This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
11944 | Brack(?) |
11944 | Hannah help mentioning him as when all his men were killed wounded and Scatered except four Got a(?) |
11941 | Ar''n''t you afraid of being in the woods by yourself?" |
11941 | But what nation ever has done all that was possible with the chances offered it? |
11941 | It ran as follows:"CAPTAIN CRESAP:"What did you kill my people on Yellow Creek for? |
11941 | What is your name? |
11941 | Who is there to mourn for Logan? |
11941 | Why did they not whistle now? |
17748 | A"blue robe"or"mouse- colored(?) |
17748 | How is it with the Indians of the British Possessions to- day? |
17748 | The island- like patches of persistent old hair alternating with patches of bare brown skin are adorned(?) |
17748 | Western hunters are striving for the honor(?) |
17748 | Who has not ridden over some of the Western railways and counted dead cattle by the thousands? |
17748 | are you hurt, Chardon?'' |
18525 | And from what point of the compass does the wind blow? |
18525 | I''m here, Where are you? |
18525 | North? |
18525 | Ooo- it, ooo- it? |
18525 | South? |
18525 | West? |
18525 | What landmarks do you see east of the camp? |
18525 | Whit- kwit? |
15293 | Which was there first, geography or history? |
15293 | But who could ever conceive of dislodging the Chinese or the close- packed millions of India? |
15293 | Do the Socialists hint to us the geographic basis of this new development, when they describe themselves as an international political party? |
15293 | Does this mean emancipation? |
15293 | For the same reason they leave their boundaries undefined; a mile nearer or farther, what does it matter? |
15293 | Hence we can not avoid the question: Are we in process of evolving a social idea vaster than that underlying nationality? |
15293 | If so, from what source? |
15293 | Or will the local pattern repeat itself over and over with dull uniformity? |
15293 | What is the material of warp and woof? |
15293 | What of the great man in this geographical interpretation of history? |
15293 | Whence and how did it get there? |
15293 | Will new threads enter to vary the color and design? |
16316 | _ From a feminine standpoint the first question must be,What shall I wear?" |
16316 | Can any one see a joke in this? |
16316 | Did you ever hear of a colony of ants keeping a cow? |
16316 | Did you ever know of a bat flying into any one''s hair? |
16316 | Did you ever see a play- ground where the ants have their recreation just as we have ball fields and dancing halls? |
16316 | Dry leaves? |
16316 | How many of us ever saw the possibility of a sermon in this common everyday sight? |
16316 | In playing, it is customary for the bull to engage one pair of players in conversation by asking some question such as"What is your lock made of?" |
16316 | Nature study is not"why?" |
16316 | On this occasion when their guns were empty another hunter who had withheld his fire said,"Are you all done, boys?" |
16316 | Perhaps you will say"How about a bat?" |
16316 | Then ask yourself,"How far have I gone since I was not sure of my way?" |
16316 | What are they? |
16316 | and also,"How far am I from camp?" |
14243 | Am I the person you are looking for? |
14243 | Has the chief lost his eyesight? 14243 How do you do?" |
14243 | Once, he remarked:''What am I to do, I ca n''t get along without a doctor?'' 14243 Very well sir,"I replied, and turning to Joe, added,"will you go, or shall I?" |
14243 | Why do you come here? |
14243 | At first I did not know it was that, but I called to Basil who was on that side:"''What''s the matter there? |
14243 | But do you think that our great chief will let his soldiers die and forget to cover their graves? |
14243 | But who is this coming towards me? |
14243 | But why do you not deal gently with them when they are first caught? |
14243 | I at once, with my hand upon my revolver, came back towards him and inquired,"what''s this you''re saying, sir?" |
14243 | I pointed to the shawl and said:"Where did you get that?" |
14243 | I replied,"Do you call yourselves Indians? |
14243 | I said to my pack- master,"Mr. Williams, how is this? |
14243 | Is he so old that he can not see the white man''s trail? |
14243 | My uncle then turning to me said,"Have you plenty of tobacco with you?" |
14243 | What is there which the chambers of the Metropolitan hotel can afford, which the hardy mountaineer would accept in exchange? |
14243 | What''s that fuss about?'' |
14243 | When they reached us, the chief held out his hand to me, and said in broken English,"How do, brother?" |
14243 | Why do you wish for my scalp? |
11824 | Are you two looking for trouble, mister? |
11824 | CALDWELL, OTIS W. Do you believe it? |
11824 | Do you believe It? |
11824 | HARROP, ESTHER C. Do you believe it? |
11824 | Has photography gone too far? |
11824 | Is my flesh of brass? |
11824 | LUNDEEN, GERHARD E. Do you believe it? |
11824 | Russia today; what can we learn from it? |
11824 | SEE Pickens, Robert S. Who? |
11824 | WEATHERHEAD, LESLIE D. How can I find God? |
11824 | What have you done with Dr. Millmoss? |
11824 | Who? |
11824 | become a permanent feature of our economic life? |
11824 | become a permanent feature of our economic life? |
11824 | what? |
11824 | what? |
11824 | when? |
11824 | when? |
11824 | where? |
11824 | where? |
11839 | Can we keep the faith? |
11839 | Did I ever tell you I was voted man likely to succeed at Lafayette in 1938? |
11839 | Did you bellow, sir? |
11839 | Do n''t you think he''d prefer it if we just ran off and let him know by Western Union? |
11839 | Do you need some money? |
11839 | Do you want to be a nurse? |
11839 | EDDY, WALTER H. We need vitamins; what are they? |
11839 | Friend or foe? |
11839 | HAWLEY, GESSNER G. We need vitamins; what are they? |
11839 | Is that one? |
11839 | N or M? |
11839 | Pardon me, have you seen any condor eggs? |
11839 | Prisoners, but whose? |
11839 | SEE Pringle, Henry F. PRINGLE, HENRY F. Why? |
11839 | The creative thinker; when opportunity knocks, do you instinctively extract its value, or do you sometimes allow it to slip away unrecognized? |
11839 | What gives out now? |
11839 | When does two plus two equal four? |
11839 | Who is Sylvia? |
11839 | Who''s calling? |
11839 | Will a man rob God? |
11839 | Will we have inflation? |
11839 | what do they do? |
1864 | And a day less or more At sea or ashore, We die-- does it matter when? |
1864 | Do they droop and end their lesson, wearied over there beyond the seas? |
1864 | FARRAGUT AT MOBILE BAY Ha, old ship, do they thrill, The brave two hundred scars You got in the river wars? |
1864 | GENERAL GRANT AND THE VICKSBURG CAMPAIGN What flag is this you carry Along the sea and shore? |
1864 | GEORGE ROGERS CLARK AND THE CONQUEST OF THE NORTHWEST Have the elder races halted? |
1864 | How would he and such men as he stand the great ordeal when it came? |
1864 | I know St. George''s blood- red cross, Thou mistress of the seas, But what is she whose streaming bars Roll out before the breeze? |
1864 | I write of one, While with dim eyes I think of three; Who weeps not others fair and brave as he? |
1864 | If you ask, what if we do fail? |
1864 | The brigadier answered,"Are you afraid to go, sir?" |
1864 | To him who, deadly hurt, agen Flashed on afore the charge''s thunder, Tippin''with fire the bolt of men Thet rived the rebel line asunder? |
1864 | Was it to destroy a great nation, and fetter human progress in the New World? |
1864 | Was this barbarous force now to prevail in the United States in the nineteenth century? |
1864 | With side to side, and spar to spar, Whose smoking decks are these? |
12846 | Come and recite your lesson in arithmetic? |
12846 | How many parts of speech are there? |
12846 | If I subtract one bottle of whisky, and replace it with one in which I have mixed an emetic, will not the whole remain, if nobody drinks it? |
12846 | On what continent is Ireland? |
12846 | Take six from nine, and what remain? |
12846 | What is that? |
12846 | You ask,answered he,"if we do not know you? |
12846 | Boone then hailed them with the challenge,"Who comes there?" |
12846 | Take three- quarters from an integer, and what remains?" |
12846 | The chief bade all set down, and then inquired whether his cabin was prepared and every thing unpolluted, according to the custom of their fathers? |
12846 | The question was, how to obviate this pressing emergency, and obtain a supply? |
12846 | What guardians could be more true than their husbands with their good rifles and the skill and determination to use them? |
12846 | You expect reinforcements and cannon, do you? |
12846 | is that the way you get your lesson?" |
11847 | < pb id=''063.png''/> Donald Duck-- graduatin''? |
11847 | < pb id=''122.png''/> Where did this story begin? |
11847 | ASSOCIATION FOR RESEARCH& ENLIGHTENMENT, INC. Am I my brother''s keeper? |
11847 | Accident, manslaughter or murder? |
11847 | Big government: can we control it? |
11847 | End- of- course test in What is farming? |
11847 | How about tomorrow morning? |
11847 | How do we value our children? |
11847 | How ya doin'', Hug? |
11847 | MOULTON, HAROLD G. Should price control be retained? |
11847 | Me looking for a valentine? |
11847 | Norma faces what? |
11847 | RIDGWAY, MARION V. How far? |
11847 | SEE BALDWIN, HANSON W. ELIOT, T. S. What is minor poetry? |
11847 | SEE JACKSON, ROBERT H. DEAN, JOHN P. Home ownership: is it sound? |
11847 | VOSKUIL, WALTER H. Can United States oil reserves meet the postwar demand? |
11847 | WARD, ROBERT S. Asia for the Asiatics? |
11847 | What are cosmic rays? |
11847 | What matters the rest? |
11847 | What''s perkin''? |
11847 | Who lives here? |
11847 | Why abstract? |
11841 | < pb id=''111.png''/> Will Germany crack? |
11841 | Any children? |
11841 | Are you unhappy, darling? |
11841 | Can our cities survive? |
11841 | Do I leave the punctuation up to the Home Office? |
11841 | Do n''t you Just adore it? |
11841 | Do you have one in which a wife murders her husband in a very ingenious manner? |
11841 | Have you seen Tom Thumb? |
11841 | How a plane flies, are you sure you know? |
11841 | How''s about going somewhere and trying traction splints on each other, Miss Bryson? |
11841 | May we be excused for a few minutes, Mamma? |
11841 | SHAW, CHARLES G. The blue guess book, another guess what am I? |
11841 | The body on the barrage balloon; or, Who killed the corpse? |
11841 | Well, dear, was it fun playing Indian? |
11841 | Wha''d''ya do when it rains? |
11841 | What do I do now? |
11841 | What occurs after death? |
11841 | What price conquest? |
11841 | What the hell ever happened to the old- fashioned love story? |
11841 | What''s the good word? |
11841 | Which you am I talking to now? |
11841 | Who am I? |
11841 | Will Germany crack? |
11841 | Will Germany crack? |
11841 | Wo n''t you take a seat? |
11841 | Would you like to have lived when? |
16508 | Do n''t you agree,he was asked,"that tailors are a conscienceless and extortionate class?" |
16508 | Have you struck? |
16508 | How long have you studied law? |
16508 | No,he answered, still smiling;"how could I? |
16508 | Shall I hoist it, boys? |
16508 | The general is tough, is n''t he? |
16508 | What time is it, Rees? |
16508 | What''s the matter there? |
16508 | Born at the Waxham settlement, North Carolina(? |
16508 | But have you ever thought what a story is? |
16508 | For what other class of men was fitted to direct it? |
16508 | Franklin?" |
16508 | Have n''t you, more than once, made up your mind that you would n''t like a thing, just from the look of it, without ever having tasted it? |
16508 | Have we had any great statesmen since? |
16508 | How were they to get back to Spain, with the wind always against them? |
16508 | I wonder if any one foresaw that day, even in the dimmest fashion, what immortality of fame was to come to that tall, quiet, dignified man? |
16508 | Now why is it that everyone likes to read these make- believe biographies? |
16508 | The compass varied strangely, and what hope for them was there if this, their only guide, proved faithless? |
16508 | What chance, then, had this little force of backwoodsmen, commanded by an ignorant and untrained general? |
16508 | What was the meaning of a sea as smooth as their own Guadalquiver? |
16508 | Where are your landmarks, your boundaries of colonies? |
16508 | Will he be a Democrat or Republican-- or of some new party yet to be born? |
11858 | Are there any conclusions you have been able to reach as a result of your investigation? |
11858 | Have I the honor of addressing General Washington? |
11858 | Of what temper? 11858 What age she is? |
11858 | What family she has? 11858 What her appearance is? |
11858 | What kind of sickness is Betty Davis''s? |
11858 | What then is to be done? 11858 Whether Widow or Wife? |
11858 | Whether active and spirited in the execution of her business? 11858 Whether much knowledge in Cookery, and understands ordering and setting out a Table? |
11858 | Whether sober and honest? 11858 And, after all, as the story has it,what''s time to a hawg?" |
11858 | He was no misanthropic cynic to exclaim,"What has posterity ever done for us that we should concern ourselves for posterity?" |
11858 | Old Jack would waken and upon rowing to shore would inquire angrily:"What you all mek such a debbil of a racket for hey? |
11858 | Shall I ever see them again? |
11858 | What is it to be a gentleman? |
11858 | What should be done? |
11858 | What then more simple than to divide this sum by seven and ascertain his average receipts during the years of the Revolution? |
11858 | Which of these is the true gentleman? |
11858 | if the latter"Where her husband is? |
13641 | And how long has white man known of this? |
13641 | Lady, if white man has known about God and about heaven so long, what for, why has he not told poor dying Indian about this before? 13641 Now, what does you say?" |
13641 | Now,said he,"when we gits cold and wicked follerin''our own ways, how does de Lord brung us back again to our senses?" |
13641 | Ques.--''Your Jesus men, was there any difference between them and us?'' 13641 With our views of the case, how could we believe anything else?" |
13641 | ''Do n''t you think his doctrine good?'' |
13641 | A prominent professor in a theological seminary, when the question was put to him ten years ago:"Professor, when did you become an Abolitionist?" |
13641 | But are they progressing rapidly? |
13641 | But why not face the more hopeful question: Is there a remedy? |
13641 | He has taught us to worship the ancestors and also use a lamb for sacrifice, why do n''t you obey?'' |
13641 | How many of you at home do as much for your prayer- meeting as this poor old colored woman? |
13641 | Is it to be wondered at, then, that the colored people are flocking to the Catholic fold? |
13641 | Now, how can one better prove his patriotism than by giving his money or service to save his country from ignorance and degradation? |
13641 | One of the questions most often asked is,"Are the colored people improving?" |
13641 | Shall immigrants be welcomed, restricted or prohibited? |
13641 | She asked of her teacher:"But, lady, how long have you known of this beautiful story?" |
13641 | She passed in while I stood at the door and thought thus,"Shall I go in here when one of those awful"blues"is there?" |
13641 | Some ask:''Do you believe our Confucius?'' |
13641 | Suppose you go to the stable to pray, do you think God was there-- such a dirty place-- and hear your prayer?'' |
13641 | The Colonel at once gives him chase; after a brief absence he returns to his home, and his wife eagerly asks"What did you do with him?" |
13641 | What will be its end? |
13641 | What will it mean? |
13641 | Why can not those disciples of Confucius be better men? |
13641 | Why should not the North and South alike manfully face the question of a war of races? |
13641 | Why stand over- awed at a threatened flood that if met in time may not only be averted but be turned into fertilizing waters over the broad lands? |
17857 | Is that the way you employ your precious time? 17857 What is this I see, Harriet?" |
17857 | ''George,''said his father,''do you know who killed that beautiful little cherry tree yonder in the garden?'' |
17857 | Could anything be more lucid? |
17857 | Fleet, 1789?] |
17857 | Fleet, 1789?] |
17857 | How else could elders and guardians have placed without scruple such books in the hands of children? |
17857 | In the Bible Adam( or is it Eve?) |
17857 | Is there no possibility of arresting this force of evil? |
17857 | Margery, upon her rounds to teach the farmers''children to spell such words as"plumb- pudding""( and who can suppose a better? |
17857 | Mr. Hildeburn has given Rivington a rather unenviable reputation; still, as he occasionally printed(?) |
17857 | Was the price marked upon its page as a reminder that two shillings was a large price to pay for a boy''s book? |
17857 | What say you to a little good prose? |
17857 | Who can forget? |
17857 | Who can spurn the ministers of joy That waited on the lisping girl and petticoated boy? |
17857 | Who except Goldsmith was capable of this vein of humor? |
17857 | Who to- day could wade through with children the good- goody books of that generation? |
11825 | < pb id=''181.png''n=''1962_h1/ A/0915''/> Do you people mind if I take off some of these hot clothes? |
11825 | ALDRICH, CHARLES S. How far is it to Hollywood? |
11825 | ALDRICH, ROBERT S. How far is it to Hollywood? |
11825 | BEVANS, MARGARET VAN DOREN What is American literature? |
11825 | CHURCH, FRANCIS P. Is there a Santa Claus? |
11825 | COMPTON, CHARLES H. Who reads what? |
11825 | Can prayer be answered? |
11825 | Can prayer be answered? |
11825 | Do you people mind if I take off some of these hot clothes? |
11825 | Do you people mind if I take off some of these hot clothes? |
11825 | Do you really love me? |
11825 | Europe between wars? |
11825 | Five years; what have they done to us? |
11825 | How far is it to Hollywood? |
11825 | How far is it to Hollywood? |
11825 | How far is it to Hollywood? |
11825 | May I leave the room? |
11825 | Negro Americans, what now? |
11825 | Negro Americans, what now? |
11825 | T.11: Le sabbat a- t- il existe? |
11825 | The magic has gone out of my marriage; has the magic gone out of your marriage? |
11825 | Was Europe a success? |
11825 | Was the corpse dead? |
11825 | What is American literature? |
11825 | What is American literature? |
11825 | What is American literature? |
11825 | What is a story? |
11825 | Whither Latin America? |
11825 | Who reads what? |
11842 | < pb id=''308.png''/> BARR, ALFRED H., JR. What is modern painting? |
11842 | < pb id=''521.png''/> Why do n''t you wait and see what becomes of your own generation before you jump on mine? |
11842 | Can England trust us? |
11842 | Do you ever have fears that you may cease to be before your pen has gleaned your teeming brain? |
11842 | FILE, QUENTIN W. How supervise? |
11842 | HERRIDGE, W. D. Which kind of revolution? |
11842 | Has anyone seen Bill? |
11842 | He will be different-- will you? |
11842 | How about sports? |
11842 | How did the world begin? |
11842 | How''s Inky? |
11842 | How''s Inky? |
11842 | How''s Inky? |
11842 | I have given you a son and the best years of my life, have n''t I? |
11842 | MCCOY, EDWARD E. Where are we headed? |
11842 | MOULTON, HAROLD G. Collapse or boom at the end of the war? |
11842 | SEE Bennett, John C.< pb id=''527.png''/> What is the church doing? |
11842 | The call to conversion; have you been born again? |
11842 | To solve the German problem, a free State? |
11842 | We saw our daughter off on; anybody in a crisis? |
11842 | What became of Anna Bolton? |
11842 | What do we eat now? |
11842 | What do we eat now? |
11842 | What do we eat now? |
11842 | Where''s Sammy? |
11842 | Who could ask for anything more? |
11842 | Why do n''t you let me know what it is, if it''s so pleasant? |
13811 | And why do you continue to threaten our people?" |
13811 | But should a log hut and a few straggling soldiers seal a territory against other emigrants? |
13811 | But, God help us, where shall we turn for assistance, to the north or to the south, to the east or to the west? |
13811 | Can not some accommodation yet be agreed upon? |
13811 | Has any injury been done you since I came into the country? |
13811 | Have we gained by the change?" |
13811 | In case the Indians will not surrender the murderer, is it not just to destroy the whole village to which he belongs? |
13811 | In what manner, when, and by whom ought this to be executed?" |
13811 | It is said, however, that he received the soldiers very haughtily, aiming his gun at them and saying,"What are you doing here, you dogs?" |
13811 | Men now ask the question,''How much is he worth?'' |
13811 | The inquiry once was,''Who is he?'' |
13811 | They say that I do well in teaching the christians, but immediately add,''Why do so many christians do these things?''" |
13811 | They shouted back contemptuously,"Are you our friends? |
13811 | To them the question was propounded:"Is it not just, that the murder lately committed by a savage, upon Claes Smits, be avenged and punished? |
13811 | Was this God''s allowed retribution for the crime of sending the Indians into slavery? |
13811 | What then is to be done? |
13811 | When it was read Seely demanded of him whether he would surrender himself according to commission? |
13811 | Who will now compensate us for our losses?" |
13811 | Why should we be called upon to support them? |
13811 | Why then have you committed this murder, burned our houses and killed our cattle? |
14023 | ''Could there be happiness or comfort in such dwellings and such a state of society? 14023 Do you know William Stewart?" |
14023 | I know that your own circumstances are critical; but are we to be wholly forgotten? 14023 My reader will naturally ask, where were their mills for grinding grain? |
14023 | Ai n''t you afraid of being in the woods by yourself?'' |
14023 | And it is said that the monster merely replied,"Do n''t you see I have no gun, Colonel?" |
14023 | Did a flood of emigration inundate the frontier with an amount of consumers disproportioned to the supply of grain? |
14023 | Did an autumnal intermittent confine the whole family or the entire population to the sick bed? |
14023 | Did the safety of the frontier demand the services of every adult militiaman? |
14023 | From what expedition had he ever shrunk?--what white man had ever seen his back? |
14023 | Had he ever expressed a wish that a single captive should be saved? |
14023 | Had he not brought seven scalps home with him from the last expedition? |
14023 | He asked if_ he_ could be suspected of partiality to the whites? |
14023 | He came forward with his slate and pencil, and the master began:''If you subtract six from nine, what remains?'' |
14023 | If you take three- quarters from a whole number, what remains?'' |
14023 | In regard to the question of Girty,"Whether the garrison knew him?" |
14023 | Some of the ladies, as was natural, had no relish for the undertaking, and asked why the men could not bring water as well as themselves? |
14023 | Was the frontier suddenly invaded? |
14023 | What could they do? |
14023 | What is your name? |
14023 | When had he ever before interceded for any of that hated race? |
14023 | Where their smiths''shops for making and repairing their farming utensils? |
14023 | Where their tanners for making leather? |
14023 | Which of their own natural warriors had been more zealous than himself? |
14023 | Who were their carpenters, tailors, cabinet- workmen, shoemakers, and weavers? |
14023 | Whose tomahawk had been bloodier than his? |
14023 | and had he not submitted seven white prisoners that very evening to their discretion? |
14023 | cried the master, beating him;''you stupid little fool, how can you show that?'' |
14023 | strangers, who are you?" |
14023 | what is_ your_ name, then?" |
10070 | And what has a ship to do with my writing? |
10070 | Are you a man, or an angel? |
10070 | Could you say it to us? |
10070 | Did you want something? |
10070 | Do you want to learn to print? |
10070 | Friend, what is the matter? |
10070 | Have you been to school much? |
10070 | What are you doing, Bob? |
10070 | What have you read? |
10070 | What makes you so late? |
10070 | And did he tell it by speaking, or by signs that he made with his feelers? |
10070 | And did he tell them that there was a string by which an ant could get there? |
10070 | But how could he ask the sunshine? |
10070 | But where had they gone? |
10070 | Can you guess who sent it to her? |
10070 | Do you think that the greedy ant told the other ants about the jar? |
10070 | He said to young Long- fel- low,"Did you see that poem in the paper? |
10070 | He said,--"Alice, what makes people say,''Do n''t give up the ship''?" |
10070 | How do you think he did it? |
10070 | How does it begin?" |
10070 | Men said,"How did he ever learn so many things?" |
10070 | Some one said to the owner of the house,"Do you lend books to such a fellow as that?" |
10070 | That night the boys in the office said to Mr. Bliss,"You are not going to take that tow head, are you?" |
10070 | The captain shouted to the little man,"Is that Doctor Kane?" |
10070 | Then the stranger said to the land- lord,"Who is that man? |
10070 | What should this little boy be named? |
10070 | Who is he?" |
10070 | say, does that star- span- gled banner yet wave O''er the land of the free, and the home of the brave?" |
11850 | 2443)( In United feature comics, June 13, 194?) |
11850 | Am I not your Rosalind? |
11850 | Are the Mahars doomed? |
11850 | Bowlers are people? |
11850 | Calculations amiss? |
11850 | Do you hope he gets away with it? |
11850 | Do you want your children to be tolerant? |
11850 | Does Turkey''s end mean the fall of Great Britain? |
11850 | Does world government mean more government? |
11850 | Drawing entitled How old are you? |
11850 | Education for what? |
11850 | Great Northern? |
11850 | Have you considered him? |
11850 | How can mankind find the Christ again? |
11850 | How do we know? |
11850 | How do we know? |
11850 | Into the frying pan? |
11850 | NM: foreword&"If it is n''t fun, what is it?" |
11850 | Rescue in sight? |
11850 | We all want to save money, but where? |
11850 | What am I doing here? |
11850 | What happened at Hazelwood? |
11850 | What must the church do? |
11850 | What next? |
11850 | What''s your diploma worth? |
11850 | Where is truth? |
11850 | Who am I? |
11850 | Who''ll buy my sentimental value? |
11850 | Will Russia conquer Turkey? |
11850 | Will there be another world war? |
11850 | World wars, why has a merciful God permitted them? |
11850 | Your numbers: which, what, how, why are they? |
11834 | < pb id=''292.png''n=''1966_h2/ A/2552''/> Has anybody here seen Kelly? |
11834 | < pb id=''365.png''/> Whose theatre is this? |
11834 | < pb id=''491.png''/> How do you stand on a third term, scout, right or wrong? |
11834 | < pb id=''494.png''/> What college and why? |
11834 | Can women be gentlemen? |
11834 | Do girls like you? |
11834 | Do you like it here? |
11834 | Do you speak correct English? |
11834 | Doit- on le dire? |
11834 | Doit- on le dire? |
11834 | Four is almost the perfect, you mean another cat? |
11834 | Friends or foes? |
11834 | Hello operator? |
11834 | Hello, darling, wool- gathering? |
11834 | Huntsman, what quarry? |
11834 | Is n''t that sweet? |
11834 | L. D. writes, is there--? |
11834 | Mortal flesh, is not your place in the ground? |
11834 | Quo Vadimus? |
11834 | RUSSELL, GEORGE S. Can women be gentlemen? |
11834 | What about Willie? |
11834 | What about Willie? |
11834 | What college, and why? |
11834 | What is liberty? |
11834 | Where, oh where? |
11834 | Whither thou goest? |
11834 | Whose victory? |
11834 | Why ca n''t we live forever? |
11834 | Why ca n''t we live forever? |
11834 | Why did he do it? |
11834 | YOUNG, ALICE K. Do you speak correct English? |
19463 | Does an author,said"The New Yorker"in February,( p. 182) 1837,"subject himself to personal criticism by submitting a work to the public? |
19463 | Have you read the American novels? |
19463 | Were we ever unjust to Cooper? |
11835 | < pb id=''154.png''n=''1967_h1/ A/1180''/> MACGLASHAN, LIONEL C. Can a whiskey keep a secret? |
11835 | BODE, BOYD H. What is democracy? |
11835 | Can America stay neutral? |
11835 | Can he make it? |
11835 | DULLES, ALLEN W. Can America stay neutral? |
11835 | Do you need money? |
11835 | Do you want to become a banker? |
11835 | Do you want to become a doctor? |
11835 | Dr. Livingston, I presume? |
11835 | For what do we fight? |
11835 | Has anyone a suggestion? |
11835 | How do you know you do n''t like it if you wo n''t even try any? |
11835 | How firm a foundation? |
11835 | NAGEL, HENRY R. When''s your birthday? |
11835 | Pensions or penury? |
11835 | Religious or Christian? |
11835 | Religious or Christian? |
11835 | Religious or Christian? |
11835 | SEE Crook, Wilbur F. CROOK, WILBUR F. Do you want to become a banker? |
11835 | SEE Gates, Arthur I. BEHRMAN, S. N. Hyper or hipo? |
11835 | SMITH, T. V. What is democracy? |
11835 | We go fast? |
11835 | What am I doing away from home? |
11835 | What did he see? |
11835 | What is democracy? |
11835 | What use is religion? |
11835 | What''s Keydo up to? |
11835 | What''s happened to Tommy? |
11835 | Where did your garden grow? |
11835 | Where did your garden grow? |
11835 | Who''s running this sales department anyway? |
11835 | Why did they confess? |
11835 | Wo n''t you walk a little faster? |
11838 | Are we too hard or too soft? |
11838 | Bachelor of artifice& Who was that lady? |
11838 | Can the Nazis steal our South American trade? |
11838 | Crop thy lawn, lady? |
11838 | Democracy at the box office; what''s your story? |
11838 | Double- talk tales; For whom is that bell for? |
11838 | Dummy, dummy, who''s dummy? |
11838 | For what? |
11838 | Go ahead, why do n''t you? |
11838 | Have you a religion? |
11838 | How do I find the Christ? |
11838 | How will our pan- American trade pan out? |
11838 | JOHNSON, GERALD W. Roosevelt, dictator or democrat? |
11838 | N. or M.? |
11838 | Or are we only interested in fossils? |
11838 | Psst, Bud, wanna take a gander at some lewd sand sculpture? |
11838 | SEE Bisch, Louis E. BISCH, LOUIS E. Why be shy? |
11838 | SEE Dicks, Russell L. DICKS, RUSSELL L. Who is my patient? |
11838 | Shall we have a woman''s National Guard? |
11838 | The lights look down; Who goes there? |
11838 | To the Promissory Land, II: Hollywood will fool you if you do n''t watch out, did n''t it? |
11838 | UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO CONFERENCE ON BUSINESS EDUCATION, 1940. Business education for what? |
11838 | What books for children? |
11838 | What do four ones beat? |
11838 | What does the angel do in our astral body? |
11838 | What is democracy? |
11838 | Where do Catholics stand? |
11838 | Where is the devil? |
11838 | Who killed the husband? |
11838 | Why do n''t you look where you''re going? |
11838 | Why the Third Order of St. Francis? |
11838 | Will Freemasonry survive? |
11838 | but whose? |
1222 | Have you got a good sharp pair of shears there? |
1222 | I like to have people come up to me on the street and call me Mr. Sutherland and ask me how I left my sisters? 1222 Indeed?" |
1222 | You say it covers my coat collar? |
1222 | As what man has not? |
1222 | But does the barber to whom I repair at frequent intervals coincide with my desires in this respect? |
1222 | But, as has been said by some thinking person, who in thunder wants to be a camel? |
1222 | Did he ever have to leave the two top buttons of his vest unfastened on account of his extra chins? |
1222 | Does he have to take the tailor''s word for it that his trousers need pressing? |
1222 | Does the barber respect my wishes in this regard? |
1222 | Does the barber take cognizance of the emergency? |
1222 | Does the youth in the pale mauve shirt with the marquise ring on the little finger of the left hand rest content with this? |
1222 | How does Dr. Woods Hutchinson know? |
1222 | How many are there right now who have one foot in the grave and the other at the chiropodist''s? |
1222 | Is he greeted with sympathetic understanding? |
1222 | It seems to you that you are always doing something for your teeth? |
1222 | Love in a cottage? |
1222 | Love in a rendering plant? |
1222 | Need I answer this question? |
1222 | Or if we refuse to surrender, demanding just a shave by itself and nothing else, what then follows? |
1222 | Pardon me again-- but how long has it been since you had them did?" |
1222 | Shall you ever forget your first manicure? |
1222 | We dislike this folded- up appearance naturally-- who would n''t? |
1222 | What cares he how I feel about it so long as the higher cravings of his own nature are satisfied? |
1222 | What kind of a way is that to greet the dewy morn anyhow? |
1222 | When planning public utilities, who thinks of a fat man? |
1222 | Who wants to greet the dewy morn by lying flat on his back and lifting his feet fifty times? |
1222 | You know that live- broiled look? |
1222 | instead of making it,"Where are the snows of yesteryear?" |
12045 | And I? |
12045 | 1552- 1619(?). |
12045 | A series of her mural decorations was exhibited in various German cities, and finally shown at the Paris Exposition of 1890(? |
12045 | Among the latter are"What Will Become of the Child?" |
12045 | An amphora decorated with landscape and figures was exhibited at the Promotrice in Florence in 1889(?) |
12045 | At Milan, 1886, her"Will He Arrive?" |
12045 | Because the artist was a foreigner? |
12045 | Can one doubt that such a Museum must be an element of artistic development in those who are in contact with it? |
12045 | Did not women paint those pictures of Isis-- goddess of Sothis-- that are like precursors of the pictures of the Immaculate Conception? |
12045 | Does this mean that she had been ungenerous in depriving him of the privilege of asking for what she so freely bestowed? |
12045 | Have I achieved a success, in the true, serious meaning of the word? |
12045 | How pathetic her written words:"I have spent six years, working ten hours a day, to gain what? |
12045 | In 1895 she settled in Berlin, where she has made a specialty of women''s and children''s portraits in olgraphy(?) |
12045 | Is it not more than the mere ableness of method, still more than the audacity of brush work, that often passes for style? |
12045 | Is it not the aim of painting to copy nature? |
12045 | Is it possible to dissociate the manner of a picture from its embodiment of some fact or idea? |
12045 | Is not this the key to the charm of her works? |
12045 | Miss Halse executed the reredos in St. John''s Church, Notting Hill, London; a terra- cotta relief called"Earthward Board"(?) |
12045 | Of this time she writes:"Am I satisfied? |
12045 | Paints genre subjects, some of which are"Captain John,"in National Museum;"Laughing Child,"in C. P. Huntington Collection;"Who Comes?" |
12045 | Was Constable in advance of his critics? |
12045 | Were there not artists among them who decorated temples and tombs with their imperishable colors? |
12045 | What could Henriette Knip do except paint pictures? |
12045 | Who knows? |
12045 | Why was this verdict not confirmed by the jury? |
12045 | Will the judgments of the present be thus reversed in the future? |
12045 | You have guessed it, have you not? |
11313 | Build a railroad to Oregon? |
11313 | / face value? |
11313 | But by what route? |
11313 | But in what manner should it be acquired? |
11313 | But the decision to have representation according to population at once raised the question, Shall slaves be counted as population? |
11313 | But when the antislavery legislature met soon after, they ordered the question, Will you, or will you not, have this constitution? |
11313 | But when the question arose, How shall he be chosen? |
11313 | Could a negro whose ancestors had been sold as slaves become a citizen of one of the states in the Union? |
11313 | Dashing down the line, Sheridan shouted,"What troops are these?" |
11313 | Did Congress have power to enact the Missouri Compromise? |
11313 | During the long embargo and the war, manufactures had arisen, and one question now became,"Shall home manufactures be encouraged?" |
11313 | How shall the paper money be disposed of and"specie payment"resumed? |
11313 | Now, what were some of the results of this movement of population into the Mississippi valley? |
11313 | Pray where is Annapolis? |
11313 | Resumption of Specie Payments.%--What shall be done with the currency? |
11313 | Shall state sovereignty be recognized? |
11313 | The English and the Indians.%--How, meantime, did the English act toward the Indians? |
11313 | The Great American Desert.%--But how came Frémont to be in California in 1846? |
11313 | The States.%--What sort of a country, and what sort of people, was Washington thus chosen to rule over? |
11313 | The Surplus Revenue.%--What caused this surplus revenue? |
11313 | The payment of the bonds brought up the question, Shall the 5- 20''s be paid in coin or greenbacks? |
11313 | The political question of the time thus became, Shall, or shall not, slavery exist in New Mexico and California? |
11313 | The question was not, Shall America support an army? |
11313 | The questions to be decided were: Shall there be one or two republics on the soil of the United States? |
11313 | The real question of the campaign thus became, Will the people of Illinois have Stephen A. Douglas or Abraham Lincoln for senator? |
11313 | Were reinforcements coming? |
11313 | What shall be done with the national bonded debt? |
11313 | Why did the States secede?%--Why did the Southern slave states secede? |
11313 | Why not divide the country west of the great river in the same way? |
11313 | [ 1] Then came the question, Is there not a shorter route? |
11313 | [ 1][ Footnote 1: The question is often asked, When did the Constitution go into force? |
11313 | but, Shall Parliament tax America? |
11313 | they submitted the question, Will you have this constitution with or without slavery? |
11313 | | value? |
12111 | 1728), Thomas Frye( 1710- 1762), Edward Fisher( 1722- 1785? |
12111 | 1816? |
12111 | And what of the women of Ireland today? |
12111 | And when that"next rebellion"came, the great uprising of the outraged race in 1641, what do we find? |
12111 | But, we may lawfully ask, will not this peace bring with it a special danger, against which we ought to take precautions? |
12111 | Could there be more striking proof of the natural bent and aptitude of the Irish mind for journalism? |
12111 | Did they keep before the Norsemen to America too? |
12111 | From our point of view, what would be the result of that arrangement? |
12111 | If it be further asked:"Does this statement stand the test of strict investigation?" |
12111 | If it is a question of languages, why not learn one of the more useful ones? |
12111 | Oh, whose shall be the potent hand To give that touch informing, And make thee rise, O Southern Land, To life and poesy warming?" |
12111 | On our side, what shall we say of it? |
12111 | Shall they come short of the high ideal of the past, falter and fail, if devotion and sacrifice are required of them? |
12111 | To what element in the Irish nature are we to attribute this joyous and illuminating gift? |
12111 | We can do it if we wish it: the question is, shall we wish it? |
12111 | What did learning bring him? |
12111 | What of the sister of Henry Joy McCracken, Mary, the friend and fellow- worker with the Belfast United Irishmen? |
12111 | When did this language begin to be used in literature? |
12111 | Who does not know of his brilliant performances on the track? |
12111 | Who has not heard of the great music school of San Gallen, founded by St. Gall,"the wonder and delight of Europe,"whither flocked German students? |
12111 | Who has not heard of the wondrous little Thomas Conneff from the short- grass county of Kildare? |
12111 | Who would ask anything racier in its kind than the former''s"Father O''Flynn"? |
12111 | Why was he so eager to bear for its sake"all the thousand aches That patient merit of the unworthy takes"? |
12111 | With such workmen, having such instincts and training, what of the housing and surroundings to contain them and give them a fit and suitable setting? |
11062 | But say, B.J.,said Bobbles, in a puzzled manner,"suppose your fire was in the other direction? |
11062 | Do you all belong to the Crows? |
11062 | Do you mean that we should go down and eat the banquet for''em? |
11062 | Going to bed? |
11062 | Oh, ca n''t you? |
11062 | Suppose I give the signal for the left- guard to take the ball around the right- end,he would say, and ask each man in turn,"Where would you go?" |
11062 | Well, how are you going to retaliate? |
11062 | Well, what has happened to the banquet? |
11062 | Well, what of it? 11062 What are you going to do with it?" |
11062 | What bell is that? |
11062 | What do you mean? |
11062 | Where shall we brand the wretch, your Honor? |
11062 | Who ate it? |
11062 | Who''s Demoskenes? |
11062 | Why ca n''t we? |
11062 | Why, do n''t you remember him? |
11062 | ;"d''you hear that?" |
11062 | And had n''t they given up every free hour for two years to working like Trojans? |
11062 | But Pretty answered with much dignity:"Run? |
11062 | But Tug gave him one contemptuous look, and remarked:"Do you suppose I''m a cry- baby? |
11062 | But they all stopped suddenly, and Quiz expressed the sentiment of all of them when he said:"But how are we going to do it?" |
11062 | Just then MacManus came by, and with one accord the Crows exclaimed:"Where did they tie you up?" |
11062 | One of them, indeed, called out in a suspiciously friendly tone:"Hey, young feller, hold up a minute and tell us what time it is, will ye?" |
11062 | Quiz was a long time getting his breath and opening his eyes; then it was his turn to look around in amazement and to exclaim:"What of it? |
11062 | Still Tug argued:"What right have you men got to come into my room without being invited?" |
11062 | Still, he repeated, when Heady only looked puzzled and gave no answer:"How are you going to retaliate, I say?" |
11062 | Then he fastened a handkerchief over History''s eyes, and growled:"Are those irons hot yet?" |
11062 | Then they all exclaimed in chorus:"Well, what of it?" |
11062 | They heard a low voice from the inside ask:"Who''s there?" |
11062 | What for?" |
11062 | What of it? |
11062 | What''s the matter with yourself?" |
11062 | When they had done with this jollification, Tug, who objected to doing things by halves, asked:"Why not kidnap the whole kit and boodle of them?" |
11062 | Why, you numskulls, do n''t you see it''s just the chance you wanted for revenge?" |
15923 | How Can We Help Increase the Number of Boys Attending Sunday School? |
15923 | On Sunday a bunch of the younger boys came to Mr. Ball, and said,''We have no teacher; will you get one for us?'' 15923 Should an Older Boy Teach a Younger Boys''Sunday School Class?" |
15923 | Why Do n''t the Older Boys Attend Church Services? 15923 ''Did they get me? 15923 ''Well, did they get you?'' 15923 ''Who do we want?'' 15923 As soon as a life knows Jesus as Saviour, it asks the question,What wilt thou have me to do, Lord?" |
15923 | Attend Sunday school( yes or no)? |
15923 | B.?'' |
15923 | Chapman.--How Shall I Tell My Child? |
15923 | He called across to them,''Say, fellows, what''s the matter?'' |
15923 | How, then, shall all this be worked out in Bible class and through- the- week activity? |
15923 | If yes, where? |
15923 | In view, then, of all that has gone before, what shall be said of the Sunday school and the boy? |
15923 | Mr. Ball looked at them, and said,''Who do you want, fellows?'' |
15923 | Notice, it is not, what shall I believe, or what shall I cast out of my life? |
15923 | Should They Be There?" |
15923 | Starbuck.--Should the Impartation of Knowledge Be a Function of the Sunday School? |
15923 | There was silence for a moment or two, and then one of the older fellows said,"Gee, do the Chinks over there know enough to play a game like that?" |
15923 | They found that he had left for home, and the boys looked at Mr. Ball and said,''Now, what shall we do?'' |
15923 | To accomplish the latter, what shall the procedure be? |
15923 | What now is the Sunday school? |
15923 | What organizations can be used to lead them into Christian manhood between the twelfth and fifteenth year? |
15923 | What shall be used, then, for this purpose? |
15923 | What should the Sunday school do to achieve this? |
15923 | What then is the factor of the boy? |
15923 | With this and other organizations what can the church''s relationship be? |
15923 | ___________ Is the class of intermediate age( 13- 16), or senior age( 17- 20)? |
15923 | ______________ What is the average age of the members of your class? |
15923 | and the leader turned around and said to the fellows,''Say, fellows, who_ do_ we want?'' |
15583 | And you, Billy? |
15583 | And you, Cody? |
15583 | Billy, what is the matter? |
15583 | Boy pale- face know chief? |
15583 | Boy, ai n''t you the one who killed Hugh Hall in Kansas some time ago? |
15583 | But are you used to hard riding and a life of danger? |
15583 | But what will my mother think of me? |
15583 | Captain Denham, will you permit that boy to cover me with his revolver and hurl insult upon me? |
15583 | Do you love me now, pard? |
15583 | How do you make that out? |
15583 | How shall we shoot it off, Billy? |
15583 | The best way, Hugh; but what about the wife that''s now on your trail? |
15583 | Ther devil yer say: waal, I has heerd o''him as a greased terror, an''he looks it; but who''s with yer, young pard? |
15583 | This red- skin country? |
15583 | Waal, did yer get yer b''ar? |
15583 | Was he mad? |
15583 | Well, Billy? |
15583 | Well, Velvet, where will you find a camping place to- night? |
15583 | Well, what have you got to- day that''s worthy our picking, my Boy Driver? |
15583 | Whar''s yer critter? |
15583 | What care I for her, after I have run off with Nannie? |
15583 | What could it mean? |
15583 | What do you mean? |
15583 | What for come here? |
15583 | What pale- face boy do here? |
15583 | What with, boy, fists or knives? |
15583 | When come back? |
15583 | Where friend? |
15583 | Who are you? |
15583 | Who are you? |
15583 | Who be they, Billy? |
15583 | Who is there? |
15583 | Who is you? |
15583 | Who''s cheating, Buffalo Bill? |
15583 | Who''s goin''ter say no? |
15583 | Yes; but do your young men intend to kill me? |
15583 | You are sure it''s coming to''em, Hugh? |
15583 | 20 WHAT ARE THE WILD WAVES SAYING, SISTER? |
15583 | By the way, where''s that old father of yours?" |
15583 | He asked,''What detained you?'' |
15583 | Jack looked at me and said,''Bill, how long will it take you to commit your part?'' |
15583 | Nearer and nearer came the rushing band, for what had two hundred mounted warriors to fear from one man? |
15583 | Roy Velvet turned very pale, but said:"Are you mad, boy?" |
15583 | Speaking to him in Sioux, which the boy understood, he asked:"What pale- face boy do here?" |
15583 | The next it was:"I wonder if he has not lost his way?" |
15583 | The old man and his sons quickly lowered their rifles, while the former said:"A friend in blue uniform, while we wear the gray?'' |
15583 | This served as a warning to the others, and they stood like statues, while one said:"Pard, who is yer?" |
15583 | Who has not heard the name of Buffalo Bill-- a magic name, seemingly, to every boy''s heart? |
15583 | they must pay toll; and they generally have good watches; but what is it, a woman''s rights meeting, or a Seminary broke loose?'' |
14132 | Are you coming? |
14132 | Are you going with me? |
14132 | Do you remember you swore that you would never speak that word? |
14132 | For a tattler, then? |
14132 | Has he ever been unjust or overbearing to you, Nathan? |
14132 | He said that? |
14132 | I, inadvertent? |
14132 | I? 14132 Is she handsome?" |
14132 | May I speak to Katie? |
14132 | She has refused you? 14132 Six?" |
14132 | Suppose the lady should be so too? |
14132 | Well,returned the young man in a sullen tone,"if I did, what harm in saying it here with not a soul but you around? |
14132 | What do you take me for, a traitor? |
14132 | Why have you waited so long? |
14132 | Will you see that some conveyance is here within half an hour? |
14132 | ''Twas then, by sudden chance, I met thine eyes, What saw I there? |
14132 | But are we wholly free from the same fault in another direction? |
14132 | But what mattered that? |
14132 | By the way, Bulchester, who was he? |
14132 | Did his father know of it? |
14132 | Have you sent for a carriage? |
14132 | How was he to know, he or the fair Elizabeth, that the business was a love suit? |
14132 | I wonder,"he asked turning sharply round,"if you have been playing me false?" |
14132 | If a man has only a tenth of the income he needs to live upon, what is he going to do? |
14132 | Is it my fault that I am obliged to look out for money? |
14132 | Mr. Archdale had not waited; what had they to say? |
14132 | Or the father has?" |
14132 | Should it not be crime? |
14132 | Was Archdale going to call upon his wife? |
14132 | What did you say?" |
14132 | Who ever knew a man to sign his name Mr. so and so, or so and so, Esq.? |
14132 | Who knows what person may be round?" |
14132 | Why, where should I have been if I had? |
14132 | cried the Governor,''did you see that exchange of looks, scorn and hatred on both sides, and they may be husband and wife? |
14132 | what is the use of cursing one''s luck?" |
17683 | A mouthful? 17683 Are you Nell?" |
17683 | Can a saloon- keeper take too much beer? |
17683 | Do you base your calculations upon last fall''s crops? |
17683 | Do you call that a candle? |
17683 | Good? |
17683 | So it was n''t your home? |
17683 | Upon what do you base your calculations? |
17683 | What is it, Yik? |
17683 | What is the matter with him? |
17683 | What shall we do? |
17683 | Why did n''t he take his coat off? |
17683 | 2. Who is the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and who his associates? |
17683 | But where was this one to appear? |
17683 | But, supposing him to have got this sound animal; what has he got? |
17683 | By the way, how is your store coming on? |
17683 | By the way, where are the poor deluded woodchucks, muskrats, and Old Settlers, who told us we were to bask in mild etherialness all winter long? |
17683 | By the way, you are getting up a report of this grand assembly, I suppose?" |
17683 | Could Harry White be a cattle thief? |
17683 | How d''do, Mr. Blank? |
17683 | How did I happen to find her? |
17683 | How has it advanced? |
17683 | How is your paper coming out? |
17683 | How much did you make for your share?" |
17683 | How will we propagate this valuable race of the cherry? |
17683 | Is it not by the invaluable aid of men who have given their whole lives to the solution of some special problem? |
17683 | Is not the expert swine- grower the successful man? |
17683 | It plainly indicated to these observers that some important event was impending, and what could be more important than the birth of a great man? |
17683 | Now brother farmers, I have moved the adoption of appropriate names for every farm in the land; who will second the motion? |
17683 | Petted, well- housed, demure, and sleek; Three times a day he is called to feast, And why should he not be quiet and meek? |
17683 | There is a beautiful little song entitled,"What is Home Without a Mother?" |
17683 | What are the laws in regard to drainage passed by the last Legislature? |
17683 | What can I do for them? |
17683 | What do you s''pose marm''ll say?" |
17683 | What is it moves that jeweled throng of dainty worshippers? |
17683 | What is the reason of this? |
17683 | What nobler employment in which young men can engage? |
17683 | Where had we been? |
17683 | Where was Jack? |
17683 | Where was Yik Kee? |
17683 | Why have they not been introduced? |
17683 | You are here drumming up custom, I suppose?" |
17683 | You are the man who got drunk and raised a fuss on a street car?" |
17683 | which could be supplemented with another of equal interest, to wit:"What is Home Without a Name?" |
17683 | whispered Ted, cocking his revolver? |
13266 | But what did you mean to take? |
13266 | Then you mean that we shall construe it our own way? |
13266 | ; if so, to what extent; what is their value? |
13266 | And if nothing was said by us evidencing such an abandonment of the demand, what answer have you ever made to such a demand? |
13266 | And who can be assured that by continually increasing in our colonies they will not one day become formidable enemies? |
13266 | And who is not? |
13266 | Can the mind of man conceive a more resplendent territory? |
13266 | Can we depend upon slaves who are only attached to us by fear and for whom the very land where they are born has not the dear name of mother country?" |
13266 | Can you advise me how long you expect to remain in Washington? |
13266 | Can you give an approximate estimate of the proportional number of exhibits by women contained in these classes? |
13266 | Have any steps been taken to indicate on which of these committees you are to make appointments? |
13266 | He asked,"Did they not call you up?" |
13266 | He said to me,"Mr. Krug, your bid is very satisfactory, but why have you not submitted a bid on all the buildings shown in the specifications?" |
13266 | He was, therefore, greatly surprised by a question from Talleyrand, in which he was asked"What we would give for the whole tract?" |
13266 | I stood up then and spoke to President Francis and said,"President Francis, how do you know but that this bid of Mr. Evans may be a dummy?" |
13266 | If so, how? |
13266 | In what way did their work( or exhibits) differ from their work( or exhibits) of the past? |
13266 | Now, then, have you any notice of on which juries you are to be allowed to name a juror? |
13266 | On April 11 Talleyrand asked Livingston"whether he wished to have the whole of Louisiana?" |
13266 | Should it be hired labor of freemen or the compulsory labor of the imported negro? |
13266 | Was the work of women as well appreciated when placed by the side of that of men? |
13266 | Were any of the exhibits of women developments of original inventions, or an improvement on the work of some prior inventor? |
13266 | Were they shown in such manner as to indicate in any way, or to enable you to distinguish, which part had been performed by women, which by men? |
13266 | What advancement did they show in the progress of women in any special industry, art, science, etc.? |
13266 | What can you say of the skill and ingenuity displayed in the invention, construction, or application? |
13266 | What of the merits of the installation as to the ingenuity and taste displayed, and its value as an exposition attraction? |
13266 | What proportion of women received awards in your group or classes? |
13266 | What proportion, or, approximately, what number, of exhibits were installed by foreign women? |
13266 | What service will the Commission require from the board between the opening and closing of the exposition? |
13266 | What special work does the Commission desire the board to perform before the opening of the exposition? |
13266 | Which, in your opinion, were the most striking exhibits by women in your department? |
13266 | Who can estimate the good done by this noble army? |
13266 | Who knows? |
13266 | Why, then, were not the bids opened in public, thus securing the largest amount for the exposition and for the stockholders? |
13266 | Would the results have been better if their work had been separately exhibited? |
19157 | Shall Rome or Heathen rule in Arthur''s realm? 19157 You who are the oldest, You who are the tallest, Do n''t you think you ought to help The youngest and the smallest? |
19157 | You who are the strongest,( p. 36) You who are the quickest, Do n''t you think you ought to help The weakest and the sickest? 19157 AMUSEMENTS AND HANDICRAFT Where''s the cook? 19157 And didst Thou play in Heaven with all The angels, that were not too tall, With stars for marbles? 19157 And what did it feel like to be Out of Heaven, and just like me? 19157 Coolidge................................................ 163 What Shall We Do Now? 19157 Did the things Play_ Can you see me?_ through their wings? 19157 Did the things Play_ Can you see me?_ through their wings? 19157 Didst Thou sometimes think of_ there_, And ask where all the angels were? 19157 GEOGRAPHY, TRAVEL, AND DESCRIPTION Where shall we adventure, to- day that we''re afloat, Wary of the weather and steering by a star? 19157 Hadst Thou ever any toys, Like us little girls and boys? 19157 Oh, where be these gay Spaniards, Which make so great a boast O? 19157 RELIGION AND ETHICS Little Jesus, wast Thou shy Once, and just so small as I? 19157 RELIGION AND ETHICS What can I give Him, Poor as I am? 19157 RELIGION AND ETHICS( p. 184) Who is the happy Warrior? 19157 Shall it be to Africa, a- steering of the boat, To Providence, or Babylon, or off to Malabar? 19157 Should not you? |
19157 | What Shall We Do Now? |
19157 | What Shall We Do Now?.................................... |
19157 | Where are the Little Prudy books( p. xii) which once headed the list? |
19157 | Where are the stories of Oliver Optic? |
19157 | Where go the children, travelling ahead? |
19157 | Where is Jacob Abbott''s John Gay; or Work for Boys? |
19157 | Which is the way to Boston Town? |
19157 | Who is he That every man in arms should wish to be? |
19157 | _ THIRTEEN YEARS OF AGE_( p. 171)_ Where go the children? |
19157 | do n''t ye hear it roar now? |
19157 | do n''t you wish that you were me? |
19157 | is supper ready, the house trimmed, rushes strewed, cobwebs swept? |
19157 | let us a voyage take; Why sit we here at ease? |
13911 | And would you advise, then, that married couples live apart one- third of the time, in the interests of domestic peace? |
13911 | And, Zeke, what did you do with your dollar? |
13911 | Do you know why their love was so very steadfast, and why they stimulated the mental and spiritual natures of each other so? |
13911 | For God''s sake, Walter,whispered Payn,"you are not going to explain to''em how you do it, are you?" |
13911 | How long have you studied law? |
13911 | It''s not Bill Spear who keeps a secondhand- shop, you want, mebbe? |
13911 | No, why was it? |
13911 | The which? |
13911 | Well, Dan,said the father,"did you spend your money?" |
13911 | What can all this fuss be about? |
13911 | What''s it about? |
13911 | You know those suits against you in the Admiralty Court? |
13911 | *****"Are n''t we staying in this room a good while?" |
13911 | After a little pause my inquiring mind caused me to ask,"Who made Judge Davis?" |
13911 | And how did Richard Henry Lee like it, and George Wythe, and the Randolphs? |
13911 | And is all this worry the penalty that Nature exacts for dreaming dreams that can not in their very nature come true? |
13911 | And is your sleep disturbed by dreams of British redcoats or hissing flintlocks? |
13911 | And what have you heard or observed of his character or merits? |
13911 | And whether, think you, it lies in the power of the Junto to oblige him, or encourage him as he deserves? |
13911 | As Pendleton handed his pistol to Hamilton he asked,"Shall I set the hair- trigger?" |
13911 | Did Patrick Henry wax eloquent that afternoon in a barroom, and did Jefferson do more than smile grimly, biding his time? |
13911 | Did Washington forget his usual poise and break out into one of those swearing fits where everybody wisely made way? |
13911 | Do you know of any deserving young beginner, lately set up, whom it lies in the power of the Junto in any way to encourage? |
13911 | For sin is only perverted power, and the man without capacity to sin neither has ability to do good-- isn''t that so? |
13911 | Hath any deserving stranger arrived in town since last meeting that you have heard of? |
13911 | Have you any weighty affair on hand in which you think the advice of the Junto may be of service? |
13911 | Have you lately observed any defect in the laws of your country, of which it would be proper to move the legislature for an amendment? |
13911 | Have you lately observed any encroachment on the just liberties of the people? |
13911 | Have you read over these queries this morning, in order to consider what you might have to offer the Junto, touching any one of them? |
13911 | He reminded us boys several times when we kicked, that he had a good claim on it-- for did n''t he furnish the door and the window- frames? |
13911 | I was feeling quite useless and asked,"Ca n''t I do something to help?" |
13911 | In what manner can the Junto, or any of its members, assist you in any of your honorable designs? |
13911 | Is there any difficulty in matters of opinion, of justice and injustice, which you would gladly have discussed at this time? |
13911 | Jefferson''s experience seems to settle that mooted question,"Can a man love two women at the same time?" |
13911 | Merchant- prince and agitator, horse and rider-- where are you now? |
13911 | One fine day, one of his schoolmates put the question to him flatly:"In case of war, on which side will you fight?" |
13911 | Or do you know of any beneficial law that is wanting? |
13911 | Spear, the antiquarian?" |
13911 | The non- slaveholding North was rubbing its sleepy eyes, and asking, Who is this man Seward, anyway? |
13911 | The question at issue was,"Is a bequest for founding a college a charitable bequest?" |
13911 | Then did the boy ask the question, What moral right has England to govern us, anyway? |
13911 | They look at me out of wistful eyes, and sometimes one calls to me as she goes by and asks,"Why have you done so little since I saw you last?" |
13911 | Were we talking of the seasons? |
13911 | Wha-- what''s that you said?" |
13911 | What benefits have you lately received from any man not present? |
13911 | What happy effects of temperance, of prudence, of moderation, or of any other virtue? |
13911 | What unhappy effects of intemperance have you lately observed or heard; of imprudence, of passion, or of any other vice or folly? |
13911 | What was it? |
13911 | Where is the man who in a strange land has not suffered rather than reveal his ignorance before a shopkeeper? |
13911 | Who is there who can not sympathize with that groan? |
13911 | do you understand the situation? |
13911 | how has Samuel managed to get himself so enormously in debt?" |
22771 | Is chronic pleuro- pneumonia contagious? 22771 Can the creature be otherwise than uneasy? 22771 How many succumb? 22771 How shall such attacks be prevented? 22771 How, then, is our stock to be improved? 22771 In response to a question,Whether any animals that had once been affected, had afterward recovered?" |
22771 | The all- important question,"Is inoculation of service?" |
22771 | The question should be-- with so much hay, so much grain, so many roots, how can the most milk, or butter, or cheese, be made? |
22771 | Was not the cyst broken through by some accident, thus letting in the air, when she grew worse? |
22771 | Would she not, probably, have overcome this disagreeable accident, and recovered, in spite of it? |
22771 | _ 2dly._ In the event of such contagion''s existing, would all the animals become affected, or what proportion would resist the disease? |
22771 | _ 3dly._ Amongst the animals attacked by the disease, how many recover, and under what circumstances? |
22771 | _ 4thly._ Are there any animals of the ox species decidedly free from any susceptibility of being affected from the contagion of pleuro- pneumonia? |
22771 | _ 5thly._ Do the animals, which have been once affected by a mild form of the disease, enjoy immunity from subsequent attacks? |
22771 | _ 6thly._ Do the animals, which have once been affected by the disease in its active form, enjoy such immunity? |
12736 | Was ever lady in such humor wooed? |
12736 | Yes? 12736 ''Are you, indeed? 12736 ''Go, poor devil, get thee gone, why should I hurt thee? 12736 ''Yes; pretty well; but are they all horrid? 12736 After all, importance in fiction is exactly like importance in life; important to whom? 12736 And is it honest or an affectation? 12736 And when the scene was hissed, he said to the disconsolate player:I did not: give them credit for it: they have found it out, have they?" |
12736 | Are there flaws in the weaving? |
12736 | Are you not wild to know?'' |
12736 | Are you sure they are all horrid?'' |
12736 | But has this amazing creation a meaning, or is Roy merely one of the results of the sportive play of a man of genius? |
12736 | But is not Dickens within his rights as artist in so changing the features of life as to increase our pleasure? |
12736 | But what of Thackeray''s view, his vision of things? |
12736 | But what of her philosophy? |
12736 | Consider Dr. Holmes''"Autocrat of the Breakfast Table,"for example; is it essay or fiction? |
12736 | Did he play the game well? |
12736 | Do I live but for her?'' |
12736 | Does Dickens make his characters other than what life itself shows, and if so, is he wrong in so doing? |
12736 | Does he bear down unduly upon poor imperfect humanity? |
12736 | For how, in sooth, could they keep away or avoid talking shop when they were bursting with the books just read? |
12736 | Has any philologist said all that could be said, so succinctly? |
12736 | Has indeed the same number of equal weight and quality been given forth by any other English writer? |
12736 | Have you gone on with Udolpho?'' |
12736 | Here she looked at him tenderly almost a minute, and then bursting into an agony, cried:''Oh, Mr. Jones, why did you save my life? |
12736 | How shall we characterize"Puddin''Head Wilson"? |
12736 | If the"silvery laughter"betimes sounds a bit sharp and thinly feminine, what would you have? |
12736 | Is the trouble one of thought or expression? |
12736 | Is"Roughing It"more typical of his genius than"Tom Sawyer"or"Huckleberry Finn"? |
12736 | Jones, for Heaven''s sake, how came you here? |
12736 | Lessing felt this when he wrote his brilliant quatrain: Wer wird nicht einen Klopstock loben, Doch wird ihn jeder lesen? |
12736 | Or is it that such a type calls forth the novelist''s powers to the full? |
12736 | Perhaps the central gift of all is that for character-- is it, in truth, not the central gift for any weaver of fiction? |
12736 | Plot, story- interest, is it not the backbone of romantic fiction? |
12736 | Shall we ever forget Mr. Crummles and his family? |
12736 | She stood a moment silent, and covered with confusion; then, lifting up her eyes gently towards him, she cried:''What would Mr. Jones have me say?'' |
12736 | Should it follow Scott and the romance, or Jane Austen and the Novel of everyday life? |
12736 | Success or failure means but this: have I grown in my higher nature, has my existence shown on the whole an upward tendency? |
12736 | The Daniel Boone of history must have had, we feel, the nobler qualities of Bumpo; how otherwise did he do what it was his destiny to do? |
12736 | The most untrue thing in a novel may be the fact lifted over unchanged from life? |
12736 | The only query would be: Is the picture undistorted? |
12736 | Then follows this dialogue:''O, my Sophia, what means this dreadful sight?'' |
12736 | Under what category shall we place"A Yankee at the Court of King Arthur"and"Joan of Arc"? |
12736 | Was this well for the novelist? |
12736 | What appears to be the main difference between it and the romantic inheritance from Scott and Hawthorne? |
12736 | What are they all?'' |
12736 | What can be said with regard to it? |
12736 | What has insured its popularity? |
12736 | What is the cause of this to- and- fro of judgment? |
12736 | What is the philosophy unfolded in his representative books? |
12736 | What then are some illustrative creations? |
12736 | What, to illustrate, could be more of the present intellectually than his remarkable sonnet- sequence,"Modern Love"? |
12736 | Who does not find something likable in the Fotheringay and in the Campaigner? |
12736 | Who, in truth, reads epics now-- save in the enforced study of school and college? |
12736 | Why has"Felix Holt"been treated by the critics, as a rule, as of comparatively minor value? |
12736 | Why should it be necessary to miss appreciation of the creator of"Vanity Fair"because one happens to like"David Copperfield"? |
12736 | With all these things in its favor, why has appreciation been so scant? |
12736 | and what was his purpose in satire? |
12736 | does there not lurk the thought that the pseudo- romantic attitude toward Life is full of danger-- in truth, out of the question in modern society?" |
12736 | yes, quite; what can it be? |
15854 | And I said,''Why is this thus? 15854 Is any thing to be seen of the Delaware chief?" |
15854 | Is any thing to be seen? |
15854 | Is it fast to the warlock, or does he carry it above the left ear? |
15854 | Is the rock empty, Judith? |
15854 | Not hear it? 15854 They said,''Doth not like us?'' |
15854 | They then said,''Wilt not marry us?'' 15854 What are the trees saying?" |
15854 | What is''t?--what is''t, Judith? |
15854 | What now, Judith?--what next? 15854 Where does he wear his hawk''s feather?" |
15854 | Why should not we also enjoy an original relation to the universe? 15854 Are the very clods where we tread entitled to this ardent preference because they are greener? 15854 At Genoa he drives the_ cicerone_ to despair by pretending never to have heard of Christopher Columbus, and inquiring innocently,Is he dead?" |
15854 | Do I not distinguish that heavy and horrible beating of her heart? |
15854 | Do put your accents in the proper spot: Do n''t, let me beg you, do n''t say''How?'' |
15854 | Do the Mingoes still follow, or are we quit of''em for the present?" |
15854 | Do you remember any act of enormous folly, at which you would blush, even in the remotest cavern of the earth? |
15854 | From the tops of mountains they appear like smooth- shaven lawns; yet whither shall we walk but in this taller grass? |
15854 | Have I not heard her footstep on the stair? |
15854 | Her hair is almost gray; Why will she train that winter curl In such a spring- like way? |
15854 | How can she lay her glasses down, And say she reads as well, When, through a double convex lens, She just makes out to spell? |
15854 | Is it a narrow affection for the spot where a man was born? |
15854 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
15854 | Is she not hurrying to upbraid me for my haste? |
15854 | It was the precise point at which Sidney Smith had uttered that bitter taunt in the_ Edinburgh Review_,''Who reads an American book?'' |
15854 | O, whither shall I fly? |
15854 | One day a feller-- a stranger in the camp he was-- come acrost him with his box and says:"''What might it be that you''ve got in the box?'' |
15854 | Said I not that my senses were acute? |
15854 | Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side? |
15854 | Then they said,"Wilt not marry us?" |
15854 | They said,"Doth not like us?" |
15854 | To him who, deadly hurt, agen Flashed on afore the charge''s thunder, Tippin''with fire the bolt of men That rived the rebel line asunder?" |
15854 | Was there no meaning in the live repose of the valley behind the mill, and which Homer or Shakespeare could not re- form for me in words? |
15854 | Well, what''s_ he_ good for?'' |
15854 | What could I do? |
15854 | What could a poor old orphan do? |
15854 | What if Remorse should assume the features of an injured friend? |
15854 | What if he should stand at your bed''s foot, in the likeness of a corpse, with a bloody stain upon the shroud? |
15854 | What if the fiend should come in woman''s garments, with a pale beauty amid sin and desolation, and lie down by your side? |
15854 | What is patriotism? |
15854 | What is the reason of this thusness?" |
15854 | What is the reason of this thusness?'' |
15854 | What links of human affection brings she over the sea? |
15854 | What was It?, 186. |
15854 | What was it that Nature would say? |
15854 | What worlds in the yet unformed Occident May come refined with accents that are ours?" |
15854 | What would human life be without forests, those natural cities? |
15854 | What''s that you say?-- Why, dern it!--sho!-- No? |
15854 | Whence comes this?" |
15854 | Where are the flowers, the fair young flowers, That lately sprang and stood In brighter light and softer airs, A beauteous sisterhood? |
15854 | Whither,''midst falling dew, While glow the heavens with the last steps of day, Far through their rosy depths dost thou pursue Thy solitary way? |
15854 | Why should not we have a poetry and philosophy of insight and not of tradition, and a religion by revelation to us and not the history of theirs?" |
15854 | Will she not be here anon? |
15854 | Would you not think the bases of the earth rising beneath it? |
15854 | Would you not think the foundation of the deep had given way? |
15854 | You ask what I mean? |
15854 | [ 1] On being asked, Whence is the flower? |
15854 | and''Wherefore did I come?''" |
15854 | for''What?'' |
15854 | said my grandsire, as he shook Some powder in his pan,"What could this lovely creature do Against a desperate man?" |
15854 | what is this? |
2390 | Well might Braddock exclaim with his last breath:"Who would have thought it? |
21090 | And I said,''Why is this thus? 21090 Mais ou sont les neiges d''antan?" |
21090 | They said,''Doth not like us?'' 21090 They then said,''Wilt not marry us?'' |
21090 | What are the trees saying? |
21090 | What though the field be lost? 21090 Where are the snows of yester year? |
21090 | Why should not we also enjoy an original relation to the universe? 21090 At Genoa he drives the cicerone to despair by pretending never to have heard of Christopher Columbus, and inquiring innocently,Is he dead?" |
21090 | Do put your accents in the proper spot; Do n''t, let me beg you, do n''t say''How?'' |
21090 | How Sleep the Brave? |
21090 | In such verses as Carew''s_ Encouragements to a Lover_, and George Wither''s_ The Manly Heart_--"If she be not so to me, What care I how fair she be?" |
21090 | In the_ Europeans_, 1879, and an{ 588}_ International Episode_, 1878, he has reversed the process, bringing Old Word[ Transcriber''s note: World?] |
21090 | Is it a narrow affection for the spot where a man was born? |
21090 | It was the precise point at which Sidney Smith had uttered that bitter taunt in the_ Edinburgh Review_,''Who reads an American book?'' |
21090 | Or are ye very Nature, the goddéss, That have depainted with your heavenly hand This garden full of flowrës as they stand?" |
21090 | So young and so untender? |
21090 | Thou bender of the thistle of Lora; why, thou breeze of the valley, hast thou left mine ear? |
21090 | To him who, deadly hurt, agen Flashed on afore the charge''s thunder, Tippin''with fire the bolt of men That rived the rebel line asunder?" |
21090 | What Was it? |
21090 | What frail man Dares lift his hand against it? |
21090 | What is patriotism? |
21090 | What is the reason of this thusness?'' |
21090 | What''s that you say?-- Why, dern it!--sho!-- No? |
21090 | Who, even after a single reading or representation, ever forgets Falstaff, or Shylock, or King Lear? |
21090 | Whom do you love best in the world? |
21090 | Why Come Ye Not to Courte? |
21090 | Why should not we have a poetry and philosophy of insight and not of tradition, and a religion by revelation to us and not the history of theirs?" |
21090 | and''Wherefore did I come?''" |
21090 | for''What?'' |
13029 | ''Where,''cried Reginald Fitzurse,''is the traitor, Thomas Becket?'' |
13029 | And lest they come weeping, accursed, and alone, let us ask, how shall we recognize them? |
13029 | And they said:''Is not this Joseph''s son?''" |
13029 | Are the art schools and the art museums making themselves ready to assimilate a new art form? |
13029 | Are the distributors willing to send out a musician with each film? |
13029 | Are the institutions with a purely literary theory of life going to meet the need? |
13029 | But what, more specifically, are prophet- wizards? |
13029 | By what means shall we block it in? |
13029 | Can you not attain to that informal understanding in pictorial delineations of such people? |
13029 | Having read thus far, why not close the book and go round the corner to a photoplay theatre? |
13029 | He brings to one''s mind the tearful book, much loved in childhood, Parted at the Altar, or Why Was it Thus? |
13029 | Here are two bits from his discourse:--"Strike the dialogue from Molière''s Tartuffe, and what audience would bear its mere stage- business? |
13029 | How are they going to make a practical national distribution of the accompaniment? |
13029 | How are we to step in to the possession of such a destiny? |
13029 | How could memories of Ladies''Entrance squalor be made into Castles in Granada or Carcassonne? |
13029 | How could these people reconstruct the torn carpets and tin cans and waste- paper of their lives into mythology? |
13029 | How does public opinion grip the journalist? |
13029 | How far may it go in cultivating concerted emotion in the now ungoverned crowd? |
13029 | If you are so disposed, consider your answers to these questions: What play or part of a play given in this theatre did you like most to- day? |
13029 | Is it not possible to have a Michelangelo of photoplay sculpture? |
13029 | Is it too much to expect that some American prophet- wizard of the future will give us this film in the spirit of an Egyptian priest? |
13029 | Is there a reform worth while that can not be embodied and enforced by a builder''s invention? |
13029 | Is this also sculpture? |
13029 | Is this photoplay physician such a one? |
13029 | Or between Shakespeare''s Lear and any one else''s Lear? |
13029 | Or what is the type of institution that will ultimately take the position of leadership in culture through this new universal instrument? |
13029 | Prospective author- producer, do you remember Landor''s Imaginary Conversations, and Lang''s Letters to Dead Authors? |
13029 | Prospective author- producer, why not spend a deal of energy on the photoplay successors of the puppet- plays? |
13029 | Should we not look for him in the fulness of time? |
13029 | So without too much theorizing, why not erect our new America and move into it? |
13029 | Suppose the seated majesty of Moses should rise, what would be the quality of the action? |
13029 | There came magicians, saying,"Where is he that is born king of the Jews, for we have seen his star in the east and have come to worship him?" |
13029 | Though no photoplay tableau has yet approximated the brush of Inness, why not attempt to lead Jeanne through an Inness landscape? |
13029 | What becomes of the difference between Shakespeare and Sheridan Knowles in the film? |
13029 | What do I mean by New Arabia? |
13029 | What is the best picture you have ever seen anywhere? |
13029 | What is the high quixotic splendid call? |
13029 | What materials should the photoplay figures suggest? |
13029 | What pictures, seen here this month, shall we bring back?" |
13029 | What possibilities lie in this art, once it is understood and developed, to plant new conceptions of civic and national idealism? |
13029 | What shall be done in especial by this generation of idealists, whose flags rise and go down, whose battle line wavers and breaks a thousand times? |
13029 | What the least? |
13029 | When the use of alcohol is treason, what will become of those all but unbroken lines of slum saloons? |
13029 | When you are appraising a new film, ask yourself:"Is this motion as rapid, as godlike, as the sweep of the wings of the Samothracian?" |
13029 | Where is the inspired camera that will record something of what Inness beheld? |
13029 | Where will the money come from? |
13029 | Where will we find our precedents for such a cavalcade? |
13029 | Where will we get our story? |
13029 | Who do we mean by The Prophet- Wizard? |
13029 | Who will endow the local photoplay and the Imagist photoplay? |
13029 | Who will endow the successors of the present woman''s suffrage film, and other great crusading films? |
13029 | Who will see that the public documents and university researches take on the form of motion pictures? |
13029 | Who will take the first great measures to insure motion picture splendors in the church? |
13029 | Why are our managers so mechanical? |
13029 | Why can not our weekly story be henceforth some great plan that is being worked out, whose history will delight us? |
13029 | Why do men prefer the photoplay to the drinking place? |
13029 | Why do the people love Mary? |
13029 | Why do the people love Mary? |
13029 | Why do they flatten out at the moment the fancy of the tiniest reader of fairy- tales begins to be alive? |
13029 | Why does the audience keep coming to this type of photoplay if neither lust, love, hate, nor hunger is adequately conveyed? |
13029 | Why not ballot on the matter in hand? |
13029 | Why not face this idiosyncrasy of the camera and make the non- human object the hero indeed? |
13029 | Why not have the most beautiful scenes in front of the theatres, instead of those alleged to be the most thrilling? |
13029 | Why not rest the fevered and wandering eye, rather than make one more attempt to take it by force? |
13029 | Why not this for the adventure of the American architects? |
13029 | Why not this new splendor? |
13029 | Why should we not consider ourselves a deathless Panama- Pacific Exposition on a coast- to- coast scale? |
13029 | Why was this model of Notre Dame made with such exquisite pains? |
13029 | Why would you be imitators of these leaders when you might be creators in a new medium? |
13029 | Why? |
13029 | Will this land furthest west be the first to capture the inner spirit of this newest and most curious of the arts? |
13029 | Would not their action be as heroic as their quietness? |
13029 | Young artist in the audience, does it pass you by? |
10765 | ''Are you for Mexico and the Insurgents?'' 10765 ''Will five minutes be sufficient?''" |
10765 | ''You will allow me a minute to make my peace with heaven?'' 10765 Are you all clear forward there?" |
10765 | Did Captain Boone tell you to steal our horses? |
10765 | Do you know William Stewart? |
10765 | Do you love gin? 10765 How many men are there in Kentucky?" |
10765 | How were we to proceed to this drawing by lot? 10765 I never knew an Indian squaw so near the hut before?" |
10765 | Is she dead? 10765 Mr.----, I presume?" |
10765 | Nothing else? |
10765 | The same, sir; wo n''t you walk in? |
10765 | The sun,he murmured,"is killing me by its rays; can not you carry me into the shade?" |
10765 | Then I guess we''d better do it had n''t we? |
10765 | What do you say, boys? 10765 What is your cargo?" |
10765 | What is your own name? |
10765 | What? |
10765 | Where is the father of my children? 10765 Who are you, that thus presumes to intrude among gentlemen, without invitation?" |
10765 | Who are you? 10765 Who can the fellow be that was pursued?" |
10765 | Whose voice was that? |
10765 | Why do you think the poor woman came here? |
10765 | Why, do n''t you know me? |
10765 | ''Are you a good, moral man, of well- regulated habits?'' |
10765 | ''To whom, if I may be so bold as to inquire?'' |
10765 | ''What are we going to do?'' |
10765 | ''When do you wish to leave?'' |
10765 | A rattling of sticks, and the cries of several kind? |
10765 | Are you ready to proceed to draw the last lottery at which one of us will ever exist?" |
10765 | At this moment, a young lady of pale, care- worn countenance entered the parlor, and, rising, I said,"Miss Eveline----, I believe?" |
10765 | But now, alone and in utter darkness, how was he to attempt such a perilous feat? |
10765 | But what could all the skill of the ship- builder avail in a situation like ours? |
10765 | But what is that? |
10765 | By means of the wet finger, like infants; or by head and tail, like the school boys? |
10765 | Could I throw my body flat, and prevent myself from sinking deeper? |
10765 | Do you not perceive that he is crazy?" |
10765 | He made no reply; and, on repeating the question, said angrily,"How should I know? |
10765 | His first question was"my child?" |
10765 | I am sure I do, and the rascal knows it-- don''t you, Bravo? |
10765 | I''m your poor William-- you loved me much-- where are you? |
10765 | Is_ he_ among them, or has he been swallowed up by the waters?" |
10765 | Judge Webb took the paper, and wrote a question:"Dear sir, will you be so obliging as to inform us what is your business with the present meeting?" |
10765 | Might it not be for convenience in dispatching us, that we had been removed? |
10765 | Might not her friends, at that moment, be anxiously searching for her? |
10765 | Morton wrote again:"Who will be your second?" |
10765 | Mr. Marsh raised himself upon his arm, and demanded in Arabic,''What do you want?'' |
10765 | On the other hand, if they were her friends, why did they not relieve her? |
10765 | Shall we lick''em?" |
10765 | Shall we take those whales?" |
10765 | She turned slightly pale, and asked,''when?'' |
10765 | Should I hoist my handkerchief and try to lure them up? |
10765 | Should I imitate their call? |
10765 | Should they abandon their horses and cross on the raft, or remain with their horses and brave the consequence? |
10765 | Should they move up or down the river, or remain where they were? |
10765 | The turn is to be made-- can the horse recover himself? |
10765 | Then why should they hesitate? |
10765 | They hastened to the spot; with heart- rending cries and through tears alternately of despair and hope, they exclaimed,"Are they_ all_ there?" |
10765 | This was done, and the ship came up handsomely, head to wind,"See the cable tiers all clear-- what water is there?" |
10765 | To whom? |
10765 | Was I suffering a retribution of God? |
10765 | Was it an enemy I had before my eyes? |
10765 | What d''ye say, now, chummies? |
10765 | What was to be done? |
10765 | What was to be done? |
10765 | Whence had it come? |
10765 | Who can tell the whirlwind of thought that rushed through his brain in the brief moment that he hung above that yawning gulf? |
10765 | Who does not love Bravo? |
10765 | Who is he? |
10765 | Who is he?" |
10765 | Who knows? |
10765 | Would not one word suffice to dispel their solicitude, and restore the lost one to their arms? |
10765 | and what is it?" |
10765 | can you not return?'' |
10765 | exclaimed Judge Webb,"is it possible Colonel Morton, that you intend to fight that man? |
10765 | where are you?" |
23798 | ''Did Colonel Boone,''inquired the chief,''tell you to steal our horses?'' 23798 Could there be happiness or comfort in such dwellings and such a state of society? |
23798 | But by connivance of the authorities, only a few general questions were asked, such as:"Do you believe in Almighty God? |
23798 | But who would undertake such a mission? |
23798 | I know that your own circumstances are critical; but are we to be wholly forgotten? |
23798 | Was it a meteor? |
23798 | Was it an optical illusion? |
23798 | Was it light from the land? |
23798 | What then must it have been to have experienced it in bodily presence, and to have shared in all its terrible dangers? |
23798 | Who is there to mourn for Logan?" |
23798 | in Jesus Christ our Saviour? |
23798 | in the Holy Evangelists?" |
23798 | in the Holy Trinity? |
23798 | in the true Apostolic Church? |
22461 | Are laws of this kind passed merely to excite odium and remain a dead letter? |
22461 | But what did you mean to take? |
22461 | Can this be Lot''s wife? |
22461 | Then you mean that we shall construe it our own way? |
22461 | What are the eastern bounds of Louisiana? |
22461 | What assurance can you give that the States will agree to a treaty? |
22461 | What do we get? |
22461 | What have you to give us as reciprocity for the benefit of going to our islands? |
22461 | What have you to give us in exchange for this and that? |
22461 | What is independence? |
22461 | What is your answer? |
22461 | What powers? |
22461 | What, then,he asked,"is the professed result? |
22461 | ''Pray, sir,''I rejoined,''what was that?'' |
22461 | A third matter of policy had yet to be determined: what powers had Congress over the new territory? |
22461 | Adams was defeated, to be sure, but was Thomas Jefferson elected? |
22461 | After they had practiced thrift and met their obligations, should they, forsooth, now aid their less provident sisters? |
22461 | And for all these concessions what had been gained? |
22461 | At the face value of the paper, or at the price for which it had been purchased? |
22461 | But what if a State passed a law violating the obligation of contracts? |
22461 | But what were the bounds of Louisiana? |
22461 | Could the United States, then, recognize the colonies of Spain as independent republics without emerging from its traditional isolation? |
22461 | If France was bent on possessing and holding Louisiana, might she not make concessions for the sake of retaining the friendship of the United States? |
22461 | If such prosperity could follow in the wake of war, what commercial gains might not be expected in the piping times of peace? |
22461 | Is he capable? |
22461 | Is he faithful to the Constitution? |
22461 | Might not a treaty be secured which would open up the British West India trade? |
22461 | Might not the courts adjudge that the decrees had not been repealed_ pro forma_? |
22461 | Might not votes for one project be traded for the other? |
22461 | Should the capital be located on the Potomac, as Maryland and the Southern States wished, or somewhere in Pennsylvania? |
22461 | The promise to evacuate the Western posts? |
22461 | The vital question was: how were the present holders to be paid? |
22461 | Upon whom would his mantle fall? |
22461 | Upon whom would his mantle fall? |
22461 | Was not representative government one of these privileges? |
22461 | What do we give? |
22461 | What is that Union?... |
22461 | What was the measure which was accepted almost without discussion on"the high responsibility"of the President? |
22461 | Who, besides a Tory, could have foreseen, or a Briton, predicted them?" |
22461 | Why tinker with a constitution which had hardly been tried? |
22461 | Would the Virginia representatives abandon their opposition to assumption for the sake of locating the capital on the banks of the Potomac? |
16150 | And Daisy? |
16150 | And does no one care for her but her husband? |
16150 | And who will go with you? 16150 Are you through with your shopping?" |
16150 | Can it be I was ever that silly little fool? |
16150 | Dear friend, pardon me, wo n''t you, for the liberty I have taken since knowing your secret? 16150 Do you think Guy will die?" |
16150 | Do? |
16150 | Guy-- Guy-- what is it? 16150 Has she suffered for care-- a woman''s care, I mean?" |
16150 | He does n''t expect it now, or want it,came huskily from Tom, while Daisy quickly asked:"Does n''t he?" |
16150 | Is it true, Guy? 16150 Is it your heart, Guy? |
16150 | Is she very sick? |
16150 | Miss McDonald,I said, laying great stress on the name,"why are you here, and how did you dare come?" |
16150 | Oh, Guy, how can I give it up? 16150 Oh, is n''t she dood, and do n''t you love her, papa?" |
16150 | Only a paper!--is there nothing more? |
16150 | The son of her husband''s father? |
16150 | What date is the paper? |
16150 | What did you call the gentleman? |
16150 | What do you mean? |
16150 | What does the child mean? 16150 What is it? |
16150 | What it is, Guy, and where is Daisy? |
16150 | Who''ll be our mamma now? 16150 Will this insure me against disease?" |
16150 | Yes, yes; it''s very hot here, is n''t it? 16150 Almost his first coherent question to me after his reason came back was:Where is Daisy? |
16150 | And I was glad then, when Daisy, alarmed perhaps by something in the tone of my voice, repeated her question:"But do you think he will die? |
16150 | And why should I-- an old maid like me, who never loved anyone but Guy? |
16150 | Are there no deaths or marriages?" |
16150 | Are there no poor at your door to be fed, no hungry little ones to be cared for out of the abundance which God has only loaned you for this purpose? |
16150 | Are there no wretched homes which you can make happier, no aching hearts which a kind word would cheer? |
16150 | Are you sick?" |
16150 | But Pauline was too intent on the name of Thornton to hear what Daisy said, and she asked:"Is Mr. Thornton your friend?" |
16150 | Call her, will you?" |
16150 | Could she ever learn to love him? |
16150 | Did you know he had called her Daisy for you? |
16150 | Do n''t you remember the text and the little kirk where we heard it preached from? |
16150 | Do n''t you see him? |
16150 | Do you know Tom?" |
16150 | Do you know, Julia?" |
16150 | Do you think it is your heart?" |
16150 | Going up to Guy, she knelt down beside him, and, laying her arms across his lap, said to him:"What is it, Guy? |
16150 | Had Mr. Thornton been to breakfast? |
16150 | Has she heard any bad news from home?" |
16150 | Have you fresh vaccine?" |
16150 | He did call and found his patient worse, and the next day he asked Madame Lafarcade:"Has she friends in this country? |
16150 | He did not reproach me when I told him about turning her out in the rain; he only said:"Poor Daisy, did she get very wet? |
16150 | His text was:"Why stand ye here all the day idle?" |
16150 | How do I know what humors may be lurking in the blood? |
16150 | How old is you? |
16150 | Is he a villain, and did he know all the time that I was ruining myself? |
16150 | Is he very bad?" |
16150 | Is she here, or has she been here? |
16150 | Leave us at once; do n''t you see? |
16150 | Must we let her die alone?" |
16150 | Not the doctor, surely, for he always entered unannounced, and who else dared to come there? |
16150 | Ought he to join her life with his? |
16150 | Should he accept the sacrifice? |
16150 | Try me, Tom, wo n''t you?" |
16150 | Where am I?" |
16150 | Where did I leave off? |
16150 | Who was it that sought entrance to that death- laden and disease- poisoned room? |
16150 | Why did n''t you, Guy? |
16150 | Why need she thrust upon me the name I used to bear?" |
16150 | Will oo?" |
16150 | Will you come to me again as my wife?" |
16150 | Will you, Daisy? |
16150 | Would I show her to her room with Zillah, her maid? |
16150 | You know Daisy, do n''t you? |
16150 | do n''t you know?" |
16150 | let me bathe it; shall I?" |
16150 | she repeated, until at last a meaning dawned upon her, and she said:"Then he must be her brother- in- law; but why did n''t she say so? |
16150 | what is it you wish to say to me?" |
16150 | will you be my wife once more? |
15866 | And did you get left? |
15866 | But of course the thought at once occurs to us, How can we_ be_ considering the high cost of the necessaries of life? 15866 Do you begin to feel rested?" |
15866 | Give me leave, mister? |
15866 | How am I to get things in their right perspective? 15866 How do you make that out?" |
15866 | Who shall rule? |
15866 | And what would it be for? |
15866 | Are we tending to a Plutocracy, or can a real Democracy hold its own? |
15866 | At last he asked, hesitatingly,"What do you think of it? |
15866 | But I stumbled over the question, in regard to certain Commandments,"What are the reasons annexed?" |
15866 | But how does the British Empire hold together? |
15866 | But how is it to be distributed? |
15866 | But in so much as we were bound to find him out sometime, shall we quarrel with Dickens because we were enabled to do so in the first chapter? |
15866 | But is the remedy to be found in the restriction of immigration? |
15866 | But it must have occurred to some one to ask,"What will happen when the Oregons and Californias are filled up?" |
15866 | But we may ask, When these diverse peoples come together on common ground, what sort of man do they choose as their symbol? |
15866 | But what of yesterday? |
15866 | But when one is asked to warm his enthusiasm by means of the Roman monuments, he naturally asks,''Enthusiasm over what?'' |
15866 | Can it get itself obeyed? |
15866 | Could any better description be given of the kind of man whom Americans delight to honor? |
15866 | Did not all Lilliput laugh over the discovery of Gulliver? |
15866 | Do you remember that story of Jules Verne about a voyage to the moon? |
15866 | Does it seem to you to be cogent?" |
15866 | Does the charm remain? |
15866 | Druids or pre- Druids? |
15866 | Even when it is admitted that when considered in a large way the change is for the better, the question arises, Who is to pay for it? |
15866 | Having traversed the period from King William to the dwellers in the Halls of Tara, what more natural than to take a further plunge into the past? |
15866 | His ready- made world does not please him-- why should it? |
15866 | Honest Touchstone, in trying to reconcile the different points of view, blurted out the test question,"Hast any philosophy in thee, Shepherd?" |
15866 | How can Worship be personified? |
15866 | How can they? |
15866 | How can this machinery be controlled and used for truly human ends? |
15866 | How do the old scenes affect us? |
15866 | How shall we answer the prophets of ill? |
15866 | I ask you to remember two letters-- E and N._ What_ does the country expect this Federation to do? |
15866 | If Seattle should cease to grow while we are looking at it, what should we do then? |
15866 | If Tiberius must exhibit his colossal inhumanity, could he have anywhere in all the world chosen a better spot? |
15866 | If a person possessed a cheerful disposition, you should ask,"How did he get it?" |
15866 | If that was not happiness, what was it? |
15866 | If the Home Rule Bill be enacted into law, will Ulster submit to be ruled by a Catholic majority? |
15866 | If you do n''t feel that you can afford to make such a heavy investment as I have suggested, why do n''t you put your material into a short story? |
15866 | In the light of such facts as these, who can be a pessimist? |
15866 | In your judgment is it organic or functional?" |
15866 | Is n''t there a little of a cheaper quality that they could show you? |
15866 | Is not the motto of the true knight,_ Ich dien_? |
15866 | Is there any symptom of decadence more sure than when the moral temperature suddenly rises above normal? |
15866 | Is this an evidence of a cynic humor in the blood, or is it a manifestation of childish optimism? |
15866 | Is this still to be a land of opportunity? |
15866 | North Ovid is real, and so would be the apartment- house; but what of it? |
15866 | Said he:"Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard his spots? |
15866 | Shall Ireland any longer submit to be ruled by the English? |
15866 | Should the abutters be assessed for betterments or should they sue for damages? |
15866 | Should we push on to it? |
15866 | Suppose the pagan Maxentius had triumphed over Constantine, what difference would it have made in the picture? |
15866 | THE CONTEMPORANEOUSNESS OF ROME I"You here, Bagster?" |
15866 | That the Common has been saved many times before is true; but is that any reason why we should falter now? |
15866 | The Man on Horseback will appear, and what shall we do then? |
15866 | The question is--"Can rules or tutors educate The semigod whom we await?" |
15866 | The question which disturbs us is, Ought we to have done so? |
15866 | There they are, and here you are, and what are you going to do about them?" |
15866 | Under those circumstances what did Ulphilas do? |
15866 | Was it fear or love? |
15866 | Was there ever a greater contrast between an earthly paradise and abounding sinfulness? |
15866 | Well, what do you say to Cavour? |
15866 | Were they still under the influence of the glacial period and attempting to imitate the wild doings of Nature? |
15866 | What are the"reasons annexed"to all this uproar? |
15866 | What can a mere Act of Parliament do when confronted by such a combination as that? |
15866 | What is Gradgrind to us or we to Gradgrind? |
15866 | What is it about a stamp act that arouses such fierceness of resistance? |
15866 | What right has Sir Lionel to lay down the law for Hodge? |
15866 | What shall be done with the next ninety millions? |
15866 | What should we see when we got there? |
15866 | What spurred them on to their feats of prodigious industry? |
15866 | What then?" |
15866 | What''s the use of being here unless you are here in the spirit? |
15866 | Where was the stern little city which Calvin taught and ruled? |
15866 | Where will it find the troops to coerce the province? |
15866 | Which Boniface? |
15866 | Who is to get the benefit of these economies? |
15866 | Who were the worshipers? |
15866 | Why ca n''t I feel that way about the great events that happened down there?" |
15866 | Why should he do so when there was no Scripture for it? |
15866 | Why should not Hodge have a right to have his point of view considered? |
15866 | Why should not the sinners have the same means of identification? |
15866 | Why should they do this? |
15866 | Will she pay that three- pence? |
15866 | Will the Labor party be a little less noisy and insistent in its demands? |
15866 | Will the masses of the people submit any longer to the existing inequalities in political representation? |
15866 | Will the women of England kindly wait a little till their demands can be considered in a dignified way? |
15866 | Will you allow me, as one in the same line, to indulge in a little criticism? |
15866 | _ When_ does the country expect you to do it? |
26173 | BASIL BURTON VANDEVER,( 108), son of John Vandever,( 26), was born May 4, 1848; married Feb. 7, 18--, Florence Emma Cruea(?). |
26173 | FRANCIS(? |
26173 | JESSIE(? |
26173 | May 4, 1848; m. Florence E. Gruea(?). |
26173 | SHADRACH BURTON VANDEVER,( 109), son of Joshua Vandever,( 26), was born July 4, 1853(? |
16332 | Are General Buell and yourself in concert? |
16332 | How can he oppose the advances of slavery? 16332 If the territorial legislature refuses to act,"he inquired"will you act? |
16332 | What does this mean? |
16332 | ''Are you now in feeling as well as judgment glad that you are married as you are?'' |
16332 | And as it is to so go at all events, may we not agree that the sooner the better? |
16332 | Are you not over- cautious when you assume that you can not do what the enemy is constantly doing? |
16332 | At Steubenville:"If the majority should not rule, who would be the judge? |
16332 | But how? |
16332 | But if the negro is a man, is it not to that extent a total destruction of self- government to say that he too shall not govern himself? |
16332 | But what next? |
16332 | Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can make laws? |
16332 | Can not something be done even in Illinois? |
16332 | Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens, than laws can among friends? |
16332 | Can we not come together for the future? |
16332 | Can you not help me a little in this matter in your end of the vineyard?" |
16332 | Change positions with the enemy, and think you not he would break your communication with Richmond within the next twenty- four hours? |
16332 | Could even successful argument undo those victories or call back to life the brave American soldiers who had shed their blood to win them? |
16332 | Could you not break him?" |
16332 | David Dudley Field, the great lawyer, who escorted him to the platform; William Cullen Bryant, the great poet, who presided over the meeting? |
16332 | Did we brave all then to falter now?--now, when that same enemy is wavering, dissevered, and belligerent? |
16332 | Do you believe you could bear that patiently? |
16332 | Does not your plan involve a greatly larger expenditure of time and money than mine?" |
16332 | Failures? |
16332 | For instance, do you suppose that I should ever have got into notice if I had waited to be hunted up and pushed forward by older men? |
16332 | He dwells on his disappointment at her changed appearance, and continues:"But what could I do? |
16332 | How would he impress the great editor Horace Greeley, who sat among the invited guests? |
16332 | If it pass laws hostile to slavery, will you annul them, and substitute laws favoring slavery in their stead?" |
16332 | If it pass unfriendly acts, will you pass friendly? |
16332 | In a morning walk with a friend, waving his arm toward the white tents of the great army, he asked:"Do you know what that is?" |
16332 | In answer to his question,"What instructions?" |
16332 | In case of disaster, would not a retreat be more difficult by your plan than mine?" |
16332 | In fact, would it not be less valuable in this, that it would break no great line of the enemy''s communications, while mine would?" |
16332 | In the midst of a bombardment at Fort Donelson, why could not a gunboat run up and destroy the bridge at Clarksville? |
16332 | Is it known that any such gentleman of character would accept a place in the cabinet? |
16332 | Is it possible, then, to make that intercourse more advantageous or more satisfactory after separation than before? |
16332 | It is not,''Can any of us imagine better?'' |
16332 | May I assume the command? |
16332 | Object whatsoever is possible, still the question recurs,''Can we do better?'' |
16332 | Or would you prosecute it in future with elder- stalk squirts charged with rose- water? |
16332 | Our political problem now is,''Can we as a nation continue together permanently-- forever-- half slave and half free?'' |
16332 | Should you not claim to be at least his equal in prowess, and act upon the claim?... |
16332 | Slavery thrust the sword of civil war at the heart of the nation? |
16332 | The Almighty had drawn a line on this continent, on the one side of which the soil must be cultivated by slave labor? |
16332 | The government was assailed? |
16332 | The labor, the thought, the responsibility, the strain of intellect and anguish of soul that he gave to this great task, who can measure? |
16332 | Was he then, after all, not to be President? |
16332 | Was it possible to lose the nation and yet preserve the Constitution? |
16332 | Was patriotism dead? |
16332 | Was the Constitution waste paper? |
16332 | Was the Union gone? |
16332 | What instructions?" |
16332 | What officer would be willing and competent to play a better part? |
16332 | What was their legal status, and how should they be disposed of? |
16332 | What was to be the type, the character, the language of this speaker? |
16332 | Where is such a judge to be found? |
16332 | Wherein is a victory more certain by your plan than mine?" |
16332 | Wherein is a victory more valuable by your plan than mine?" |
16332 | Whom should he appoint as McClellan''s successor? |
16332 | Why can you not reach there before him, unless you admit that he is more than your equal on a march? |
16332 | Will you not embrace it? |
16332 | Will you not, for me, take that place? |
16332 | Would that be right?" |
16332 | Would you deal lighter blows rather than heavier ones? |
16332 | Would you drop the war where it is? |
16332 | Would you give up the contest, leaving any available means unapplied? |
16332 | Your rank is one grade too high to be ordered to it; but will you not serve the country and oblige me by taking it voluntarily?" |
16332 | but,''Can we all do better?'' |
16332 | exclaimed Cameron,"where are they to come from?" |
22994 | And where,he asked,"would all this power and money center? |
22994 | But these issues are not with the same imperious"Which?" |
22994 | But what constitutional historian has made any adequate attempt to interpret political facts by the light of these social areas and changes? |
22994 | But where is the proof of this? |
22994 | Can these ideals of individualism and democracy be reconciled and applied to the twentieth century type of civilization? |
22994 | Can you hem in such a territory as that? |
22994 | Did"Populistic"tendencies appear in this frontier, and were there grievances which explained these tendencies? |
22994 | Have we not here an illustration of what is possible and necessary for the historian? |
22994 | How adjust the old conceptions to the changed conditions of modern life? |
22994 | How did the frontiersman differ from the man of the coast? |
22994 | How far was this first frontier a field for the investment of eastern capital and for political control by it? |
22994 | How shall we conserve what was best in pioneer ideals? |
22994 | In other words, has the United States itself an original contribution to make to the history of society? |
22994 | Said Duquesne to the Iroquois,"Are you ignorant of the difference between the king of England and the king of France? |
22994 | Sir, can it be pretended that the patriots of that day would for one moment have listened to it? |
22994 | The Mississippi Valley is asking,"What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?" |
22994 | The Northwest extends eastward to the base of the Alleghany Mountains, and does not all of western New York lie westward of the Alleghany Mountains? |
22994 | The people before me,--who are you but New York men, while you are men of the Northwest?" |
22994 | The result is stated by a writer in_ De Bow''s Review_ in 1852 in these words:--"What is New Orleans now? |
22994 | Think, here_ Should this be done any more?_ We read of Balaam, in Num. |
22994 | This called out Burke''s splendid protest: If you stopped your grants, what would be the consequence? |
22994 | Were there evidences of antagonism between the frontier and the settled, property- holding classes of the coast? |
22994 | What effects followed from the trader''s frontier? |
22994 | What has it been in American life? |
22994 | What is the West? |
22994 | What more effective agency is there for the cultivation of the seed wheat of ideals than the university? |
22994 | What were America''s"morning wishes"? |
22994 | Whence comes all the inspiration of free soil which spreads itself with such cheerful voices over all these plains? |
22994 | Where are her dreams of greatness and glory? |
22994 | Where can we find a more promising body of sowers of the grain? |
22994 | Why was it that the Indian trader passed so rapidly across the continent? |
11146 | Be you Eliza? |
11146 | Do your parents like it there? |
11146 | How can we provide for ourselves and these little sisters? |
11146 | How soon can we get there? |
11146 | What next? |
11146 | Where is Elitha? |
11146 | Ah, how could we believe it? |
11146 | And had I not heard lonely miners tell of times when they gladly would have walked ten miles to shake hands and talk a few moments with a child? |
11146 | And would peace and happiness come to us there? |
11146 | Another asked,"How do you like him?" |
11146 | Away where? |
11146 | Be they well, and doing well?'' |
11146 | But on one sheet what can I say? |
11146 | CHAPTER XIII A FATEFUL CABIN-- MRS. MURPHY GIVES MOTHERLY COMFORT-- THE GREAT STORM-- HALF A BISCUIT-- ARRIVAL OF THIRD RELIEF--"WHERE IS MY BOY?" |
11146 | Did I look old fashioned? |
11146 | Did I not remind him of his own little girl? |
11146 | Do n''t you remember? |
11146 | Do n''t you think it would be better for you to live with your sister, and grandma could have some real German children to live here? |
11146 | Do you think there was ever colder, stronger winds than them that whistled and howled around our camp in the Sierras?" |
11146 | Does not each succeeding day''s entry in that journal disclose the party''s forgetfulness of its declared mission to the mountains? |
11146 | Dost thou not remember, I told thee that I would take care of everything until thy return, and then would not be a burden to thee longer? |
11146 | Had she not sent me away to save me, and asked God, our Heavenly Father, to take care of me? |
11146 | Hard feelings or ill will we have none against you; and why should I not forgive little troubles that are past and gone by? |
11146 | Harm a hair of that good man''s head? |
11146 | How can I describe that fateful cabin, which was dark as night to us who had come in from the glare of day? |
11146 | How could I believe his cruel words? |
11146 | How could I know that we were heading for the safe slope up the bank where we landed? |
11146 | How did it happen? |
11146 | How was it done? |
11146 | I was certain that brother and sister had come for us, and the absorbing query was,"How did they happen to arrive at this particular time?" |
11146 | I, being the larger, finally asked,"What''s your name?" |
11146 | In amazement she asked,"Eliza, where are you going?" |
11146 | In exuberant delight we exclaimed,"Oh, grandma, how did you learn to make such wonderful things?" |
11146 | In surprise he listened, then asked,"But are n''t you at all anxious to see your sister and little niece?" |
11146 | Is it any wonder that in later years when my mind reverted to those days, I almost questioned my identity? |
11146 | Me go, you go?" |
11146 | Meanwhile how fared it at Starved Camp? |
11146 | She stirred, then drew back, looked up into my face and asked,"Who be you?" |
11146 | Should his wife and babes die while he stood guard over those who would no longer help themselves? |
11146 | Thou wouldst not read all in the letters from thy fine sisters? |
11146 | To drive up the cows? |
11146 | Touched by her wistful gaze, I exclaimed,"Grandma, do n''t you know me?" |
11146 | Was his great effort to come to naught? |
11146 | Was it culpable, or cannibalistic to seek and use the only life- saving means left them? |
11146 | What more could be wished? |
11146 | When I first asked him to make a statement which I could reduce to writing he urged:"What is the use of making a statement? |
11146 | Whereupon Miss Magdalena turned to me and asked,"Do you live in Sacramento, Miss Donner?" |
11146 | Who better than survivors knew the heart- rending circumstances of life and death in those mountain camps? |
11146 | Who can picture my delight when Georgia got back and told me of all she had seen? |
11146 | Who can wonder that I then resolved that,"When I grow to be a woman I shall tell the story of my party so clearly that no one can doubt its truth"? |
11146 | Who could be braver or tenderer than she, as she prepared us to go forth with strangers and live without her? |
11146 | Who could foresee that it would come earlier, fall deeper, and linger longer, that season than for thirty years before? |
11146 | Who could peer into the near future and read between its lines the greater suffering which Mr. Hardcoop had escaped, or the trials in store for us? |
11146 | Who would not have done what Reed did? |
11146 | Why did you not go and speak to him? |
11146 | Will you go there?" |
11146 | With the best of intentions? |
11146 | Would it not have ordered more horses to meet it at the lower end of Bear Valley for the return trip? |
11146 | Would she take us three to live with her on that cattle ranch twenty- five miles by bridle trail from the Fort? |
11146 | Yet, who could say that harm did not emanate from that bar? |
11146 | You do know my children? |
11146 | You want to know how Flower is coming on: had you not better come and see for yourself? |
11146 | can it be?" |
18497 | And my baggage? |
18497 | And prisoners? |
18497 | And the French? |
18497 | Any attempts to repair their wire at night? |
18497 | Are you going out to be strafed at? |
18497 | But would n''t you take some of Germany if you could? |
18497 | Did you see the charge? |
18497 | Do you see why we love France? |
18497 | Have you seen the tanks? |
18497 | How about the dugouts? |
18497 | How much of it? |
18497 | How? |
18497 | On the lances? |
18497 | What are we stopping here for? |
18497 | What did you most want to do when you got out of the fight? |
18497 | What do you think of our patent barrage, now? |
18497 | What is the best time to go out to the front? |
18497 | What is_ Ã la mode_? |
18497 | What kind of a''bus would you like? |
18497 | What part of Canada do you come from? |
18497 | What part of the west? |
18497 | When are you going? |
18497 | Who would n''t surrender when a beast of that kind came up to the door? 18497 Why not go up to the mess and make yourself comfortable, and return about three? |
18497 | Why not? |
18497 | Why not? |
18497 | With your numbers so depleted, was n''t it a question whether or not it was wise for you to attempt to carry out the full plan? |
18497 | Wounded? |
18497 | You actually got some? |
18497 | You''re sure, Captain? |
18497 | Again and again in our mess and in all of the messes at the front, and wherever men gathered the world over, the question, Can the line be broken? |
18497 | And guns?" |
18497 | And personal experiences? |
18497 | And that hateful Trônes Wood? |
18497 | And the future? |
18497 | And their staff? |
18497 | Can you imagine Washington keeping a military secret? |
18497 | Could anybody be alive in Beaumont- Hamel? |
18497 | Could there be higher praise? |
18497 | Did n''t he know that the German infantry was only the other side of the knoll and that two or three score German batteries were in range? |
18497 | Did n''t they know that another twenty yards meant death? |
18497 | Did the Germans know that the tanks were building? |
18497 | England was fighting to save her island, France for the sanctity of her soil, but what was Canada fighting for? |
18497 | Had I ever flown before? |
18497 | Had Sir Douglas Haig made an army equal to the task? |
18497 | Had he something new? |
18497 | Had n''t that battery commander mistaken his directions when he emplaced his howitzers behind a bluff in the old No Man''s Land? |
18497 | Had the French or the Germans something new? |
18497 | Had these men who were mechanically slipping shells into the gun- breeches slept last night or the previous night? |
18497 | Had we taken that, too, as a part of the tidal wave of a broad attack instead of trying to take it piecemeal? |
18497 | Have n''t I also looked across No Man''s Land toward the enemy''s parapet? |
18497 | Have we enough of everything? |
18497 | How many dugouts were still intact and secure refuges for the waiting Germans? |
18497 | If the Canadians did not particularly love the Germans, do you see any reason why the Germans should love the Canadians? |
18497 | If the shell had exploded? |
18497 | If two tanks were to meet in a duel, would they try to ram each other after ineffectually rapping each other with their machine guns? |
18497 | Is he a soldier? |
18497 | It''s jolly out here, is n''t it?" |
18497 | Now, what would a Brass Hat say in such an awkward emergency? |
18497 | Of course, when it takes forty years to make a staff how could the Australians have one that could hold its own with the Germans? |
18497 | One night when a company rose up to the charge the company next in line called out,"Where are you going?" |
18497 | Over in London my friends surprised me by exclaiming,"What are you doing here?" |
18497 | Shall I describe that town on the banks of the Meuse which has been described many times? |
18497 | Should they, the Prussians, be beaten by New Army men? |
18497 | Some people might ask why Canada should be pouring out her blood in Europe; what had Flanders to do with her? |
18497 | Temperament? |
18497 | These Germans had to make a quick decision: Would they try a leap for the dugouts or a leap to the rear? |
18497 | Was Delville Wood worse than High Wood? |
18497 | Was General Byng pleased with his Byng Boys? |
18497 | Was his superior, the army commander, pleased with the Canadians? |
18497 | Was it because of the success of the first gas attack at Ypres that they now placed such reliance in gas shells? |
18497 | Was it dream or reality that you were walking about in the first- line German trenches? |
18497 | Was n''t it merely pounding the graves of a garrison? |
18497 | Was n''t it so always? |
18497 | Was n''t it their place to take their share of the pounding, and did n''t they belong to the guns? |
18497 | Was n''t that part of the experience? |
18497 | Was n''t this bombardment threshing straw which had long since yielded its last kernel of grain? |
18497 | Was the feat of conquering those fortifications within the bounds of human courage, skill and resource? |
18497 | Was the tank this revolutionary wonder? |
18497 | Was their methodical phlegm such that they acted entirely by rule? |
18497 | Were n''t they horse artillery? |
18497 | What about their protecting barrage? |
18497 | What could an observer say or do that was not banal in the eyes of men who had been through such experiences? |
18497 | What had Canada to gain by coming to fight in France? |
18497 | What had we to do with war? |
18497 | What is lacking? |
18497 | What was the use of yielding ground when you would have to make another charge in order to regain what had been lost? |
18497 | What would happen to the tanks? |
18497 | What would they do to the Germans? |
18497 | When a Canadian officer was asked if he had organized some trenches that his battalion had taken his reply,"How can you organize pea soup?" |
18497 | Where should"the spirit that quickeneth"dwell if not with the aviators? |
18497 | Why not try? |
18497 | Why not? |
18497 | Why not? |
18497 | Why not? |
18497 | Why not?" |
18497 | Why should we be downhearted? |
18497 | Would I get out to watch it? |
18497 | Would he look wise or unwise when he said it? |
18497 | Yes, but though the British had arrived, as the signals showed, could they remain? |
18497 | Yet, how were they to know the truth? |
18497 | and,"Wo n''t you miss the offensive which is about to begin?" |
18497 | became an inquiry in the mess on the order of"Are you going to take an afternoon off for golf to- day?" |
26615 | Could you if you could not write, write a better book? |
26615 | I have no vain idle catchy words, but news in a nude form do you appreciate news, gold dug out of mud? |
20014 | ''I love you like pizan and sweetmeats?'' 20014 ''It''s a fact and no mistake-- wi-- will-- now-- will you have me-- Sew-- ky?'' |
20014 | ''Jon-- nathan Hig-- gins, what am your politics?'' 20014 ''Sposing he ai n''t e-- lect-- ed?'' |
20014 | ''Wall, Jon- nathan?'' 20014 ''What''s the matter, Sukey?'' |
20014 | Can he sing? |
20014 | My attention is called to the opposite side of the room:''Here, gentlemen, is a likely little orphan yellow girl, six years old-- what is bid? 20014 The trough of the_ say_?" |
20014 | What is a civil engineer? |
20014 | What is it does it, captain? |
20014 | What''s your name? |
20014 | Why, does any accident ever happen? |
20014 | Why, what can he do, then, that you ask twenty dollars for him? |
20014 | ''Do you know how to eat?'' |
20014 | ''Now, gentlemen, what is bid? |
20014 | ''When shall we be married, Jon-- nathan?'' |
20014 | --"Any canoes ever lost there?" |
20014 | --"But is it very dangerous?" |
20014 | --"How long ago was the last accident, and what was it?" |
20014 | --"The veil?" |
20014 | --"Where are the yokes, Paddy?" |
20014 | --my friend was an Irishman--"the trough of the say? |
20014 | And who were the pioneers? |
20014 | Are they more renowned in the dreadful art of war? |
20014 | At length he musters courage and speaks--"''Sewkey?'' |
20014 | But what do the people of the United States,( for the government is not a particeps, save by force,) pretend to effect by their enormous sovereignty? |
20014 | But what is the result of such a union of versatile talent? |
20014 | Could he speak well? |
20014 | Cæsar, the conqueror, Napoleon, his imitator, and Nelson, and Wellington, are they on a par with the rabble of New York? |
20014 | Did you ever see a balloon? |
20014 | Did you ever see a mortar? |
20014 | Did you ever see a shell? |
20014 | Has nature formed all men with the same capacities, and can they be so exactly educated that all shall be equally fit to govern? |
20014 | How did all this happen in a place where drunkenness had been proverbial? |
20014 | How is it that the moon, that enormous blister- plaster, does not raise them? |
20014 | In history, in policy, in poetry, in mathematics, in music, in painting, or in any of the gifts of the Muses? |
20014 | In the first fury of a war with England, who were the promoters? |
20014 | It is a pity, is it not, gentle reader, that such feelings do not now exist? |
20014 | Now what is bid for this valuable family?'' |
20014 | Reader, do you know what a sherry cobbler is? |
20014 | The father looks a little amazed, upon which the manikin ejaculates,"Why do n''t you take them? |
20014 | Time is money in America; the meals are hurried over, relaxations necessary to the enjoyment of existence forbidden-- and what for? |
20014 | To what end? |
20014 | What was its age? |
20014 | What will the reader think of Leadenhall Market being condensed and floating? |
20014 | What would Washington have said to such a system? |
20014 | When at ease again, I looked at the imperturbable savage and said,"What made you take the Fall? |
20014 | When money became again plentiful, and the country so loudly demanded the Trent Canal, why was it not finished? |
20014 | Whence, then, do the lakes receive that enormous supply which will restore them to their usual flow?--or are they permanently diminishing? |
20014 | Wherein do the Americans exceed the sons of Britain? |
20014 | Who hoped for a new sympathy demonstration, in order to annex Canada? |
20014 | Who, he asked, had done this? |
20014 | Why does not the Board of Works, which has literally the expenditure of more than a million, take the business in hand, and complete it? |
20014 | are you a Livingstone?" |
20014 | by the powers, is that what they call beef in Canady?" |
20014 | combien? |
20014 | ejaculated the inquisitive traveller,"what happened to her?" |
20014 | is it that does it, captain?" |
20014 | or in the mild virtues of peace? |
20014 | or is she not a regular man- of- war, ready to throw her shells into Kingston, if ever it should be required? |
20014 | pointing to a large rock in the middle of the narrowest part above our heads.--"Did you come down there?" |
20014 | replied the Cockney:"shall we ever get there?" |
20014 | said he,"you wo n''t show your b-- d bunting, your old stripy rag? |
20014 | said the dame, in horror;"what veil?" |
20014 | was not the_ détour_ passable?" |
20014 | what''s the use of having a father?" |
20014 | who cleared the way for this enterprise? |
26775 | What does it matter, after all? |
22925 | ''Andthe finder will be liberally rewarded,"eh?'' |
22925 | ''Check or currency?'' 22925 ''Will you,''said one of them,''take us and our trunks out to the steamer?'' |
22925 | But was n''t it dark at that hour? |
22925 | Could n''t you be mistaken about this? |
22925 | Do n''t you s''pose I got eyes? |
22925 | How much do you want? |
22925 | Is Papa- day happy in heaven? |
22925 | Now, is n''t that strange? |
22925 | Pore? 22925 Pretty soon an orderly came along in great haste, yellin'',''Who did that?--Who fired that shot?'' |
22925 | Smoot,said he,"did you vote for me?" |
22925 | What am I to pay you? |
22925 | What time did you see it? |
22925 | When he came back I said,''Doctor, what do you say now?'' 22925 Where?" |
22925 | Why, Mr. Lincoln, what''s the matter? |
22925 | Abe laughed again and replied:"Needham, are you satisfied that I can throw you? |
22925 | But that''s like promising to give you half of the first dollar I find floating up the Sangamon on a grindstone, is n''t it? |
22925 | But"what is home without a mother?" |
22925 | Can you there, any more than here, raise corn and wheat and oats without work? |
22925 | Considering this a reflection upon his own habits, the little man sneered:"What, Mr. Lincoln, are you a temperance man?" |
22925 | Did you ever see anything like it? |
22925 | Do n''t you think it''s rather odd that He should send such a message by way of that awful wicked city of Chicago?" |
22925 | Do you believe that you could bear that patiently? |
22925 | Ever wear a wet buckskin glove? |
22925 | For instance, do you suppose that I would ever have got into notice if I had waited to be hunted up and pushed forward by older men?" |
22925 | For instance, there has been much discussion concerning Lincoln''s Gettysburg Address-- where was it written, and did he deliver it from notes? |
22925 | He finally turned to us and said:"''Gentlemen, did you ever read anything from"Artemus Ward?" |
22925 | He laughed and said:"''Ca n''t the party raise any better material than that?'' |
22925 | He-- the father-- had got along better without going to school, and why should Abe have a better education than his father? |
22925 | I understand you to say the murder was committed about half past nine o''clock, and there was a bright moon at the time?" |
22925 | Is that satisfactory?'' |
22925 | Is the land any richer? |
22925 | Lincoln( brightening)--"Good, where is it?" |
22925 | Matilda only wept silently, and the lad went on,"What are you going to tell mother about it?" |
22925 | My God, is that all?" |
22925 | Speed--"So you are to be one of us?" |
22925 | Then he would wail again in the bitterness of his disappointment:"Papa- day, where''s my Papa- day?" |
22925 | What boy has not done so time and again in his youthful dreams? |
22925 | What can you do in Missouri better than here? |
22925 | Why did you disobey mother?" |
22925 | Will anybody there, any more than here, do your work for you? |
22925 | the lines by William Knox, beginning:"''Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud? |
16298 | And the Albemarle? |
16298 | Are you mad, man? |
16298 | Are you shot? |
16298 | By whose authority? |
16298 | Do you know our force? 16298 For what, my dear friend?" |
16298 | Gentlemen,said a member of this committee,"we are brought face to face with this question; what shall we do?" |
16298 | He has not been killed? |
16298 | How do you like the prospect, Sir Henry? |
16298 | Is this in accordance with military law? |
16298 | Is this the land of which we are in search? |
16298 | One o''dem as was in de town last night? |
16298 | Since the ship has surrendered, has not the enemy the right to take possession of her? |
16298 | Surely, general,he exclaimed,"this can not be your ordinary fare?" |
16298 | Were any of your family up, Lydia,he asked,"on the night when I had visitors here?" |
16298 | What aim? |
16298 | What aim? |
16298 | What are they? |
16298 | What boat is that? |
16298 | What boat is that? |
16298 | What craft is that? |
16298 | What is this? |
16298 | What is your scraper to do? |
16298 | What news? |
16298 | What shall I do? |
16298 | What would people care for instantaneous news? |
16298 | What? 16298 Which way did he go?" |
16298 | Who are you? |
16298 | Who goes there? 16298 Who goes there?" |
16298 | Who is there? |
16298 | Who is there? |
16298 | Why are you so late? 16298 Why ca n''t we?" |
16298 | Will you be kind enough to come with me, Sir Henry? |
16298 | But in what direction should he go? |
16298 | Can you tell me anything?" |
16298 | Could she be attempting a foolish and cruel jest? |
16298 | Could they hope to pass through them in safety? |
16298 | Do you know your own? |
16298 | Do you not know of it?" |
16298 | Do you want to run afoul of us?" |
16298 | Had God really sent one of his angels from heaven, in response to their prayers, to rescue them from destruction? |
16298 | Had he gone to the bottom? |
16298 | Had it come from the Darrah house? |
16298 | Had not the Almighty sent this venerable stranger to their aid? |
16298 | Had they at length hit upon the spot for which they had so long sought in vain? |
16298 | Have you been there? |
16298 | How far did the obstruction extend? |
16298 | How had he eluded them? |
16298 | How had this information got afoot? |
16298 | How many trains might there be in the rear? |
16298 | How many were there? |
16298 | How should he escape? |
16298 | How should these daring thieves ever be overtaken? |
16298 | If they went down, and Brant with his Indians swept the valley, for what horrors might they not look? |
16298 | Is some treachery at work? |
16298 | Raising his musket to his shoulder, and taking deliberate aim at the spot indicated, he called out, in strict obedience to orders,"Who goes there? |
16298 | Say, ca n''t you raise a cud among you_ now_?" |
16298 | Shall we describe this craft? |
16298 | She selected the appropriate message from Scriptures:"What hath God wrought?" |
16298 | She''s done for, then? |
16298 | Should he attempt to dash past them? |
16298 | Should he stand his ground, or retreat before these despised provincials? |
16298 | Should she trust her husband, or some other member of her family? |
16298 | Should they fear when led by God''s messenger? |
16298 | Should veteran British troops fly before countrymen who had never fired gun before at anything larger than a rabbit? |
16298 | Sir Edmund angrily exclaimed,--"What means this, gentlemen? |
16298 | Some of the bravest men of the army were selected to occupy the post, with orders, if they should hear any noise, to call out"Who goes there?" |
16298 | The hail came again:"What boat is that?" |
16298 | Was aid coming to them from the garrison? |
16298 | Was freedom or renewed captivity before them? |
16298 | Was this the open river of which he had been told; this the ready route to the great lake beyond? |
16298 | Washington must be warned; but how? |
16298 | Were they Union or Confederate? |
16298 | What did it mean? |
16298 | What did this strange event signify? |
16298 | What man is ready to_ volunteer_?" |
16298 | What was to be done? |
16298 | What was to be done? |
16298 | What was to be done? |
16298 | What was to be done? |
16298 | What was to be done? |
16298 | What was to be done? |
16298 | What was to be done? |
16298 | What was to be done? |
16298 | Whence comes this?" |
16298 | Where was the dining- room? |
16298 | Where was the foe? |
16298 | Where were the dishes and the other paraphernalia which civilization demands as the essentials of a modern dinner?--Where? |
16298 | Which expedient should he adopt? |
16298 | Who shall it be? |
16298 | Why not give the people this constitution? |
16298 | Why not, indeed? |
16298 | Yet what sound was that which reached his ear? |
16298 | and why have you parted from the others?" |
16298 | guns?" |
16298 | he exclaimed,"who''s got a cud of tobacco? |
16298 | surrender to the Indians, attempt to dash through their line, or leap the cliff? |
16298 | where, at least, the table, on which their mid- day repast was to be spread? |
13637 | AM-- I-- IMPRISONED BECAUSE I AM FRIENDLESS AND POOR? |
13637 | Am-- I-- imprisoned because I am friendless and poor? 13637 And if to my father''s servant, why not to my brother''s?" |
13637 | And,said she,"are we poor mortals kinder than Heaven?" |
13637 | Are you ready for a wager, sir? |
13637 | Are you sure? |
13637 | But I wanted to ask you--"Phwat are ye blockin''up the road fur, young man? |
13637 | Can I go now? |
13637 | Can you forbid what you cause? |
13637 | Concerning what are you frightened? |
13637 | Did n''t she get my letter? |
13637 | Do you never want to_ stay_? |
13637 | Have you no friends in the city? |
13637 | He is the only witness, you say, officer? |
13637 | How came you here, madam? |
13637 | How do you think I sing? |
13637 | Is he not? |
13637 | Lock me up? 13637 Madam, is there no token of forgiveness?" |
13637 | Mother? |
13637 | Not go? 13637 Of Heaven, my lord?" |
13637 | Put me in prison? 13637 That you may ride back to the castle-- alone?" |
13637 | The jest is still afoot, then? |
13637 | To kill himself? |
13637 | Was it in truth the prince''s groom who rode with him, madam? |
13637 | Well? |
13637 | What are you doing to me? |
13637 | What did you do,Isaac asked,"to get you in such a scrape?" |
13637 | What is it? |
13637 | What is your errand, sir? |
13637 | What is your name? 13637 What, has she kissed you?" |
13637 | When will you come out? 13637 Where am I? |
13637 | Where are you taking me? |
13637 | Will the court officer produce the witness? |
13637 | A''int He a Daisy?" |
13637 | After all this cost to the State, and to the man? |
13637 | Ah, what have I done?" |
13637 | Air you teched?" |
13637 | Alas, what cared those Injun chiefs How bitterly wailed she? |
13637 | And presently the marquis heard a voice asking:"Does Heaven forgive unasked?" |
13637 | And why should they not have been? |
13637 | And, thus being better able to speak to him, she said, softly:"And dare you die, unforgiven?" |
13637 | As she came in she said:"Why, what are you doing with all that money?" |
13637 | At what price did he value his soul? |
13637 | At what rate did my converted hearer price his soul?--Hundreds? |
13637 | But Sissy Knott still wailed and wept, And still her fate reviled; For who could patch her dolly up-- Who, who could mend her child? |
13637 | But a little later, when Marat,"the Friend of Man,"was stricken down, a voice rose in the Convention,"Where art thou, David?" |
13637 | But where could he get a grammar? |
13637 | Contempt of your Honorable Court? |
13637 | Could he not surmise that on the Saturday following his incarceration the very mountains rang with the news? |
13637 | Could he not suspect that country papers copy from city columns all that is of special local interest, and more? |
13637 | Had he escaped? |
13637 | Had he not planned all the lonesome day to cast himself upon the kindness of the first policeman whom he saw? |
13637 | How can I get bail? |
13637 | How can he keep them? |
13637 | How could she tell him that his mother had died of grief-- too sorely smitten to bear it-- for his sake? |
13637 | How did you get there? |
13637 | How many decades was the smooth, worn rock in front of his house riding on the crest of a glacier until it reached its halt? |
13637 | I inquired; and added:"You surely are not afraid you are not going to be nominated?" |
13637 | I shook my head, and Mr. Blaine asked:"Why not?" |
13637 | I then said:"I have not heard of this;"and asked:"Are there many who know that you are against your candidacy?" |
13637 | I''m going for the winter anyway, and Abbie''ll come an''live with you, mother-- won''t you, Abbie, dear? |
13637 | IS THIS YOUR LAW?"] |
13637 | If he should notice, how would he know the meaning of the scant crops of hay and potatoes, or of the empty stall? |
13637 | If not here, why was the innocent witness suffocated behind bars and walls, while the murderer was free to dispense rum? |
13637 | Is he not here? |
13637 | Is the humiliating difference between the instinctive selection of Napoleon and that of the rooster, one of temperament or sex? |
13637 | Is there no other token of forgiveness?" |
13637 | Is this your law?" |
13637 | Isaac argued from experience-- and how else should he? |
13637 | It is to be three, then, and by what means I will, save force?" |
13637 | Of course you are innocent, Ikey?" |
13637 | Of what use were more words? |
13637 | Or been spirited away? |
13637 | Or had he become insane during his incarceration? |
13637 | Silent? |
13637 | So the grand old stock is run out of the soil? |
13637 | Supposing his mind should give way before he got there? |
13637 | Tens of thousands? |
13637 | Then Osra said:"Why did you swear on your honor?" |
13637 | Then she suddenly gave a loud cry of dismay, exclaiming,"Alas, what have I done? |
13637 | Thousands? |
13637 | Was it not taken at an earlier date than you indicate as probable in your letter? |
13637 | What did the mountaineers know about the laws of bail, and habeas corpus? |
13637 | What has been the power to keep alive thousands of prisoners in those bastions, beyond the natural endurance of the flesh? |
13637 | What have I done? |
13637 | What other guide or protector was there left for him in the strange city? |
13637 | What sentence could he? |
13637 | What sentence might he not inflict for such contempt of court? |
13637 | What was the evidence? |
13637 | What wonder? |
13637 | What, I wonder, may be the earliest act of memory on record? |
13637 | What? |
13637 | Where do you come from? |
13637 | Where is the witness? |
13637 | Where was the witness? |
13637 | Where will you put me?" |
13637 | Who forgets his first attack of nostalgia? |
13637 | Why did he leave home? |
13637 | Why has he not met his enforced appointment? |
13637 | Why not try the other Sherman?" |
13637 | Why not? |
13637 | Why precisely do you object, and what exactly do you think should happen?" |
13637 | Why should I be sent to prison? |
13637 | Why? |
13637 | Would you dream all these dreams that are tiny and fleet? |
13637 | [ Illustration:"AM-- I-- IMPRISONED BECAUSE I AM FRIENDLESS AND POOR? |
20906 | Buffalo; how far is that from Canada? |
20906 | Do n''t you know, man? 20906 How long will it take you to get ready?" |
20906 | Want to go to Canada? 20906 Well why not go with me?" |
20906 | Where do you stop? |
20906 | ( 1) Is it because the climate is unhealthy to the African? |
20906 | ( 2) Is it owing to emigration? |
20906 | ( 3) Or is it owing to the domestic slave trade? |
20906 | And is this difference of no importance? |
20906 | And what claim have they on your private purse? |
20906 | And whether the slave may not as justifiably take a little from one who has taken all from him, as he may slay one who would slay him? |
20906 | Are they admitted as Citizens? |
20906 | Are they admitted as property, then why is not other property admitted into the computation? |
20906 | Are they men? |
20906 | Are they property? |
20906 | Are you willing to raise and secure the payment of fifteen thousand dollars for their benefit, if I should be induced to free them? |
20906 | But did that make him a Democrat? |
20906 | Can any thing more inexcusable and indefensible than this be imagined? |
20906 | Commit murder, and you a Christian?" |
20906 | Could Congress, for example, say that the non- freemen of Connecticut shall be freemen, or that they shall not emigrate into any other State? |
20906 | Could we procure lands beyond the limits of the United States to form a receptacle for these people? |
20906 | Did you ask Mr. Blackwell to aid you in the prosecution of me, and do you know whether he was employed by Judge McRoberts to do so? |
20906 | Do you believe as a Christian, that I should perform my duty toward them by abandoning them to their fate? |
20906 | For what then are all these sacrifices to be made? |
20906 | He knew well enough that the system did not pay but supposing that he should turn his slaves loose, what would become of them? |
20906 | He said:"Where is the concession to the South? |
20906 | I told him''no,''Then,''In Buffalo?'' |
20906 | If he should free them, what would become of the aged and the women and children? |
20906 | If the sentiment was decidedly against such human commerce how did so many slaves become victims of the slave trader? |
20906 | Is it in denying the title of Texas to one half of her territory?" |
20906 | Is it in the admission, as a state, of California, from which we have been excluded by congressional agitation? |
20906 | Is it in the announcement that slavery does not and is not to exist in the remaining territories of New Mexico and California? |
20906 | Is it meant to require a greater proportion of votes? |
20906 | Is there any gentleman who has a large number of slaves, who will say that they are any more profitable than that? |
20906 | Is this reasonable? |
20906 | It has succeeded with certain portions of our white brethren, under the care of a Rapp and an Owen; and why may it not succeed with the man of color? |
20906 | It is very questionable, indeed, whether the Indians would sell? |
20906 | Oh, and is it possible that you think a woman has no business with questions like the question of slavery? |
20906 | P. S.--Could you or Mr. Vaux furnish me with an assessment of lands in the different counties of Pennsylvania? |
20906 | P. S.--Why was not Judge McRoberts returned as a witness, on the back of the indictment? |
20906 | Shall all the States then be bound to defend each;& shall each be at liberty to introduce a weakness which will render defence more difficult? |
20906 | Some of these, embarrassed by the question;"What further is to be done with them?" |
20906 | Surprise, did I say? |
20906 | System? |
20906 | That they are not to be violated but with his wrath? |
20906 | The same question to ourselves would recur here also, as did in the first case: should we be willing to have such a colony in contact with us? |
20906 | Then make them Citizens& let them vote? |
20906 | Then why are they not admitted on an equality with White Citizens? |
20906 | To what extent were there slave traders in Kentucky? |
20906 | Upon what principle is it that the slaves shall be computed in the representation? |
20906 | Was slavery profitable to the Kentucky planters? |
20906 | Were there ever in later years gathered within the confines of the State any body of men who had a better grasp of the future? |
20906 | What authority have individuals to act in this case, even at their own expense? |
20906 | What could they do for a living? |
20906 | What shall I do with that class?" |
20906 | What was the attitude of the Kentucky slaveholder and the people in general on the question of the domestic slave trade? |
20906 | What would be the consequence of hindering us from it? |
20906 | Why not from that of the lands which have been ceded by the very States now needing this relief? |
20906 | Why persecutest thou me?" |
20906 | Why then is no other property included? |
20906 | Would it be better to hire more where good masters could be got? |
20906 | Would it be better to hire plantations and all, if proper assurance can be provided for the good usage, of everything? |
20906 | Would it not, therefore, be best not to state on the face of the publications where they were printed? |
20906 | You''re running away, ai n''t you?" |
20906 | [ 134] Who would estimate its blessed effects? |
20906 | [ 33] Was this to be a free State in every sense of the word? |
20906 | [ 4] Henson gives this interesting conversation:"How far is it to Canada?" |
20906 | [ 58] From what fund are these expenses to be furnished? |
20906 | _ The Cincinnati Herald_ inquired:"Is this a fact? |
20906 | do n''t you know? |
20906 | whether Spain would be willing to receive these people? |
25879 | A friend to whom? |
25879 | Charger, sir? |
25879 | The elegant horse you sent me, sir? |
25879 | What kind of a place is Pictou? |
25879 | What,cried the dying hero,"do they run already? |
25879 | Who run? |
25879 | You do, you villain, do you? 25879 [ 187] NOTE F. WERE THE HIGHLANDERS FAITHFUL TO THEIR OATH TAKEN BY THE AMERICANS? |
25879 | And who can realize the internal emotion of him whom they immediately and unmistakably concerned? |
25879 | But what becomes of the external part of the body? |
25879 | But what is their chance of a boat now? |
25879 | Had they already discovered their prey? |
25879 | If they have not, for what are they contending? |
25879 | Living in the land of Ossian, it was natural to ask a stranger,"Can you speak of the days of Fingal?" |
25879 | One of the pursuers? |
25879 | Send him a charger to drive the rebels, hey? |
25879 | Sergeant? |
25879 | Sergeant? |
25879 | Several refused; but three, shall I call them men? |
25879 | Should 1763 be read for 1764?] |
25879 | The friends of my early years, where are they now? |
25879 | They answered me by asking, What brig is that? |
25879 | Urchad( Urquhart? |
25879 | Well, my compliments to Colonel Tarleton; tell him I''ve sent him a horse, my young Selim, my grand Turk, do you hear, my son of thunder? |
25879 | What are the terms they asked of him, think you? |
25879 | What became of them? |
25879 | When shall we have so fine a regiment again? |
25879 | Whither could they fly? |
25879 | Who but an epicure could grumble at the repast before them? |
25879 | and by my sergeant? |
25879 | do you hear? |
25879 | do you think it would do you any harm?" |
25879 | is n''t he, my boy?" |
25879 | so I must always split my throat with bawling, before I can get you to answer hey?" |
25879 | you villain, do you hear?" |
2670 | Alas, what cared those Injun chiefs How bitterly wailed she? |
2670 | And then old Sport he hangs around, so solemn- like an''still, His eyes they seem a- sayin'':"What''s the matter, little Bill?" |
2670 | And"Who''s been bad to- day?" |
2670 | But Sissy Knott still wailed and wept, And still her fate reviled; For who could patch her dolly up-- Who, who could mend her child? |
2670 | THE NIGHT WIND Have you ever heard the wind go"Yooooo"? |
2670 | The garden may wither, the silver- bird fly-- But what careth my little precious, or I? |
2670 | What wonder? |
2670 | Why should''st Thou take my little son-- Why should''st Thou vent Thy wrath upon This innocent?" |
2670 | Will ever his heart feel faint and cold, When he heareth the songs of yore? |
2670 | Will ever my dear little boy grow old, As some have grown before? |
2670 | Will ever this toy Of my dear little boy, When the years have worn away, Sing sad and low Of the long ago, As it singeth to me to- day? |
2670 | Would you dream all these dreams that are tiny and fleet? |
2670 | Yet what danger shall he fear When his mother hovereth near, And he hears her cheering call:"All- Aloney"? |
2670 | what have I done, Or in what wise offended Thee, That Thou should''st take away from me My little son? |
27256 | May we now be permitted to make a single suggestion or two to the Manager of the Rail Road? |
27256 | One traveller is said to have asked"What is the matter, will we never arrive?" |
26965 | Jim,said he,"what are you doing that for?" |
26965 | There, did n''t you hear it? 26965 But who would brave so many dangers in the attempt to procure it? 26965 But why continue a description so horrible? 26965 Do you think they would be glad to see me? |
26965 | Do you think,"continued he,"there is any chance?" |
26965 | His mother exclaimed,"why did you not tell me of this?" |
26965 | Mrs. Parker then asked the Indian if Parker had sent for her, and where he was? |
26965 | This exclamation immediately drew Mrs. Parker''s attention, who directly enquired of the Indian, what''s the matter with Parker? |
26965 | What is your opinion, doctor? |
26965 | When asked on his return,"What luck?" |
26965 | Where shall we look for deeds of equal daring and hardihood? |
26965 | but Mrs. Parker thought the voice was not exactly like that of her son-- in order to ascertain the fact, she said"Jake, where are the Indians?" |
26422 | If there should be another battle to- morrow,he said,"with what am I to fight it?" |
26422 | Who run? |
26422 | Whom can we send against him? |
26422 | Will the troops stand? |
26422 | )?--_A._ To God''s grace and temperate habits. |
26422 | ?--_A._ I eat very little, and take concentrated food. |
26422 | All who had a heart and soul in Italy were up and doing, and could Italy''s greatest heart and soul remain beyond the seas? |
26422 | Collingwood, on the other hand, said to his captain,"Rotherham, what would Nelson give to be here?" |
26422 | His character has been subjected to that ordeal, and who can point to any spot upon it? |
26422 | How could he resist the mighty spell of the past? |
26422 | If General Washington had had a Mr. Davis over him, could he have accomplished what he did? |
26422 | Is there still room for me, think you?" |
26422 | Mrs. Wayne indignantly exclaimed,"Did you expect to find General Wayne in a feather- bed? |
26422 | Pleased with this indication of military ambition, the duke suddenly inquired one day,"What can I do for you, Churchill, as a first step to fortune?" |
26422 | Relating his reminiscences of that period, in reply to the question,"Do you retain pleasant recollections of cadet life?" |
26422 | Shall I hoist it?" |
26422 | There was an effort to board the Serapis, which was repulsed, when Captain Pearson called out,"Has your ship struck?" |
26422 | Where else in history is a great man to be found whose whole life was one such blameless record of duty nobly done? |
26422 | Will blushing glory hide the tale of shame? |
26422 | Will you not, then, own with me, that they surpass all the heroes of former ages?" |
26422 | [ TN]] How shall we describe the"Incomparable,"the extraordinary compound of so many brilliant and repulsive qualities? |
26422 | _ Q._ How many hours did you spend in the open air? |
16472 | Afraid of what? |
16472 | Afraid of_ what_? |
16472 | And fifty is what part of one hundred and fifty,--that is, what part of the population of New York? |
16472 | And, Nicholas, ven you goes for to hunt bears_ you must helps one anoder; you hears_? |
16472 | Are any of you hurt? |
16472 | Are you comfortable there? |
16472 | Are you hurt? |
16472 | But how can I help it, Nick? |
16472 | But how can we find each other at night? |
16472 | But how was it there was but_ one_? |
16472 | But suppose, Nick, these woods are on fire? 16472 But where can we go?" |
16472 | Can it be anything has happened to her? |
16472 | Did n''t you hear me call you? |
16472 | Did n''t you see him? |
16472 | Did nopody gif you helps on der lessons? |
16472 | Did you know efery one dot you knowed? |
16472 | Do you think he foresaw the trick of the hog? |
16472 | Dot is right; did you help anypodies? |
16472 | For how long? |
16472 | Hallo, Sam, are you there? |
16472 | Hallo, my friend? 16472 Have you a dog?" |
16472 | Have you found anything of Nellie? |
16472 | Have you signaled to him? |
16472 | Hef you been into any fights mit nopodies to- day? |
16472 | How dot is? |
16472 | How is it there? |
16472 | How is that? |
16472 | How should I know anything about him? 16472 How will that help us?" |
16472 | I know that; do n''t you suppose a bear will keep that long? 16472 I laughs ven some folks dinks dey ai n''t shmarter don dey vosn''t all te vile, do n''t it?" |
16472 | I s''pose they''re very strong, Nick? |
16472 | I suppose, from the way you talk,continued the teacher,"that you have seen nothing of her?" |
16472 | I''ll soon be there, Nellie,he called;"are you all right?" |
16472 | If I hafs feefty tollar more don you hafs, how mooch less tollar do n''t you hafs don I hafs? 16472 Is it going to mend matters to sit down and cry?" |
16472 | No, what do I want of a dog? 16472 Now, what shall we do that we have got here?" |
16472 | Of course I remember further back than that: why do you ask? |
16472 | Oh, father,pleaded the lad, moving toward him:"would you make me stay at home when Nellie is lost?" |
16472 | Suppose he tries to climb upon the raft,ventured Nellie, trying to edge still further away,"what will become of us?" |
16472 | That''s business,he exclaimed, with a thrill of pride;"but why could n''t I shoot that way when Nick and Sam were looking at me? |
16472 | Then if Philadelphia has one hundred people for its population, New York has one hundred and fifty? |
16472 | Vot you do n''t laughs at? |
16472 | Was she sick? |
16472 | We do n''t expect him to be of much help, except to find the track of the bear, if he is anywhere in the neighborhood--_there!_ do you hear that? |
16472 | What better can we do? |
16472 | What did you do that for? |
16472 | What do you mean by barking a squirrel? |
16472 | What is that? |
16472 | What is that? |
16472 | What of that? 16472 What will you do?" |
16472 | What''s the odds? |
16472 | When she had the fever and was getting well? |
16472 | Where can Nick be? |
16472 | Where is he? |
16472 | Where is the bridge? |
16472 | Where''s Nick? |
16472 | Where? |
16472 | Who would have thought it, boys? 16472 Why are you so anxious to shoot the bear?" |
16472 | Why did we not think of this before? |
16472 | Why do n''t you knock him off? |
16472 | Why do n''t you say she and I played tag? |
16472 | Why is it a girl ca n''t talk without saying''awful''in every sentence? 16472 Why not let the raft drift close to land, so as to give him a chance to get off?" |
16472 | Why so? |
16472 | Why so? |
16472 | Why then did n''t you answer me? |
16472 | Why, I thought that was a wild animal-- that is, a bear, in the path in front of me; what is it? |
16472 | Yes, sir,--three or four of the girls and some of the boys asked me to give them a lift--"Gif dem_ vat_? |
16472 | You got me that time,laughed Nick;"where is father?" |
16472 | You remember, Gustav, how cross she was and how hard it was to please her? |
16472 | You think she is drowned? |
16472 | You vos sure dot you ai n''t right, Nicholas, eh? |
16472 | You''re a pretty hunting dog, ai n''t you? |
16472 | _ A bear._"Do you know whether there are any in the woods? |
16472 | Ah, had it been the final Judgment Day, how many of us would have had our houses in order for the coming of the angel of the Lord? |
16472 | And what was to be the end of this singular and most uncomfortable condition of affairs? |
16472 | Can it be you?) |
16472 | Carefully watching the studious lad for a few minutes, he generally asked a series of questions:"Nicholas, did you knowed your lessons to- day?" |
16472 | Happy it is, indeed, that it is so, for what one in a thousand would have retained her self- possession? |
16472 | He meekly picked up his hat, brushed off the dirt, and looking reproachfully at Nick said:"Do you know you broke two of my ribs?" |
16472 | How far is it back to where we entered them?" |
16472 | Is n''t there any way by which the world might swing out of its-- what do you call it?" |
16472 | Kannst du es sein?" |
16472 | Kilgore?" |
16472 | Layton?" |
16472 | Nick and Sam looked significantly at each other, and Nick said:"That is what we are after; wo n''t you join us?" |
16472 | Nick, as a matter of course, had kept to the road, but what had become of Nellie? |
16472 | Now, how many people will have to be subtracted from New York''s population to make it the same as Philadelphia?" |
16472 | She was already doing so, and she asked:"Why do n''t you pinch out that fire on your coat?" |
16472 | The husband thereupon fell back beside her, and in a tremulous voice she said:"Do you remember when Nellie was three years old?" |
16472 | This sounded reasonable enough, but:"De basket,--vot of dot?" |
16472 | WAS IT A JOKE? |
16472 | What did it mean? |
16472 | What makes you so late?" |
16472 | Why do n''t you answer me?" |
16472 | Wo n''t you bring your friends and stay with us to- night?" |
16472 | did n''t you hear him?" |
16472 | did n''t you hear them rattle against the logs when he struck them?" |
16472 | did you ever see such nails? |
16472 | has Philadelphia less than New York?" |
16472 | he shouted in agonized tones;"Where are you? |
16472 | is she lost?" |
16472 | is that you?" |
16472 | more, it must have one hundred and fifty people as its population; that is correct, is it not, father?" |
16472 | of the father rang out, and looking at the solemn visage of his wife, he asked:"Vy you do n''t laughs now, eh? |
16472 | what are you firing at?" |
16472 | what can that be?" |
16472 | what does that mean?" |
16472 | what''s the matter?" |
27394 | _ Who hath heard such a thing? 27394 Is it extraordinary that people thus exposed should be attacked by violent maladies? 27394 It may be asked,If Arkansas be so fine a country, why has it not been settled faster?" |
27394 | Mounds of earth are found in every country on the globe, of all forms and sizes; and why should they not exist in the western valley? |
27394 | Shall the earth be made to bring forth in one day? |
27394 | Under such circumstances, can it be surprising that many were sick, and that many died? |
27394 | Who hath seen such things? |
27394 | With such management, is it surprising that our cows and steers are much inferior to those of the old States? |
27394 | Would it not be more wonderful that such a careless prodigality of life could pass with impunity? |
27394 | or shall a nation be born at once?_"Isaiah, LXVI. |
11255 | ''How did you lose your arm?'' 11255 Did a colored man marry you?" |
11255 | Did he say the ceremony? |
11255 | Did you go away? |
11255 | Did you have a nice supper? |
11255 | Did you have a wedding? |
11255 | Did you have any brothers and sisters, Aunt Liz.? |
11255 | Do you know how old you are? |
11255 | Does I get a pension? 11255 How am I supported? |
11255 | How many chillun I have? 11255 How many tines did you marry, Aunt Add.?" |
11255 | How old is she? |
11255 | How was that? |
11255 | How were you dressed? |
11255 | I been farmin''all my life and what have I got? 11255 I beg your pardon, can you tell me where to find Wade Street and James Baker?" |
11255 | Jonas, can you remember anything about the war or slavery time? |
11255 | Jonas, if your owners were Hewitts why is your name Boone? |
11255 | Klu Klux? 11255 Me? |
11255 | Me? 11255 Me? |
11255 | Miss, do you believe in ha''nts? 11255 Now whose story are you saying this is? |
11255 | So you was a''Tarheel''too? 11255 Well what do you want to own it for? |
11255 | What is I been doing? 11255 What you want to go out there for?" |
11255 | What you writing down? 11255 Who is Price a fightin''? |
11255 | Why did your folks move to Arkansas? |
11255 | You did? |
11255 | You wants to know how old I is? 11255 You wants to know what I think of the way young folks is doing these days? |
11255 | ''72? |
11255 | 1103 State Street, Pine Bluff, Arkansas Age: 107? |
11255 | ? |
11255 | ? |
11255 | A duck, a bullfrog and a skunk went to a circus, the duck and the bullfrog got in, why did n''t the skunk get in? |
11255 | Age:? |
11255 | Age:? |
11255 | And I said,''What must I do?'' |
11255 | Are they goin''to give the old slaves a pension? |
11255 | Arkansas Age: About 80? |
11255 | Ast me is I been doing? |
11255 | At last he said:"Love, did I not tell you that I would soon come again to see you?" |
11255 | Boone? |
11255 | Ca n''t I do it as fast as if I had a head full of keen eyes? |
11255 | Can I build a wagon-- make all the parts? |
11255 | Could I sew? |
11255 | Dat-- dat-- dat''s de house over da-- da-- da-- da-- r. He-- he-- he lives at his daughter''s""Could that be he on the porch?" |
11255 | Did I say Harris brought us? |
11255 | Do n''t you know if they find it out they will kill you?" |
11255 | Do you want to hear how I runned away and jined the Yankees? |
11255 | Good to me? |
11255 | Have you been down in Argenta to the Roundhouse? |
11255 | He put me up on a block an''he say,''How old is dis nigger?'' |
11255 | He worked the???? |
11255 | He worked the???? |
11255 | He worked the???? |
11255 | He worked the???? |
11255 | He would say,''Whut you hittin''me for when I got a pass?'' |
11255 | How did it happen? |
11255 | How much I get? |
11255 | How old does that leave me? |
11255 | I asked the merchant"How old is she?" |
11255 | I do n''t think a person is free unless he can vote, do you? |
11255 | I heard her say,''Did you see the soldiers pass early this morning?'' |
11255 | I heered''em say,''Did you know they sold Aunt Sally away from her baby?'' |
11255 | I know about that? |
11255 | I may be in glory time I get it and then what would become of my wife?" |
11255 | I said,"Auntie, what have you in that box?" |
11255 | I said,"May I carry your meal or your meat?" |
11255 | I said,''What you goin''to pay me?'' |
11255 | I stopped and said,"Auntie, could you direct me to Molly Brown''s house?" |
11255 | I telled you my number, didnft I? |
11255 | I used to go out to the fields and they would ask me,''Jeff Bailey, what you do in''out here?'' |
11255 | If Bob met a Negro carrying cotton to the Gin, he would ask"Whose cotton is that? |
11255 | If your father''s sister is not your aunt what kin is she to you? |
11255 | Interviewer: Miss Irene Robertson Person Interviewed: Mattie Aldridge Age: 60? |
11255 | Interviewer: Mrs. Bernice Bowden Person interviewed: Bob Benford 209 N. Maple Street, Pine Bluff, Arkansas Age: 79"Slavery- time folks? |
11255 | Interviewer: Mrs. Rosa B. Ingram Person interviewed: Lizzie Barnett; Conway, Arkansas Age: 100? |
11255 | Interviewer: Samuel S. Taylor Person interviewed: Jennie Butler 3012 Short Main Street, Little Rock, Arkansas Age: Between 103 and 107[ HW: Nurses? |
11255 | It was:"If you had to be blown up which would you choose, to be blown up on the railroad or the steamboat?" |
11255 | J.J. Gambol( Gamble?) |
11255 | July 10, 1850? |
11255 | Let''s see-- Powell Clayton-- was he one of the presidents? |
11255 | Marriage"You see that broom there? |
11255 | Missy, was you ever on a river boat? |
11255 | My grandpa was a white man; mama''s pa."What I been doin''from 1864- 1937? |
11255 | My mistress said,''What?'' |
11255 | My mother belonged to her son and she said,''Agnes( that was my mother''s name), will you follow me if I buy your husband?'' |
11255 | Named after her? |
11255 | Occupations and accomplishments, with dates-- Farmed till 21, public work? |
11255 | Old age pension? |
11255 | Our owner was Myers(?) |
11255 | Peace was declared in 1865, was n''t it? |
11255 | Plenty to eat? |
11255 | She said,''Betty, would n''t our mama cry if she could see us off like this?'' |
11255 | She told him it was asking too much, what would happen to her and her family if they found those weapons in her possession? |
11255 | That was in''74, was n''t it? |
11255 | That was n''t yistiday was it? |
11255 | That would be about 1870, would n''t it? |
11255 | The heart is n''t educated and if my heart is black as my hat, can I do anything for God? |
11255 | Then I said teasingly,"Why you think I have a nickel?" |
11255 | Then what did I do? |
11255 | Vote? |
11255 | Want to hear about it? |
11255 | Was they more run- aways there? |
11255 | What did I do on that boat? |
11255 | What else you want to know, Miss? |
11255 | What is the difference between a four quart measure and a side saddle? |
11255 | What kind books did we have? |
11255 | What they keer''bout you being white or black? |
11255 | What they want to ask all these questions for then? |
11255 | What would a heap of them do? |
11255 | When he was gone, I said,''Miss Sue, where is Master Alex?'' |
11255 | Who showed me how? |
11255 | Why would n''t I love her when I sucked titty from her breast when my mammy was working in the field? |
11255 | Will it help us along any or make times any better? |
11255 | You asking me what was the shares? |
11255 | You axes me how it seem to earn money? |
11255 | You do n''t know how I can thread the needle? |
11255 | You ever been to Monticello? |
11255 | You says did I like living in the army? |
11255 | You says you wants to know how I live after soldiers all go away? |
11255 | You want a drink? |
11255 | You''d rather sit right there on the step? |
11255 | [ HW: migration?] |
12317 | ''Cause it''s so bright? |
12317 | About Keith''s age, is n''t she, Aunt Allison? |
12317 | Could you understand that, Teddy? |
12317 | Did you want me, Keith? |
12317 | Do n''t you remember how it goes? 12317 Do n''t you s''pose Jonesy feels as badly about it as we would?" |
12317 | Do n''t you wish you knew? |
12317 | Do you expect to wave a wand and see it spring up out of the earth? |
12317 | Do you see that hand- car? |
12317 | Goin''back on the hand- car? |
12317 | Has he only one arm? |
12317 | Have n''t we had a lot of things, when you come to think of it? |
12317 | How are you expecting to bring this wonderful thing to pass? |
12317 | How big is he? |
12317 | How did it happen? |
12317 | How far''s he gone? |
12317 | How old is she now? |
12317 | How? |
12317 | Is it mine? 12317 Is n''t he a dandy?" |
12317 | Is n''t he lovely? |
12317 | Is n''t it a beauty? |
12317 | Is n''t it lovely? |
12317 | Is that a trained bear? |
12317 | Is that man your father? |
12317 | Is that what you''re hangin''around here now for? |
12317 | Is the child badly burned? 12317 Is your home near here, my little gen''leman?" |
12317 | It looks exactly like some of the armour we saw in the Tower of London, does n''t it, Keith? |
12317 | Keith Maclntyre, what have you been doing to yourself? |
12317 | Oh, do n''t you wish you could have lived in those days, Jonesy, and have been a knight? |
12317 | Oh, do you suppose you can hit it? |
12317 | So she''s that kind, is she? 12317 So you want to get a job around here, do you?" |
12317 | Then he would keep him till Uncle Sydney comes, if somebody would pay his board? |
12317 | Then what made him take to his heels so fast if he did n''t? |
12317 | Well, Virginia, what do you suppose has become of the boys? |
12317 | Well, what is it you want me to do? |
12317 | Were you frightened, Ginger? |
12317 | What can it do? |
12317 | What do you s''pose can be the matter? |
12317 | What do you suppose Ginger will say to us for leaving her so long? |
12317 | What do you suppose they''ll do? |
12317 | What do you wa- ant? |
12317 | What does it mean, Allison? |
12317 | What does that mean, auntie? |
12317 | What if we should meet a dragon? |
12317 | What is it, Keith? |
12317 | What is it, son? |
12317 | What kind of a cyclone has struck us now? |
12317 | What makes you so still, Jonesy? |
12317 | What will the wicked queen think when she ca n''t find us? |
12317 | What will you do if I wo n''t? |
12317 | What''s this written underneath? |
12317 | Where on earth have you chimney- sweeps been? |
12317 | Who are invited? |
12317 | Who is going to put you in an asylum? |
12317 | Who is this? |
12317 | Who''s prowlin''roun''dis yere premises? |
12317 | Why did n''t you jump off and flag the train? |
12317 | Why did n''t you meet us at the train? |
12317 | Why do n''t they have it in the dining- room? 12317 Why do n''t you write to your father?" |
12317 | Why is Aunt Allison''s head like Aladdin''s lamp? |
12317 | Why? |
12317 | Will he bite? |
12317 | Will they be out here all winter? |
12317 | Will you keep it to remember me by? |
12317 | Wo n''t Ginger be surprised? |
12317 | Would n''t it make a beautiful carpet for our playhouse down by the old mill? |
12317 | Yes''m,said Virginia, meekly,"but you''ll ask her, wo n''t you please, auntie?" |
12317 | You remember Nell Bond, do you not? 12317 ''And the long and level sunbeams shot their spears into the forest, breaking through its shield of shadow,''Is n''t that pretty? 12317 Better leave your things here, had n''t you? 12317 Both boys began an excited exclamation, but were stopped by Miss Allison''s question,Where is Virginia? |
12317 | But is n''t it a splendid imitation?" |
12317 | Could n''t you raise any more money than that?" |
12317 | Do n''t you know enough to keep still, you little magpie?" |
12317 | Else wherefore born_?'' |
12317 | For my very own?" |
12317 | Have you two little savages scalped her?" |
12317 | He was their ideal of all that was generous and manly, and yet--"What have I ever done,"he asked himself,"to make them think so? |
12317 | Hear me? |
12317 | How can we get our share of the picnic?" |
12317 | How could you be so cruel? |
12317 | How many tableaux are you going to have, Ginger?" |
12317 | I think it''s a ninety- nine dollar cravat you always buy, is n''t it? |
12317 | Is any one else hurt? |
12317 | Is n''t it a stunner? |
12317 | Is n''t it splendid that the Benefit turned out so well? |
12317 | Is that cabin far from here?" |
12317 | Is the tramp in the cabin?" |
12317 | It does n''t seem fair now, does it?" |
12317 | It''s righting the wrong that will be the tough job, but we have done it a little teenty, weenty bit for Jonesy, do n''t you think, auntie? |
12317 | Know anything about railroadin''?" |
12317 | Little Lloyd Sherman,--don''t you know? |
12317 | Now are you satisfied?" |
12317 | Now-- may I have-- my-- white-- flower?" |
12317 | Please let me, papa-- do that much good-- in my life''else wherefore-- born?''" |
12317 | Plow did you happen to be at the switch, and know how to set it?" |
12317 | Poor old fellow, is you hungry? |
12317 | S''pose they''ll jump off, or turn and try to come back?" |
12317 | Then she stopped pounding long enough to say, sharply,"Whuffo''you alluz''spicion dem boys so evahlastin''ly, Unc''Henry? |
12317 | What do you suppose he means?" |
12317 | What other way is there?" |
12317 | What will your mother say? |
12317 | What would you do then?" |
12317 | What wrong could he set right, to prove himself really as noble as they thought him? |
12317 | Where did you get it, boys?" |
12317 | Where is Lloyd?" |
12317 | Who did you say is your tailor in London, and how many times was it the Queen invited you out to Windsor? |
12317 | Why should the ladies be bothered about a matter that the boys were old enough to decide? |
12317 | Would n''t it have been lovely if there had a- been?" |
12317 | Would n''t my little girl like that?" |
12317 | Would n''t that be serving our country, too, Aunt Allison, just a little speck?" |
12317 | Would n''t you like to have seen the heralds marching by, two by two, in cloth of gold, with an escort of the queen''s guard following? |
12317 | Would n''t you now? |
12317 | Would the depot never never come in sight? |
12317 | Would you believe it, Dodds( that''s the little fellow''s name)_ never saw a tree in his life_ until yesterday? |
12317 | You ca n''t pick fruit in the dead of winter, can you? |
12317 | You know you promised Keith you would do anything he wanted, and that is what he was trying to ask for?" |
12317 | You''s done it yo''se''f, has n''t you?" |
12317 | [ Illustration:"''DAPHNE, WHAT''S DEM CHILLUN ALLUZ RACIN''DOWN TO DE SPRING- HOUSE FO''?''"] |
12317 | [ Illustration:"''WILL YOU KEEP IT TO REMEMBER ME BY?''"] |
12317 | or pull weeds, or rake leaves? |
26424 | Is life so dear or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? 26424 What shall I do? |
26424 | When the fire is beginning to kindle, and your heart growing warm, propound these questions to it: Who is this invader? 26424 And how did he use them? 26424 Are they equally propitious? 26424 But how about direct taxation, the manly sacrifice of free peoples, the plummet by which to sound the enlightenment of a nation? 26424 Have I a competent knowledge of him? 26424 He hastened to M. Thiers''s house, and asked him whether he would accept the presidency of a provisional government? 26424 I agree with you that the law is well calculated to draw forth the powers of the mind, but what are its effects on the heart? 26424 Is he a gambler, a spendthrift, or drunkard? 26424 Is he a man of good character; a man of sense? 26424 Is his fortune sufficient to maintain me in the manner I have been accustomed to live, and my sisters do live? 26424 Is it possible to have a nobler epitaph pronounced on one than that-- and pronounced by such a man? 26424 Let her marry, and what is the consequence? 26424 Now, what is the clew to this comedy of errors? 26424 The General asked,By what route?" |
26424 | What has been his walk in life? |
26424 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
26424 | What is the something to be? |
26424 | What were those instincts? |
26424 | What would they have? |
26424 | Who would, consequently, deny the possibility at least, of Bismarck''s being so misunderstood, by friend and foe, at this present moment? |
26424 | Why? |
26424 | and is he one to whom my friends can have no reasonable objection? |
28255 | Gambrel? |
28255 | Which Would You Rather Do or Go Fishing? |
28255 | [ Illustration: Which would you rather do or go fishing? |
13405 | ''And so you lost the wager?'' 13405 ''Eh, old Slick,''said one of the sparks,''capital dinner, by Jove; good wine, fine cigars; plenty of customers, eh?'' |
13405 | ''Faith, have you?'' 13405 ''They?-who do you mean?'' |
13405 | ''Where are they?'' 13405 ''Why, you fool, you did not give them your money, did you?'' |
13405 | And Meyer,I interrupted,"what of him?" |
13405 | And the horses? |
13405 | Any milk? |
13405 | Are not the Crows, the Bannaxas, the Flat Heads, and the Umbiquas, starving during the winter? 13405 Are you quite sure that the revelation was from the Lord?" |
13405 | Aye, boil, bubble, evaporate,exclaimed I;"what do I care for water or tea now?" |
13405 | Can you give my horse a pail of water? |
13405 | Could you restore him, if his head had been cut off? |
13405 | Does she? 13405 Does the just Nanawa wish the Shoshones to be despised by the Crows or the horsemen of the south? |
13405 | Does your power to raise this man to life again depend upon the particular nature of his disease? 13405 Fear has turned the Crows into stones,"resumed the Prince,"what has become of their light feet? |
13405 | Flower of the magnolia,said he, taking her by the hand,"wilt thou love me less as a brother than as a husband? |
13405 | How do you know that you can? |
13405 | How far to Little Rock? |
13405 | How far,said I,"to Caledonia city?" |
13405 | How much? |
13405 | Is there no farm on the way? |
13405 | It is a shameful imposition,he cried;"how much do you want after all?" |
13405 | Now, why should not the Shoshones put themselves at once above the reach of such chances? 13405 Oh, Pat, be a good man; ca n''t you go and pick some berries? |
13405 | Take them away, then; are they tied? |
13405 | The bodies of the young women have been atrociously and cowardly abused-- seest thou? 13405 The what?" |
13405 | We shall soon reach the chiefs,said he;"I to revenge a brother''s death, thou to quit for ever thy tribe and thy children, Hast thou a wish? |
13405 | Well, if this man had been killed, and one of his arms cut off, could you bring him to life, and also restore to him his arm? |
13405 | Well, stranger, what will you give me to ferry you over? |
13405 | What is the matter, Blackey? |
13405 | What the devil can you have babbled about during the whole blessed night? 13405 What,"I exclaimed,"after he was dead?" |
13405 | Where do you come from, eh? |
13405 | Why not settle the matter with them all at once? 13405 Why, you are both of you mere children; she ca n''t get a house, and how could you support her?" |
13405 | Would they not be too happy to exchange their furs against the corn, the tobacco, and good dried fish of the Shoshones? 13405 ''And the pocket- book?'' 13405 ''I know better,''he will say,''do n''t I? 13405 1, smacking his lips;''now have you the real genuine stuff? 13405 Accordingly, after putting one sheet in type? 13405 After a silence of a few minutes, he asked the Comanche chief what he could answer to that? 13405 And next? 13405 And to all the invectives and reproaches of Mrs. Slick he answered only with,''Here she goes? 13405 Are they not although rebels and unnatural children, still the children, of the Shoshones? 13405 At last the judge condescended to cease his whittling, and come to make his own bargain, which he did openly:Any good saddles, Fielding? |
13405 | At last, an old chief rose and addressed Opishka:--"Great chief,"said he,"why askest thou? |
13405 | But what could be expected from a Frenchman? |
13405 | Can a Comanche and warrior think in any way but one? |
13405 | Come, old chap, let us have your bill, and mind, make it out as for old customers, for we intend to return often; do n''t we?'' |
13405 | Could he not easily procure plates and inscribe thereon a set of characters, no matter what, and exhibit them to the intended witnesses as genuine? |
13405 | Did I not- say so? |
13405 | Didst thou ever dream of another voice than mine, a younger one, breathing of love and despair?" |
13405 | Didst thou ever dream of one? |
13405 | Do my warrior? |
13405 | Do n''t you hear anything?" |
13405 | Do they intend to conquer Missouri, Illinois, Mexico? |
13405 | Does the snake offer peace to the squirrel when he kills him with the poison of his dreaded glance? |
13405 | Dost thou know the love of a brother? |
13405 | Down we darted? |
13405 | Eh, Boone, my boy, how fares it with ye?" |
13405 | Had they not the unlimited range of the prairies? |
13405 | He was going, but the chief grasped him firmly by the arm,--"Where dost thou wish to go? |
13405 | How can I escape? |
13405 | How long it lasted none is living to say; and who could? |
13405 | I hear?" |
13405 | I only said,''How dare you, Sir?'' |
13405 | Is not the poison a deadly one?" |
13405 | Is the buffalo less a buffalo when he grows old, or the eagle less an eagle when a hundred winters have whitened his wings? |
13405 | Is there a place in the mountains or the prairies where the name of Mosh Kohta has not been pronounced and praised? |
13405 | It is only the white Manitou that speaks to him, and how could the white Manitou know the nature of the Indians? |
13405 | Now I was in uncommon bad temper that morning, and I answered his question with a"What do you mean, you old fool?" |
13405 | Now, is an impure Cayuga a fit tomb for the body of a Comanche warrior? |
13405 | Perceive you not how fast the blood runs into their veins? |
13405 | See you not into their hearts? |
13405 | Shall we chastise them and give their carcases to the crows and wolves? |
13405 | Shall we return, or encamp here?" |
13405 | The Prince spoke:--"Do you not want to become the most powerful nation of the West? |
13405 | The chief looked at him and replied, with the most ineffable contempt:"What should I answer?" |
13405 | The farmer then asked,--"You are quite certain that you can bring this man to life again?" |
13405 | The merchant, however, would not:"Why did you take it?" |
13405 | The question was, what was the length of the rope required;_ i.e._, what was the width of the river? |
13405 | The text was--"Ye are the salt of the earth, but if the salt has lost its savour, wherewith shall it be salted? |
13405 | The young wanderer was amazed; he had now ten thousand dollars, but what could he do with so much money? |
13405 | There stood the bleeding moon;''twas neither light nor obscurity; how could man divide the time and the seasons? |
13405 | Was it good-- was it bad? |
13405 | Was it good? |
13405 | What Comanche ever scalped women and children? |
13405 | What could he do? |
13405 | What could we do? |
13405 | What does this mean? |
13405 | What evidence, then, have we of the_ existence_ of these plates? |
13405 | What have they to eat? |
13405 | What hunting and what fishing have you had this last year? |
13405 | What must it then be on those who have resided with the Indians for years? |
13405 | What next? |
13405 | What say my warriors; let them speak? |
13405 | What then shall we do? |
13405 | What were the Crows before the coming of the white men, on the shores of the Buona Ventura? |
13405 | What will you bet-- five, ten, fifty, hundred? |
13405 | What would be easier than thus to impose on their credulity and weakness? |
13405 | Where was the boasted superiority of the Texans over the Indian race? |
13405 | Who ever heard of the Arrapahoes entering the war- path in night? |
13405 | Who knows? |
13405 | Who then could resist the Shoshones? |
13405 | Who will say that the Mormon prophet is not among the great spirits of the age? |
13405 | Why ask? |
13405 | Why comest thou, false- hearted, to pour thy deceitful words into the ears of my young men? |
13405 | Why did they act like wolves, biting their benefactors, instead of showing to them their gratitude?" |
13405 | Why this exact discipline of the Mormon corps? |
13405 | Why; can two suns light the same prairie, or two male eagles cover the same nest? |
13405 | a pale- faced Oposh- ton- ehoc? |
13405 | does an Indian say to the beaver, he comes to offer peace when he sets his traps for him? |
13405 | gentlemen,''exclaimed Slick,''why did you not say so? |
13405 | know such a people? |
13405 | or could you now bring any dead man to life?" |
13405 | said I,"are they shooting in the bar?" |
13405 | speak? |
13405 | suppose they are a vanguard of General Rusk''s army, and one of them should escape? |
13405 | what can we expect from them and their assistance but exorbitant claims and undue interference? |
13405 | why should they not get rich? |
18618 | But when? |
18618 | Dead, sir? |
18618 | Did the Americans stand fire? |
18618 | If the governor refuses to give the pass, shall the revenue officer be allowed to seize the tea and land it to- morrow morning? |
18618 | Shall we submit and say nothing? 18618 What makes thee think so, Isaac?" |
18618 | Who cares what this country fellow thinks? |
18618 | Who is he anyway? 18618 Would ten dollars be of any service?" |
18618 | 3. Who were the men Washington chose to help him in his new task as President? |
18618 | 4. Who was Kit Carson, and how did he help Frémont? |
18618 | 7. Who was Lafayette, and what did he do for the American cause? |
18618 | A weak man would have said:"What can I do with an army like this? |
18618 | And how did the Provincials, as the British called the Americans, regard the situation? |
18618 | And what do you suppose the chief business of this Congress was? |
18618 | Are you a patriot? |
18618 | Are you locating every event upon the map? |
18618 | Are you making frequent use of the map? |
18618 | Are you making frequent use of the map? |
18618 | Are you making frequent use of the map? |
18618 | Are you making frequent use of your map? |
18618 | Are you making frequent use of your maps? |
18618 | But how can we help ourselves?" |
18618 | But when shall we be stronger? |
18618 | Can you explain Patrick Henry''s power as an orator? |
18618 | Can you explain how it was that he had such a powerful influence over men? |
18618 | Can you tell in what ways each of these is of special value to us? |
18618 | Did not the British fleet have them so close under its nose that it could easily get between them and New York and make escape impossible? |
18618 | Did you ever hear of such a party? |
18618 | Do you wonder that the colonists felt that England was taking an unfair advantage? |
18618 | Do you wonder that they loved their new home? |
18618 | For how could the Americans get away? |
18618 | Have you in your mind a picture of young Patrick Henry as he rode on horseback along the country road toward Williamsburg? |
18618 | He wanted to rule England in his own way, and how could he do so if he allowed his stubborn colonists in America thus to get the better of him? |
18618 | How are we all dependent upon one another? |
18618 | How can the simple colonists resist it?" |
18618 | How did Washington show his ability as a general at New York? |
18618 | How did he help his countrymen before taking up his public life? |
18618 | How did he prove his strength at that time? |
18618 | How did he save this settlement from the Indians? |
18618 | How did the colonies help the people of Boston at this time? |
18618 | How did the people express their feeling for Washington when he was on his way to New York to be inaugurated as President? |
18618 | How do you account for Clark''s remarkable success? |
18618 | How is the telegraph useful to men? |
18618 | How may we be truly patriotic? |
18618 | In what respects were Samuel Adams and Patrick Henry unlike as boys? |
18618 | In what way did George III and Parliament punish Boston for throwing the tea overboard? |
18618 | In what ways are coal, iron, and steel especially useful? |
18618 | In what ways was the Erie Canal useful to the people? |
18618 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
18618 | It is good for us to ask ourselves this question: How can I be helpful in the community where I live, which has done so much for me? |
18618 | Of Daniel Webster? |
18618 | Of Henry Clay? |
18618 | On a certain occasion Morse said to one of them, who owed him for a few months''teaching:"Well, Strothers, my boy, how are we off for money?" |
18618 | Serious questions are being discussed:"What shall we do about the Stamp Act?" |
18618 | Shall we beg Parliament to repeal the act, or shall we take a bold stand and declare that we will not obey it?" |
18618 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
18618 | Shall we send a petition to King George asking him for justice? |
18618 | Should you not like to have been one of the guests? |
18618 | The English captain, feeling sure of victory, called out:"Has your ship struck?" |
18618 | Then arose the burning question:"Shall the territory we have acquired from Mexico be free or open to slavery?" |
18618 | What and where was the National Road? |
18618 | What are the four great industries taken up in this chapter? |
18618 | What can you tell about the early life of John C. Calhoun? |
18618 | What can you tell of Robertson''s boyhood? |
18618 | What did I say?" |
18618 | What did Nathan Hale do? |
18618 | What did Washington say when he heard that the Americans had stood their ground in face of the British assault? |
18618 | What did William Pitt think of the Stamp Act? |
18618 | What did he do for Kentucky? |
18618 | What did he do for Texas? |
18618 | What did he find out about the spirit of these colonists? |
18618 | What did the Americans win by the treaty? |
18618 | What do you admire about John Paul Jones? |
18618 | What do you admire about Morse? |
18618 | What do you admire about each of the three great statesmen? |
18618 | What do you admire about him? |
18618 | What do you admire about him? |
18618 | What do you admire about him? |
18618 | What do you admire about him? |
18618 | What do you admire about him? |
18618 | What do you admire in Patrick Henry? |
18618 | What do you admire in Samuel Adams? |
18618 | What do you think of him? |
18618 | What do you think of him? |
18618 | What do you think of him? |
18618 | What effects did the invention of the cotton- gin have upon slavery? |
18618 | What great mistake did General Howe make at that time? |
18618 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
18618 | What kind of Indian fighter was Sevier? |
18618 | What kind of army did Washington have when he took command at Cambridge? |
18618 | What kind of boy was Andrew Jackson? |
18618 | What kind of boy was Grant? |
18618 | What kind of boy was Houston? |
18618 | What kind of boy was he? |
18618 | What kind of boyhood had Daniel Boone? |
18618 | What kind of man was Daniel Morgan, and what do you think of him? |
18618 | What kind of man was George III? |
18618 | What kind of man was he? |
18618 | What kind of man? |
18618 | What kind of man? |
18618 | What kind of man? |
18618 | What kind of student was he in college? |
18618 | What led up to the"Boston Tea Party"? |
18618 | What part did he take in the events leading up to the purchase of Florida? |
18618 | What sort of training did the pioneer boy receive in school and at home? |
18618 | What was Clark''s brilliant plan? |
18618 | What was Webster''s idea of the Union, and in what way did it differ from Hayne''s? |
18618 | What was the Compromise of 1850? |
18618 | What was the Declaration of Independence, and when was it signed? |
18618 | What was the Emancipation Proclamation? |
18618 | What was the First Continental Congress, and what did it do? |
18618 | What was the Missouri Compromise? |
18618 | What was the Stamp Act? |
18618 | What was the condition of his army when he took command in the South? |
18618 | What was the extent of our country at that time? |
18618 | What was the outcome of the desperate sea duel between the Bon Homme Richard and the Serapis? |
18618 | What was the tax law of 1767, and why did the colonists object to paying the new taxes? |
18618 | What were some of the important results of the Civil War? |
18618 | What were the results of the Battle of Bunker Hill? |
18618 | What were the results of the capture of Burgoyne? |
18618 | What were the results of this expedition? |
18618 | What would they have? |
18618 | When did he make a great speech in St. John''s Church, Richmond? |
18618 | When did it end? |
18618 | When did the Revolution begin? |
18618 | When did this war begin, and when did it end? |
18618 | Why did Jefferson send Lewis and Clark on their famous expedition? |
18618 | Why did Lee go with Virginia when this State seceded? |
18618 | Why did Parliament pass it, and why did the colonists object to it? |
18618 | Why did Parliament repeal it? |
18618 | Why did Robertson plant a settlement at the place where Nashville now stands? |
18618 | Why did Sevier go with his family to the Watauga settlement? |
18618 | Why did he so strongly desire that the colonists should be compelled to pay a tax to England? |
18618 | Why did not Lincoln set the slaves free when he became President? |
18618 | Why did the Americans fortify Breed''s Hill? |
18618 | Why did the British troops march out to Lexington and Concord? |
18618 | Why did the English call him a pirate when he was sailing along the British coasts in order to destroy property? |
18618 | Why did the Westerners wish the Mississippi to be open to their trade? |
18618 | Why did they admire him? |
18618 | Why has Washington been called the"Father of his Country"? |
18618 | Why stand we here idle? |
18618 | Why was Clay called"the Great Peacemaker"? |
18618 | Why was Napoleon willing to sell us the whole of Louisiana? |
18618 | Why were the people of South Carolina opposed to the high tariff laws of 1828 and 1832? |
18618 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
18618 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
27431 | Do you suppose,said he,"we would pretend to treat with such treacherous wretches? |
27431 | I am under a flag of truce,cried Simon;"do you know who it is that speaks to you?" |
27431 | What if they do shoot us? |
27431 | What noise is that? |
27431 | Who comes there? |
27431 | At all events, he was leaving them for months, perhaps for years-- he knew not how long-- and who can wonder that tears stood in his eyes? |
27431 | But what was their surprise on finding the camp plundered, and not one of their companions to be seen? |
27431 | But who was the enemy? |
27431 | He came forward with his slate and pencil, and the master began:"If you subtract six from nine, what remains?" |
27431 | If you take three quarters from a whole number, what remains?" |
27431 | Looking through, they saw fifteen or twenty Indians fast asleep in the camp; but where were the girls? |
27431 | They were safe, but where were their comrades? |
27431 | What could prompt men to leave the comforts of their quiet homes, and wander off into the wilderness? |
27431 | What had become of them? |
27431 | What was to be done? |
27431 | Which way were they to go? |
27431 | Without ammunition to procure food, or defend himself, what could he do? |
27431 | You expect reinforcements and cannon, do you? |
27431 | cried Boone;"who ever beheld such an abundance?" |
27431 | cried the master, beating him,"you stupid little fool, how can you show that?" |
11431 | And he swore? |
11431 | And how long,said Alexander,"have I to live?" |
11431 | And you expect me, a stranger on your lake, to find this place without chart, course, distance, latitude, longitude, or soundings? 11431 And you,"replied the pirate,"by what right do you ravage the world? |
11431 | Better than teaching school and writing learned articles? |
11431 | Do n''t you? |
11431 | From far? |
11431 | Have you learned that fame is an icy shadow? |
11431 | Have you? |
11431 | His name? |
11431 | How, friend,replied the archbishop,"has it[_ the homily_] met with any Aristarchus[_ severe critic_]?" |
11431 | I''m a sort of a kind of a nonentity; arn''t I, sergeant Drill? |
11431 | If you once saw me in battle, you''d never forget it; would he, sergeant Drill? |
11431 | In your opinion, who is the greatest genius that France has ever produced? |
11431 | Is the sinful servant more Than his gracious Lord who bore Bonds and stripes in Jewry? |
11431 | My character for valor is pretty well known; is n''t it, sergeant Drill? |
11431 | That gratified ambition can not make you happy? 11431 That was pretty well, egad, eh?" |
11431 | The ladies will be happy to-- eh? |
11431 | Then prithee, sweetheart, do you know the bailiff''s daughter there? |
11431 | Was he a-- ah-- peaceable man? |
11431 | What''s here? 11431 Where were you born?" |
11431 | ( Query,"Seint Eloy"for Seinte Loy?) |
11431 | ... The same Astarte? |
11431 | 1): Have you forgot the elder Dionysius, Surnamed the Tyrant?... |
11431 | Allow me to ask if you think a mariner runs by his nose, like one of Pathfinder''s hounds?" |
11431 | Ask you for whom my tears do flow so? |
11431 | BETTY DOXY, Captain Macheath says to her,"Do you drink as hard as ever? |
11431 | BORS(_ King_) of Gaul, brother of king Ban of Benwicke[ Brittany?]. |
11431 | Bishop Bruno, whither art thou travelling? |
11431 | But Ogier gazed upon it[_ the sea_] doubtfully One Moment, and then, sheathing, Courtain, said,"What tales are these?" |
11431 | But what are these to great Atossa''s mind? |
11431 | Byron refers to it in the lines: Like friar Bacon''s brazen head, I''ve spoken,"Time is, time was, time''s past[?]" |
11431 | C. Dibdin says none who ever saw W. Parsons( 1736- 1795) in"Corbaccio"could forget his effective mode of exclaiming"Has he made his will? |
11431 | Can this last long? |
11431 | Can we the Drapier then forget? |
11431 | Care I for the limb, the thews, the stature?... |
11431 | Clytus? |
11431 | Cowley,_ Who''s the Dupe_? |
11431 | Cui a Deo æternum meritum nisi vero Catholico Recaredo regi? |
11431 | D''ye give it up? |
11431 | D''ye think my niece will ever endure such a borachio? |
11431 | Did he mean all that by shaking his head? |
11431 | Did you think I should live for ever? |
11431 | Do n''t you hear how lord Strutt[_ the king of Spain_] has bespoke his liveries at Lewis Baboon''s shop[_ France_]?... |
11431 | Do you love me?" |
11431 | Doll Tearsheet for a lady of quality in Temple Garden; if he were wiser than he is... of what worth were he to us? |
11431 | ELEAZAR the Moor, insolent, bloodthirsty, lustful, and vindictive, like"Aaron,"in[ Shakespeare''s?] |
11431 | EST- IL- POSSSIBLE? |
11431 | Fond of saying"good things,"and pointing them out with such expressions as"There I had you, eh?" |
11431 | From Corin came it first? |
11431 | Have you not heard the poets tell How came the dainty Baby Bell Into this World of ours? |
11431 | He is stabbed by Deme''trius and Chiron, sons of Tam''ora queen of the Goths.--(?) |
11431 | He rarely finishes a sentence, but runs on in this style:"Dover is an odd sort of a-- eh?" |
11431 | He turned at random to the"Prayer of the Jews,"in Baruch, and was so struck with it that he said aloud to Racine,"Dites, donc, who was this Baruch? |
11431 | His one and only inquiry is"How many quarterings has a person got?" |
11431 | His wife says to him: Here''s a goodly jewel.. Did you not win this at Goletta, captain?.. |
11431 | How dare you infest the seas with your misdeeds?" |
11431 | Iago, speaking of the lieutenant, says: And what was he? |
11431 | If then, Castara, I in heaven nor move, Nor earth, nor hell, where am I but in love? |
11431 | If this had been the case it would, indeed, have been startling; but what are the facts? |
11431 | Is not our nation in his debt? |
11431 | Is not this dying with courage and true greatness? |
11431 | Justice Shallow remonstrated, but Falstaff exclaimed,"Will you tell me, master Shallow, how to choose a man? |
11431 | Now, if the food was in the great- coat, and the great- coat was stolen, how is it that the victuals remained in Sancho''s possession untouched? |
11431 | Or to the dreadful summit of the cliff That beetles o''er its base into the sea? |
11431 | Pilate''s question, QUID EST VERITAS? |
11431 | Shakespeare would have furnished them with a good motto,"Use every man after his desert, and who shall''scape whipping?" |
11431 | Shall sapient managers new scenes produce From Cherry, Skeffington, and_ Mother Goose?_ Byron,_ English Bards and Scotch Reviewers_( 1809). |
11431 | Sinopê,"He who made a tub his home?" |
11431 | Sir Fine- face, sir Fair- hands? |
11431 | The captain was taken up by a coaster from Eye, loaded with cheese--"[ Now, pray, what did parson Prunello say? |
11431 | The lady Astarte his? |
11431 | The measure was agreed to in full council, but one of the sager mice inquired,"Who would undertake to bell the cat?" |
11431 | The sailors trembled at sight of him, and the fiend demanded how they dared to trespass"where never hero braved his rage before?" |
11431 | This Curio, hated now and scorned by all, Who fell himself to work his country''s fall? |
11431 | Thus,"Does your master stay in town, as the saying is?" |
11431 | Was I for this nigh wrecked upon the sea, And twice by awkward wind from England''s bank Drove back again unto my native clime?... |
11431 | Was it not for this that no cortejo ere I yet have chosen from the youth of Sev''ille? |
11431 | Were you at Sedan? |
11431 | What is this jargon? |
11431 | What say you does this wizard style himself-- Hakeem Biamrallah, the Third Fatimite? |
11431 | What says my Æsculapius? |
11431 | What would Sir Roger de Coverley be without his follies and his charming little brain- cracks? |
11431 | What''s the matter with me?" |
11431 | What, however, says history proper? |
11431 | Whatty, what is this? |
11431 | When Crillon heard the story of the Crucifixion read at Church, he grew so excited that he cried out in an audible voice,_ Où étais tu, Crillon_? |
11431 | When like a wretche led in an iron chayne, He was presented by his chiefest friende Unto the foes of him whom he had slayne? |
11431 | Where is the great Alcidês of the field, Valiant lord Talbot, earl of Shrewsbury? |
11431 | Where were they when I, unaided, Rescued thee from thirteen foes? |
11431 | Who can Amiel''s praise refuse? |
11431 | Who in their useless pyramids would live? |
11431 | Who is it thou hast slain? |
11431 | Who knows not Circe, The daughter of the sun, whose charmed cup Whoever tasted lost his upright shape, And downward fell into a grovelling swine? |
11431 | Who would not weep if Atticus were he? |
11431 | Why does he wish to swear away the life of that young man who never did him any harm? |
11431 | Why is Chelmsford Theatre like a half- moon? |
11431 | Why is a pump like viscount Castlereigh? |
11431 | Why should I not, had I the heart to do it, Like to th''Egyptian thief at point of death, Kill what I love? |
11431 | _ Bacchus_ or_ Saturn_? |
11431 | _ Beonê_ or_ Oenonê_? |
11431 | _ Ce''lia_, a poetical name for any lady- love: as"Would you know my Celia''s charms...?" |
11431 | _ Critias_ or_ Crito_? |
11431 | _ Dites, donc, avez- vous lu Baruch?_ Said when a person puts an unexpected question, or makes a startling proposal. |
11431 | can you prefer a man to the interests of Rome?" |
11431 | de quoi servait- il sur la terre? |
11431 | do they run already? |
11431 | in thy anguish What is there left to thee? |
11431 | is he dead? |
11431 | my Galen?... |
11431 | said the prince of darkness;"so you think by these churches and convents to put me and mine to your ban, do you? |
11431 | the hapless husband cried;"young as I am and unprepared?" |
11431 | who comes here? |
12402 | And was this bright-- this fair domain-- With all its beauty, formed in vain? 12402 No answer still? |
12402 | What if they meet this side the goal? |
12402 | A step at the gate, in the path, on the sill; Did the postman return? |
12402 | A world is waiting for thee: And shall it be deceived? |
12402 | Ah, then, who''d dream that aught so fair, Was fleeting as the Summer air? |
12402 | And archly she said as she gave him his tea,"Where''s the valentine Archy, you promised to me? |
12402 | And if he sometimes noisy grows, What matter, if he''s right? |
12402 | And is not such a scene as this the spell, That lulls the restless passions into peace? |
12402 | And lightnings glared those towering trees among? |
12402 | And who are those men, daughter, helping him down? |
12402 | And will he come and mock me with his booty, And twirl my visions round his bony finger? |
12402 | And will he tell my heart no other beauty Upon the earth is mine-- no other duty, Than for his mandate linger? |
12402 | Are there no duties there to do? |
12402 | Are they our kindred? |
12402 | But avails it aught? |
12402 | But that''s not all-- the horse I ride, The ox I yoke, the dog I chide, The flesh and fish and fowl we feed on Are kindred, too; is that agreed on? |
12402 | But why thus chide-- why not with gratitude Receive and cherish ev''ry gleam of joy? |
12402 | But, slowly she revives-- when, quick as light, His cloak and wig are instantly thrown by-- And what is that that greets her''wildered sight? |
12402 | But, who than Jackson ever yet Has filled a prouder grave? |
12402 | By yon steep stair of ruddy light The sun is climbing fast aloft; What makes the stealthy, creeping chill That hangs about the morning still?" |
12402 | Call back the pure, forgiven, To such a world as this? |
12402 | Can bleeding hearts refrain? |
12402 | Can earthly commerce hush the music of the heart, and shut the door of memory on a friend? |
12402 | Can you know All the good I owe to you? |
12402 | Canst thou read his inmost soul? |
12402 | Canst thou search his secret feelings? |
12402 | Canst thou tell the hidden motives Which his actions here control? |
12402 | Death have hush''d The music that endears, And makes this chill''d existence tolerable? |
12402 | Did angels with snow- white wings come down And hover about her dying bed? |
12402 | Did friends who had left it, to greet her, advance And joyfully lead her to dwell with them, there? |
12402 | Did her gaze rest on valleys and pastures green, Where roses in beauty supernal, bloom? |
12402 | Did she cross the deep Jordan without any fears For all were now calmed on her dear Saviour''s breast? |
12402 | Did strains of sweet music her senses entrance While Earth, with her loved ones, receded in air? |
12402 | Did they bear a white robe, and a starry crown To place on their sainted comrade''s head? |
12402 | Do lilacs bloom in the wild green wood? |
12402 | Do roses drop from the bilberry bough? |
12402 | Dost thou mourn for the hoary- headed sage Who has sunk to the grave''neath the weight of age? |
12402 | Dost thou mourn that the gray and mouldering door Swings back to the reverent crowd no more? |
12402 | Dost thou mourn, that from sacred desk the word Of life and truth is no longer heard? |
12402 | Doth a watcher, pale and patient, Folded from the tempest''s wrath, Wait the coming of my footsteps Down the grave''s long, lonesome path? |
12402 | Earth, air and sky, in dire commune, Demand-- what hand shall guide them now? |
12402 | For the bride''s decay? |
12402 | For the bridegroom''s fall? |
12402 | For the light of youth quenched in the tomb? |
12402 | For the vanquished pride of manhood''s bloom? |
12402 | Giant, young and strong, What impulse heaves thy throbbing breast? |
12402 | Hath the queen of all blossoming beauty Come forth with the early dawn? |
12402 | Have I return? |
12402 | Have we grown wiser? |
12402 | Heed the voice that asks in scorn,-- Thou liv''dst and reign''dst for what? |
12402 | Hey? |
12402 | Hold I the slightest part Within the boundless realm of thy confiding heart? |
12402 | How are you, George, my rhyming brother? |
12402 | How have we used this fleeting year? |
12402 | How long has that hand lain in dust? |
12402 | How long, and yet how long, must this frail bark be driven, While these unsteady, fitful hope- lights given, One after one expire? |
12402 | How long? |
12402 | How stands the case to- day? |
12402 | How, poor frail and erring mortal, Darest thou judge thy fellow- man And with bitter words and feelings, All his faults and frailties scan? |
12402 | I see her soul in yonder star, I see the soft lines of her face, And could God so unkindly mar That angel beauty and its grace? |
12402 | Is he erring? |
12402 | Is it chiming in woe or gladness, Its symphonies sweet and grand? |
12402 | Is it hung in an ancient turret? |
12402 | Is it rung for a shadowy sorrow, In the shadowy phantom land? |
12402 | Is it swung by a mortal hand? |
12402 | John A. Calhoun, my Joe John,"I wonder what you mean?" |
12402 | Just ask the wisest, What is matter? |
12402 | Let me see, Yes;"Can Christians consistently Engage in war against a brother And at the same time love each other?" |
12402 | List-- do you hear that mother speak For her son that is doom''d to die? |
12402 | Lying in your chamber low, Neath the daisies and the dew, Can you hear me? |
12402 | Must it be That all the fools in all creation, And knaves and thieves of every station In life, can call me their relation? |
12402 | No clothes to mend, that you could sew, No beer that''s worth the brewing? |
12402 | On pinions of light did she mount to the spheres Where all is contentment, and pleasure, and rest? |
12402 | Or dost thou ever give to me one thought? |
12402 | Or dost thou mourn that the house of God Has ceased to be a divine abode? |
12402 | Or shall the journey henceforth take A brighter phaze for me? |
12402 | Or shout for war? |
12402 | Or who shall hope, or friend, or foe, E''er to forget that hour? |
12402 | Reason return:--let strife be o''er? |
12402 | Saw ye in your solemn marches From the citadel of death, In our bridal halls of beauty Burning still the lamp of faith? |
12402 | Shall I next six- and- twenty make My journey, love, with thee? |
12402 | Shall warrior plumes bedeck thy crest? |
12402 | She cried--"within thy hidden hands What recompense is waiting me Beyond these naked wintry sands? |
12402 | She held her breath in silent dread, The crimson from her soft cheek fled, Low at her feet he knelt;--"No welcome for the leal and true? |
12402 | She is not dead, she''s shining In robes of spotless white; Why then are we repining? |
12402 | She is not dead-- O never Will sorrow cross her track; She''s passed Death''s darksome river, And who would have her back? |
12402 | That pastor and people have passed away, And the tears of night their graves bedew By the funeral cypress and solemn yew? |
12402 | That the gentle shepherd, who to pasture bore His flock, has gone, to return no more? |
12402 | That the tall and waving grass defiles The well- worn flags of the crowdless aisles? |
12402 | That the wild fox barks, and the owlet screams Where the organ and choir pealed out their themes? |
12402 | Then let me turn, and return too, For I have wandered from my text,-- Well, Mr. Steele, how do you do? |
12402 | Thus I behold thy wondrous arm And own thy works divine: Then what in life or death can harm So long as thou art mine? |
12402 | Thy mistress,--fair Beatrice,--dwells she here? |
12402 | To distant lands to roam and then Dead lips to welcome me again? |
12402 | To gain a life of shipwrecked bliss? |
12402 | To rise no more? |
12402 | Turning the lumbering, mumbling wheel; Which moans and groans as tho''t could feel?" |
12402 | WHAT IS MATTER? |
12402 | We can bear so much in youth; Who cares for a swift sharp pain? |
12402 | What ails the sunshine and the day?" |
12402 | What am I? |
12402 | What say''st thou? |
12402 | What startled you? |
12402 | What though the o''er- labored limbs are weary? |
12402 | When will the flood of human woe, That flows from folly, pride, and sin, Subside, and ever cease to flow? |
12402 | When will the reign of peace begin? |
12402 | When wilt thou come with thy tiny feet That bounded my glad embrace to meet? |
12402 | Where Nature, a paradise to grace, Hath loved her every charm to trace, That man, enamored of distress Should mar it into wilderness?" |
12402 | Where is the Divine compassion That God has shown to me? |
12402 | Where lilies in snowy and golden sheen Fill the air with their heavenly, rare perfume? |
12402 | Where then shall we poor mortals go? |
12402 | Who doubts, that ever saw him strike, He aimed to strike for right? |
12402 | Who never yield or quit the field, Can you blame Charlie then? |
12402 | Why dost thou pour thy sad complaint On the evening winds from a bosom faint? |
12402 | Why flee me, like a debtor in arrears? |
12402 | Why have I lived for this? |
12402 | Why rake out from time''s dull ashes, And before the world display Deeds, it may be, long repented And forgiven, ere this day? |
12402 | Why spend thy zest on barren sands? |
12402 | Wilt peal the bugle- blast afar And urge the cannon''s madd''ning roar? |
12402 | Wilt plead for right, or bleed for wrong? |
12402 | Wilt whisper peace? |
12402 | Years six and twenty have been mine To journey on alone: Shall I as many more repine, Before I am undone? |
12402 | Yet, when he deigned to raise it, Who could resist its power? |
12402 | and the sweets are free-- Wilt thou trill to the touch of outwearied fingers? |
12402 | and to his arm I''ll trust my destiny; For what in life or death can harm The soul that leans on thee? |
12402 | did you not hear that loud shriek? |
12402 | do you not see that wild eye? |
12402 | laughed the miller,"he pauses not and why-- In the sunshine pausing and musing I? |
12402 | may not my body rest Beneath that sod my heart loves best? |
12402 | my letter forget? |
12402 | my love, oh, why No answer to my pleading cry?" |
12402 | oh try to strengthen; Sad? |
12402 | seek in kindness, Then, to win him back to peace; Is he weak? |
12402 | the scene has turned, Where burn those fires now? |
12402 | what have I been doing?'' |
12402 | what shall dry that country''s tears Fast falling o''er his fall? |
12402 | when will slumber cease to hold The limbs that lie so still and cold? |
12402 | whose heavy plaint Drifts down the deathly shadows faint, Why weep ye for this risen saint? |
14849 | And is mine one? |
14849 | ''Twas doing nothing was his curse-- Is there a vice can plague us worse? |
14849 | A common friendship-- who talks of a common friendship? |
14849 | A useless flint o''er which the waters flow? |
14849 | All is beauty: And knowing this, is love, and love is duty: What further may be sought for or declared? |
14849 | All the world cries,"Where is the man who will save us?" |
14849 | Am I wrong to be always so happy? |
14849 | And Jehovah said unto Joshua, Get thee up; wherefore art thou thus fallen upon thy face? |
14849 | And do our loves all perish with our frames? |
14849 | And dost thou hear the word ere it be spoken, And apprehend love''s presence by its power? |
14849 | And if ye salute your brethren only, what do ye more than others? |
14849 | And it is n''t the fact that you''re hurt that counts, But only-- how did you take it? |
14849 | And loved so well a high behavior, In man or maid, that thou from speech refrained, Nobility more noble to repay? |
14849 | And the son of man, that thou visitest him? |
14849 | And they said one to another, Was not our heart burning within us, while he spake to us in the way, while he opened to us the scriptures? |
14849 | And thou sayest, What doth God know? |
14849 | And what of that? |
14849 | And where are thy playmates now, O man of sober brow? |
14849 | And which of you by being anxious can add one cubit unto the measure of his life? |
14849 | And who will walk a mile with me Along life''s weary way? |
14849 | And why art thou disquieted within me? |
14849 | Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? |
14849 | Are not ye of much more value than they? |
14849 | Are the stars too distant? |
14849 | Are you in earnest? |
14849 | Art little? |
14849 | At rich men''s tables eaten bread and pulse? |
14849 | But he is in one mind, and who can turn him? |
14849 | But the little daughter whispered, As she took his icy hand,"Is n''t God upon the ocean, Just the same as on the land?" |
14849 | But what if I fail of my purpose here? |
14849 | But whoso hath the world''s goods, and beholdeth his brother in need, and shutteth up his compassion from him, how doth the love of God abide in him? |
14849 | Can a fig tree, my brethren, yield olives, or a vine figs? |
14849 | Can he judge through the thick darkness? |
14849 | Can thy heart endure, or can thy hands be strong, in the days that I shall deal with thee? |
14849 | Can you add to that line That he lived for it too? |
14849 | Canst thou prophesy, thou little tree, What the glory of the boughs shall be? |
14849 | Didst fancy life was spent on beds of ease, Fluttering the rose- leaves scattered by the breeze? |
14849 | Didst fondly dream the sun would never set? |
14849 | Do ye hear the children weeping, O my brothers, Ere the sorrow comes with years? |
14849 | Dost fear to lose thy way? |
14849 | Doth God exact day labor, light denied? |
14849 | Exceeding peace made Ben Adhem bold, And to the presence in the room he said,"What writest thou?" |
14849 | Feeling the way-- and if the way is cold, What matter? |
14849 | For doth not that rightly seem to be lost which is given to one ungrateful? |
14849 | For what shall a man be profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and forfeit his life? |
14849 | George W. F. Hegel born 1770. Who are thy playmates, boy? |
14849 | God will not seek thy race, Nor will he ask thy birth; Alone he will demand of thee, What hast thou done on earth? |
14849 | Hast thou named all the birds without a gun? |
14849 | Have we not darkened and dazed ourselves with books long enough? |
14849 | Have we not groveled here long enough eating and drinking like mere brutes? |
14849 | Have we not stood here like trees in the ground long enough? |
14849 | Have you an ancient wound? |
14849 | Having eyes, see ye not? |
14849 | He said:"My child, do you yield? |
14849 | He went out, and found others standing; and he saith unto them, Why stand ye here all the day idle? |
14849 | How comes it to pass, then, that we appear such cowards in reasoning, and are so afraid to stand the test of ridicule? |
14849 | How many smiles?--a score? |
14849 | How to constitute oneself a man? |
14849 | I will lift up mine eyes unto the mountains: From whence shall my help come? |
14849 | If a man die, shall he live again? |
14849 | If heard aright It is the knell of my departed hours: Where are they? |
14849 | If there were dreams to sell, Merry and sad to tell, And the crier rang the bell, What would you buy? |
14849 | In the hour of distress and misery the eye of every mortal turns to friendship; in the hour of gladness and conviviality, what is your want? |
14849 | Is all that we see or seem But a dream within a dream? |
14849 | Is life a noxious weed which whirlwinds sow? |
14849 | Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
14849 | Is n''t it interesting to get blamed for everything? |
14849 | Is not God in the height of heaven? |
14849 | Is not the life more than the food, and the body than the raiment? |
14849 | It is not worth the keeping: let it go: But shall it? |
14849 | Josephine born 1763 Could we by a wish Have what we will and get the future now, Would we wish aught done undone in the past? |
14849 | Know ye not that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit which is in you, which ye have from God? |
14849 | Look full into thy spirit''s self, The world of mystery scan; What if thy way to faith in God Should lie through faith in man? |
14849 | Loved the wild rose, and left it on the stalk? |
14849 | NOVEMBER Who said November''s face was grim? |
14849 | O God, can I not save One from the pitiless wave? |
14849 | Say, dost thou understand the whispered token, The promise breathed from every leaf and flower? |
14849 | Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? |
14849 | Shall I ask the brave soldier who fights at my side, In the cause of mankind, if our creeds agree? |
14849 | Shall I give up the friend I have valued and tried, If he kneel not before the same altar as me? |
14849 | Shall I hold on with both hands to every paltry possession? |
14849 | Shall days spring up as wild vines grow, Unheeding where they climb or cling? |
14849 | Shall two walk together, except they have agreed? |
14849 | Shall we have ears on the stretch for the footfalls of sorrow that never come, but be deaf to the whirr of the wings of happiness that fill all space? |
14849 | Summer and flowers are far away; Gloomy old Winter is king to- day; Buds will not blow, and sun will not shine: What shall I do for a valentine? |
14849 | Temptation sharp? |
14849 | The great Gods pass through the great Time- hall; Who can see? |
14849 | Then why, my soul, dost thou complain? |
14849 | Then why, my soul, dost thou complain? |
14849 | There is sunshine without and within me, and how should I mope or be sad? |
14849 | Though you have but a little room, do you fancy that God is not there, too, and it is impossible to live therein a life that shall be somewhat lofty? |
14849 | Thy bountiful care what tongue can recite? |
14849 | Unarmed faced danger with a heart of trust? |
14849 | Was it hard for him? |
14849 | Was it thus that he plodded ahead, Never turning aside? |
14849 | Was the trial sore? |
14849 | Well, what of that? |
14849 | Well, what of that? |
14849 | What do you live for if it is not to make life less difficult for each other? |
14849 | What doctor possesses such curative resources as those latent in a single ray of hope? |
14849 | What does your anxiety do? |
14849 | What have you done with your soul, my friend? |
14849 | What if no bird through the pearl rain is soaring? |
14849 | What if no blossom looks upward adoring? |
14849 | What is man, that thou art mindful of him? |
14849 | What is the essence and life of character? |
14849 | What is your life? |
14849 | What shall we do with it? |
14849 | What though to- night wrecks you and me If so to- morrow saves? |
14849 | What would be the use of immortality for a person who can not use well half an hour? |
14849 | What''s hallowed ground? |
14849 | When I hear a young man spoken of as giving promise of high genius, the first question I ask about him is always-- Does he work? |
14849 | When the heart overflows with gratitude or with other sweet and sacred sentiment, what is the word to which it would give utterance? |
14849 | Whence comest thou?" |
14849 | Where else can we live? |
14849 | Who is the happiest person? |
14849 | Who is wise and understanding among you? |
14849 | Who knoweth not in all these, That the hand of Jehovah hath wrought this? |
14849 | Who said her voice was harsh and sad? |
14849 | Who stands ready to act again and always in the spirit of this day of reunion and hope and patriotic fervor? |
14849 | Who would fail, for a pause too early? |
14849 | Who would fail, for one step withholden? |
14849 | Who would fail, for one word unsaid? |
14849 | Who would not rather have a right to immortality than to be immortal without a right to be? |
14849 | Whose heart hath ne''er within him burned As home his footsteps he hath turned From wandering on a foreign strand? |
14849 | Why are we so glad to talk and take our turns to prattle, when so rarely we get back to the stronghold of our silence with an unwounded conscience? |
14849 | Why art thou cast down, O my soul? |
14849 | Why comes temptation but for a man to meet And master and make crouch beneath his foot, And so be pedestaled in triumph? |
14849 | Why comest thou?" |
14849 | Why drooping seek the dark recess? |
14849 | Why drooping seek the dark recess? |
14849 | Why, why repine, my pensive friend, At pleasures slipped away? |
14849 | Will ye leave the flowers for the crown?" |
14849 | are they thine, When round thy brow the wreaths of glory shine; While rapture gazes on thy radiant way,''Midst the bright realms of clear mental day? |
14849 | each a space Of some few yards before his face; Does that the whole wide plan explain? |
14849 | little loveliest lady mine, What shall I send for your valentine? |
14849 | what do we see? |
14849 | when the eve is cool? |
15541 | ''Did n''t see me, did you?'' 15541 A bird to give to Jill a--""Quill?" |
15541 | After all, life to be beautiful and to reach rightly towards eternity should be helpful, and self- forgetful; do you not think so? |
15541 | And his''dopted aunt? |
15541 | Are n''t you glad you have us, and specially mother? |
15541 | Are we going right away? |
15541 | Are you afraid of a shower, Beth? |
15541 | Are you sick? |
15541 | Are you talking about the Home money? |
15541 | Are you very old, mother? |
15541 | But he is brave, is n''t he, grandmother? |
15541 | But,said Elizabeth, climbing up into her mother''s lap,"is n''t doing things for poor children like Dick, better than that?" |
15541 | Ca n''t we, mother? |
15541 | Can you tell us''bout things, mother? |
15541 | Come on now, do you know your verse? |
15541 | Could you climb in through the window, s''pose? |
15541 | Do n''t meddle and get into mischief, will you, deary? |
15541 | Do n''t you like to play with him? |
15541 | Do n''t you think you will then? |
15541 | Do you feel well enough to help me make some apple pies? |
15541 | Do you have to refuse many applicants? |
15541 | Do you think God made a mistake when He sent us here? |
15541 | Do you want us, Bobby? |
15541 | Does keeping money make folks happy? |
15541 | From Paradise? |
15541 | Has you all seen anything of a low down black pickaninny which is los''? |
15541 | Have n''t we saved this money, though? |
15541 | How do you feel? |
15541 | How do you know I''m going to leave you any, you young freebooter? |
15541 | How do you know they do n''t? |
15541 | How does middle night look, Nancy? |
15541 | How many are there of you? |
15541 | I do n''t think twelve o''clock at night looks stiller, do you, grandmother? |
15541 | If God ca n''t make mistakes, why does He let it be so easy for folks to? |
15541 | Is it Samuel Saul? |
15541 | Is it ager, children, you''re askin''about? |
15541 | Is it shaking ager? |
15541 | Is the money more than grandmother''s gold dollar? |
15541 | It is so; will you projus him? |
15541 | It would n''t be fun to have all boy dolls, and you know it, sister, and besides was n''t Billy Boy the first doll we broke after Christmas? 15541 Lord Jimmy,"she said,"wilt thou marry Arabella and nobody else and be her quilt in time of trouble--?" |
15541 | May I come in? |
15541 | May I have some of the money you''re going to leave me, to give now, just as Ethelwyn and Beth did? |
15541 | May we go away and think it over? |
15541 | Mother, this is the nicest place, and I love the Stevenses; but why are they sad around the eyes, and dressed in black, like you? 15541 My name is Nan,"said the visitor as soon as she caught Elizabeth''s eye,"Who are you? |
15541 | No, but why would they want to? |
15541 | Now what comes? |
15541 | O Johnny, how could you? |
15541 | O is n''t everything about this just too cunning? 15541 O is n''t it sweet?" |
15541 | O may I stay up? |
15541 | O may we go up to the attic and dress up? |
15541 | O that cunning baby I Where''d you get him? |
15541 | O, mother, can this pretty sea do that? 15541 O, we do n''t care at all, do we, sister?" |
15541 | O,''Vada, what has happened since we went away? |
15541 | Oh is n''t our grandmother pretty though? |
15541 | Oh, is n''t Judas mean- looking? |
15541 | Pumpkin pies do n''t go out of style like clothes, do they, grandmother? |
15541 | Should you think,Elizabeth paused to say, in a somewhat muffled voice, entirely owing to plum cake and not grief,"that one of us is married too?" |
15541 | The pie, too? |
15541 | There were two little girls who dressed exactly alike, and, as they were very near the same age, it was difficult to tell which was the--"Elder? |
15541 | Was he a bawheady? |
15541 | Was it not in''Bleak House''that that exceedingly unpleasant personage used to give away her children''s pocket money? 15541 Well Ethelwyn,"said Aunty Stevens, meeting her,"how was the picnic?" |
15541 | Well, chicken,said grandmother,"how did you like the reception?" |
15541 | Well, sir? |
15541 | Well, we do n''t mind then, do we, sister? |
15541 | Were you homesick for me? |
15541 | What can I do? |
15541 | What color is she? |
15541 | What is a husband? |
15541 | What is it? |
15541 | What is n''t right, grandfather? |
15541 | What is this? |
15541 | What of? |
15541 | What''s that? |
15541 | What''s the matter, child? |
15541 | What''s them? |
15541 | What, sister? |
15541 | When the children are thievish and given to bad language and lying, what do you do? |
15541 | Where did he lose it? 15541 Where does he live?" |
15541 | Where have you been, Bobby? |
15541 | Where is she busted? |
15541 | Who can go on the pony? |
15541 | Who did it? |
15541 | Why did you ask that question? |
15541 | Why do n''t you tell mother? |
15541 | Why, child, what do you know about funerals? |
15541 | Why,Beth stopped to ask,"does it say Precious Julias when it''s''bout Mary Deemer, sister?" |
15541 | Wiggly? 15541 Will it cost very much, Joe?" |
15541 | Would my father enjoy preaching my funeral sermon, do you think? |
15541 | Would you like that? |
15541 | Would you sell him? |
15541 | Yes, mother, I will, but what about the children--? |
15541 | Yes, you are quite right, but what are you among so many? |
15541 | Yes; why on earth do n''t you come? |
15541 | You can stay awhile, ca n''t you, Bobby? |
15541 | You can teach them to make pies like mine--"Yes, they can be taught to do all sorts of things about a house--"And Dick? |
15541 | ''I thought,''said one,''that maple sugar parties were very----''""''Pop''lar? |
15541 | ''What about?'' |
15541 | ''Will you be good and not get lost?'' |
15541 | After the children told her what Bobby had said about his grandfather losing money, they asked anxiously,"Oh mother, did he lose anything of ours?" |
15541 | And will the little lines come between your eyes?" |
15541 | And would you mind telling me a thing or two, I have been thinking about lately? |
15541 | Anyway I wish you would n''t talk in the middle of the wedding-- and give her clothes, and things to eat, eh? |
15541 | Are n''t we having a good time, Aunty Stevens?" |
15541 | Are n''t you mended up well, though?" |
15541 | Are you a hundred, or eleven, or is that your size shoe?" |
15541 | Ca n''t you ever get things right? |
15541 | Did these used to be Miss Dorothy''s?" |
15541 | Did you ever?" |
15541 | Do n''t you think, dear Mrs. Stevens, that the whole trouble with the world is its selfishness?" |
15541 | Has their father gone to Paradise too?" |
15541 | Have You Seen Our Complete Catalogue? |
15541 | He stopped beside a flowing--""Rill?" |
15541 | I told him''bout my list, and he laughed, and gave it to me, and asked me if I did n''t know''bout letter boxes? |
15541 | If your grandmother, my dear, should leave me out, till my hair soaked off-- say, sister,"she broke off suddenly to ask--"what keeps our hair on?" |
15541 | Is this your house? |
15541 | Peter''s?" |
15541 | Pine trees grew near, and there below them and very near, was the great silvery blue sea, with the sunshine flashing on its tossing waves? |
15541 | Rayburn?" |
15541 | She kept right on till by and by She took a peek into the sky--""Oh, what did she see?" |
15541 | Stevens?" |
15541 | Then, too, there was a parrot on a pole, who greeted them with,"Well, well, well, what''s all this? |
15541 | There are few people living here but fisher folk--""Christ''s people?" |
15541 | They are poor and need help--""Are we rich people now, and can we buy things for them?" |
15541 | Well, what do you s''pose,"leaning forward impressively--"becomes of the bodies the cannibals eat?" |
15541 | Were there holes in his pockets?" |
15541 | What did you think about them for?" |
15541 | What is more delightful than a re- union of college girls after the summer vacation? |
15541 | What made you, Bobby?" |
15541 | What was it they were saying about a tide?" |
15541 | What''s the good of keeping money? |
15541 | What''s this thing you have in your side?" |
15541 | When will she come home, mother?" |
15541 | While they were away, Aunty Stevens said,"Is n''t that a pretty hard test?" |
15541 | Will you come back to the porch, and sit in a Chippendale chair, and let me take your picture for the sale at the church?" |
15541 | Will you have to work so hard, motherdy, here? |
15541 | Would you mind giving up these things to help pay the hospital expenses, or to buy a wheel chair or some comfort for Dick?" |
15541 | did he invite us?" |
27777 | And what gave we? |
27777 | Are republics ungrateful? |
27777 | But what could he do? |
27777 | But what had been happening to her and to his three children during all these dismal years? |
27777 | Could this be true, or was it a vision? |
27777 | Could this be true? |
27777 | Cur non? |
27777 | Finally, Washington turned to General Wayne( behind Greene) and said,"Well, General, what would_ you_ do?" |
27777 | LAFAYETTE by MARTHA FOOTE CROW And what gave he to us? |
27777 | Shall the miseries of their prison life be dwelt upon? |
27777 | Should Lafayette return to France now? |
27777 | What was to be done? |
27777 | What were the studies of this young aristocrat? |
27777 | Where did Lafayette, a born aristocrat, get these ideas? |
27777 | Why did she not give details? |
27777 | Why not? |
27777 | Why should not the son take the same risk and leave all for a great cause? |
27777 | Why waste any more time? |
20622 | ''But how do I know your story is true, that you own this horse?'' 20622 ''Will you behave yourself, if I let you in?'' |
20622 | Brother Very, did I tell the story right? |
20622 | But his cell was in the second story, and how did he reach the ground? |
20622 | But how could the monster dwarf get the file to him? |
20622 | Good evenin'', parson, you uns seem to be in a happy frame of mind, or air ye singin''to keep yer courage up? |
20622 | Have you seen the Bible before today? |
20622 | Mose, you are quite sure you have told me all you heard? |
20622 | O God,he cried,"who am I, that I should be thy ambassador to beseech sinners to be reconciled to thee? |
20622 | Pard,he said,"hear dat? |
20622 | Was he nigger Mose''s dad? |
20622 | Whar is de best place to s''prise him? |
20622 | What can we do? |
20622 | What did you see, Mose, and how did you see it? |
20622 | What do you say, Mose, will you go or stay? |
20622 | What shall I say concerning the lady who this day becomes his wife? 20622 Who do they think was his helper?" |
20622 | Why should we be hunted like wild beasts for makin''a few gallons of whisky? 20622 Would you have me to be so selfish as to be the whole show?" |
20622 | You are certain they selected Tuesday night for their wicked acts? |
20622 | ''Sargent,''said I,''did not that angel smell of brimstone?'' |
20622 | ''Why,''said he''do you ask such a foolish question?'' |
20622 | Are you not afraid to travel those lonely hills without any protector save Mose? |
20622 | But what gave him the disposition he possesses? |
20622 | Can I see you by yerself?" |
20622 | Can any one tell me what they are?" |
20622 | Can anything on earth surpass it? |
20622 | Can you furnish us with a private room?" |
20622 | Can you unfasten the door?" |
20622 | Did you ever hear of David?" |
20622 | Do we not raise the corn, and have we not a right to turn it into drink? |
20622 | Do you ask what was the subject of their conversation? |
20622 | Do you not know that two sins can never make an act right? |
20622 | George, you naughty boy, why did n''t you tell me? |
20622 | Has any other gentleman any remarks to make?" |
20622 | Have any of you ever heard it?" |
20622 | Have they murdered her? |
20622 | Have you heard of it?" |
20622 | He said:"Susanna, how can we thank you enough for this information? |
20622 | How can you escape the wrath of God? |
20622 | How can you meet such a sin at the judgment day? |
20622 | How did he obtain this self- possession? |
20622 | How do you dare to hurry this man into the presence of his Maker unprepared? |
20622 | How is Velox standin''it?" |
20622 | How shall we enlighten their ignorance? |
20622 | I have hearn that the star preacher there-- what''s his name? |
20622 | I said:''Gentlemen, who is the man among you who is going to whip Very the first time he sees him?'' |
20622 | Is it possible for you to direct me to the hut?" |
20622 | Is she at home this morning?" |
20622 | Jasper Hurry? |
20622 | Jasper Very took for his text,"Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
20622 | Jasper was the first to speak:"Miss Viola, what is so beautiful as an apple tree in bloom? |
20622 | Larkin put himself in his way, and as he got nearer said:"Are you monkey, man, or devil, or the three combined? |
20622 | Larkin?" |
20622 | Leave you an''dis plantation? |
20622 | Madam LeMonde exclaimed:"What can be keeping them? |
20622 | May I not say they promote love?" |
20622 | One whispers to another:"Who is to be the preacher this morning?" |
20622 | Preacher, will you be so kind as to throw my horse over the fence too?" |
20622 | Reader, can you guess? |
20622 | She screamed:"Where is my daughter? |
20622 | Sheriff, what do you advise?" |
20622 | The Judge asked:"Would you be willing to tell me how to find the two ways into the cave?" |
20622 | The Judge was questioning his faithful servant:"Did the officers think he had any help in escaping?" |
20622 | The devil which was in her caused her to cry out in hideous glee:"An''so you''uns cotched her did you''uns? |
20622 | The minister asks:"Who gives the bride away?" |
20622 | Their thoughts were with the girl:"Where is she? |
20622 | Trying to awaken a greater interest in the father she said:"Mr. Sneath, when you are not working on your place or hunting, how do you pass the time?" |
20622 | Very? |
20622 | Wa''n''t dem moonshiners mad, do? |
20622 | Was it caused by her nearness to the home of this wicked man, or by a premonition of danger? |
20622 | Was it fact or fancy which showed him a female figure dressed in white standing by the west bay window? |
20622 | Was it revenge? |
20622 | What can we do?" |
20622 | What could be their object in carrying her away? |
20622 | What did he see? |
20622 | What do you say to the proposition?" |
20622 | What do you say, byes?" |
20622 | What do you say, wife?" |
20622 | What do you say?" |
20622 | What has happened to her? |
20622 | What hosses air you thinkin''on?" |
20622 | What nature poet can do justice to such sylvan loveliness as we find in the"Blue Grass Region?" |
20622 | What was the character of his thoughts? |
20622 | What were the commandments there given? |
20622 | What''s dat mean? |
20622 | Where did you find him?" |
20622 | Where is she? |
20622 | Where was Jasper Very while these thrilling events were taking place? |
20622 | Who am I that I should stand between the living and the dead and offer life and immortality to men? |
20622 | Who was Moses?" |
20622 | Will he put gentl''men ob de hills in de jug ag''in? |
20622 | Will you agree to sing it?" |
20622 | Will you do it?" |
20622 | Will you kindly favor us by so doing?" |
20622 | Will you kindly favor us with the loan of some of your horses? |
20622 | Wo n''t you''light, and walk into de house?" |
20622 | Woud you uns larn us to be good in yer school? |
20622 | Would you like to say anything?" |
20622 | You ask, reader, what were the thoughts of Miss Viola when she awoke from her deep sleep? |
20622 | _ Turner_:"That''s yer game, is it? |
20622 | _ Wiles_:"What ones do you suppose? |
20622 | dat''s yo''game, is it? |
20290 | And now, gentlemen of the Convention,said he,"what do we want?" |
20290 | Are you aware, General,said the Senator,"that the Attorney- General must represent the Government in the Supreme Court?" |
20290 | But did you know that he must there meet Daniel Webster, Reverdy Johnson, and other leading lawyers? |
20290 | But,persisted Tucker,"will you love me when you get to be President?" |
20290 | Can there,said he with dramatic effect,"be a point of pride against laying upon that sacred soil to- day the flag for which our fathers died? |
20290 | Colonel B., will you not have a bone? |
20290 | Colonel E., will you help to that chicken- pie before you? |
20290 | Do n''t it distress you,said the Boston maiden,"to have Mr. Clay gamble?" |
20290 | Do n''t you remember our conversations during the long walks we took together last summer at Newport, while in attendance on Story''s court? |
20290 | Do you mean,said Mr. Brown,"to assert that what I have said is false?" |
20290 | Douglas,says Tucker,"will you_ always_ love me?" |
20290 | Have you the papers? |
20290 | Is the demand for the previous question seconded? |
20290 | Mr. Thompson,interrupted Mr. Devens,"how long since have they been wearing spurs in the navy?" |
20290 | My dear Walker,said he, in amazement,"what is the matter?" |
20290 | Nor anything to drink? |
20290 | Then it may be the specie circular? |
20290 | Well, sir,said he, in an angry tone,"you are the man who had the audacity to disfigure Old Ironsides?" |
20290 | Well,good- naturedly replied Old Hickory,"do n''t I deserve just as much credit for picking out the man who could write it?" |
20290 | Well,said Mr. Wade,"what can I do for you? |
20290 | What do we want? |
20290 | What do you want me to do for you? |
20290 | What is it, then? |
20290 | What is to be done? |
20290 | What new part will Roscius next enact? |
20290 | What sort of a man is General Pierce? |
20290 | What was it? |
20290 | What,retorted Mr. Clay,"can you look me in the face, sir, and say that you never used that language?" |
20290 | Who is that lady? |
20290 | ''And why,''the monarch cried,''Desire again to share life''s toils?'' |
20290 | ''My girl,''said I,''how deep''s the water and what''s the price of butter?'' |
20290 | ''Well, what of that? |
20290 | ''Wha''ll be King but Charley?'' |
20290 | ''What on earth is the matter with your chief?'' |
20290 | ----, can you call again?'' |
20290 | A sharp witted opponent, to draw him out asked:"Should n''t niggers be permitted to sit at the table with white folks, on steamboats and at hotels?" |
20290 | And why did I not, sir? |
20290 | Are you in the business of shelving papa? |
20290 | B., you have absented yourself from the House during its sittings, contrary to law, and without leave of the House; what excuse have you to offer?" |
20290 | Blair?" |
20290 | But how could we retreat? |
20290 | Cutting, in a sneering tone,"that the gentleman from New York rose for?" |
20290 | General Jackson, who was escorting a lady, promptly extended his hand, saying pleasantly:"How do you do, Mr. Adams? |
20290 | General Thomas arose, and looking him in the eye, replied,"I have said so; do you wish to know on what authority?" |
20290 | Had a good v''yage?" |
20290 | Have n''t we( hic) had a turn( hic) over, gentlemen?" |
20290 | He immediately inquired:"Is this Doniphan, who made that splendid march across the plains and swept the swift Comanches before him?" |
20290 | He soon gathered up, when the following colloquy ensued:"Well, driver( hic), we''ve had quite a turn( hic) over, haint we?" |
20290 | How could we make peace? |
20290 | How did you find the roads from Lexington to here?" |
20290 | How much is it?" |
20290 | I asked him,''What are you suffering from?'' |
20290 | I told him what I wanted, and supposed I was going to get a direct answer, when, what do you think? |
20290 | I wonder whether he knows himself what he is doing? |
20290 | If the rest of the world have not learned that lesson, how shall they teach us? |
20290 | It is contagious, I believe?" |
20290 | It was inquired how Sam had always so much to eat? |
20290 | Me, who was a Whig when you gentlemen were riding cornstalk horses in your fathers''barnyards?" |
20290 | Meeting his old and intimate friend, General Armstrong, the next day, the President said,"Well, Bob, what do the people say of my message?" |
20290 | One spree at Johnny Coyle''s; one spree at Johnny Coyle''s; And who would not be glad to join a spree at Johnny Coyle''s?" |
20290 | Or,"I received some fine cod- fish from Boston to- day, sir; will you dine with me at five o''clock and taste them?" |
20290 | Polk?" |
20290 | Shall the main question be now put?" |
20290 | She looked up with apparent astonishment and inquired,''Is that all?'' |
20290 | Sir, the gentleman says he is reminded by my speech of the''nursery rhyme,''''Who shot Cock Robin? |
20290 | Such a motion having been made in one case, a voice cried out in the confusion which filled the chamber:"How are you going to do it?" |
20290 | The young lady, in her Puritan simplicity, inquired:"Is card- playing a common practice here?" |
20290 | Then, turning to the other lady, he asked,"Will you introduce your friend?" |
20290 | They circulated large editions of a tract by Horace Greeley, entitled,"Why am I a Whig?" |
20290 | This attention disturbed the sleeper, who gave a loud snort, when the boy jumped back and said,"You would n''t bite a blind boy, would you?" |
20290 | This region of savages and wild beasts, of deserts of shifting sands and whirlwinds of dust, of cactus and prairie dogs? |
20290 | Turning to Mr. Wade, he exclaimed:"Surely, you will not prevent me from taking my old black mammy with me?" |
20290 | Upon what terms? |
20290 | Was there ever witnessed such a barefaced corruption in any country before?" |
20290 | What Representative could vote against the claim of a man whose money he had been winning, in small sums, it is true, all winter? |
20290 | What became of the ten tribes? |
20290 | What can we ever hope to do with the western coast, a coast of three thousand miles, rock- bound, cheerless, uninviting, and not a harbor on it? |
20290 | What of future hopes? |
20290 | What of it?" |
20290 | What of past glories? |
20290 | What use have we for this country?" |
20290 | What was to be done? |
20290 | What will become of public liberties? |
20290 | Where is to be your boundary line? |
20290 | Where the end of the principles we shall have to give up? |
20290 | Who bids?" |
20290 | Why do n''t he mind his own business?'' |
20290 | Why do you take off your coat here?" |
20290 | Why, Mr. Wright, do you not know that he carries more than a pound of British lead in his body?" |
20290 | [?] |
20290 | he exclaimed,"with this vast, worthless area? |
20290 | unwhig me? |
20290 | what do you want?" |
20290 | yes,"replied Mr. Wade,"you run the cook- shop down- stairs, do n''t you?" |
12785 | Do you ever want I should? 12785 Does mother want me?" |
12785 | How can I? |
12785 | How will you do it? |
12785 | Is it little Jacques''s medicine? |
12785 | Is there a God?--ay, an almighty God, And vengeful as almighty? 12785 Stay?" |
12785 | Was it-- was it a long time, mother,--I mean, before he came back? |
12785 | Well? |
12785 | What are you going to do? 12785 What can she guess?" |
12785 | What evil atmosphere surrounded me? 12785 What_ are_ you talking about, you crazy woman? |
12785 | When did you get back from Boston? |
12785 | Who commands it? |
12785 | Who? 12785 Why, where are you going, Swan?" |
12785 | Woman would you see me die like a dog? 12785 Yes, I know it, mother; but how did she come by it?" |
12785 | You want orders, I suppose? |
12785 | --and here Dorcas threw her apron over her face,--"why, what harm is there? |
12785 | A ghost, or a figure like some in the shop- window, all made up of dead cloth and color into an appearance of life? |
12785 | All that was done with, long ago, and why not be peaceable? |
12785 | An''why should we kick up a muss About the Pres''dunt''s proclamation? |
12785 | An''wut''s the Guv''ment folks about? |
12785 | And if I left all for which I had labored so hard, for another to enjoy, would that better the matter? |
12785 | And now what is the peculiar virtue and glory of this nation? |
12785 | And what might the neighbors say? |
12785 | And why should it refuse heed? |
12785 | And, indeed, what is worthier than Worth? |
12785 | Are you a lawyer? |
12785 | Are you a physician? |
12785 | Are you a true artist or thinker? |
12785 | But do you envy the ox his bovine peace? |
12785 | But how, the plain English reader will ask, are we to understand from this the place which the new work takes in literature? |
12785 | But what is Christianity, early or late, and what does the Gospel mean, but a rule of holy living in every circumstance now? |
12785 | Captain Waterhouse? |
12785 | Conciliate? |
12785 | Could anything be bolder and more to the purpose? |
12785 | Did I enjoy it? |
12785 | Did I lap myself in the long- desired repose in thankful quiescence of spirit? |
12785 | Did Monsieur see it also? |
12785 | Did not their Master give it, when he said,"The field is the world"? |
12785 | Did the same doctor attend Madame C---- who prescribed for little Jacques? |
12785 | Do you ask that this house may be a true home, a treasury for wealth of the heart, a little heaven? |
12785 | Do you imagine you can hide your guilt in that way?" |
12785 | Do you think that the true artist strives to paint well that he may get money for his work? |
12785 | Does Bullion Street desire chaos? |
12785 | Does it wish that the pith should be taken out of every statute, and the chief value from every piece of property? |
12785 | Dorcas, if I come back rich, shall you be glad? |
12785 | For what did Kepler endure the last straits of poverty, his children crying for bread, while his own heart was pierced with their wailing? |
12785 | For what did Raleigh give his lofty head? |
12785 | For what did Socrates quaff the poison? |
12785 | For what is left of the field the Lord sends the minister into? |
12785 | He said, quietly,--"Would you blame me for making an angel out of an idiot?" |
12785 | Hitherto he has been simply a dreamy seeker; but now, at last, he thinks that Fate has answered his questioning exclamation,"Where?" |
12785 | How can we make their futility end, their utility begin? |
12785 | How is the table spread for supper in the house of Colonel Fox, one of the richest farmers in Walton? |
12785 | I cried;"what in the name of God would you have of me?" |
12785 | If Henry IV., when dying, could declare that he had no right to the crown of England, on what could Henry V. base his claim to that of France? |
12785 | If I left the house, casting its guilt and its comfort behind me, where could I go? |
12785 | If he that evades the revenue law of the State be guilty of fraud, what of him who would import Nature''s goods and pay no duties? |
12785 | If they ask,''Who guarded them?'' |
12785 | In coming times, strangers viewing the works on the hills of Newport and Covington will ask,''Who built these intrenchments? |
12785 | In six months where''ll the People be, Ef leaders look on revolution Ez though it wuz a cup o''tea,-- Jest social el''ments in solution? |
12785 | In that case all should be acquitted whom the laws acquit,--did we ever do this? |
12785 | Is it a harvest from the field that you seek? |
12785 | It is told us that we shall be rewarded for our virtue; what moralistic commonplace is more common than this? |
12785 | It''s there we fail; Weak plans grow weaker yit by lengthenin'': Wut use in addin''to the tail, When it''s the head''s in need o''strengthenin''? |
12785 | Mayhap you''d rather I''d be, for all your nerves, eh?" |
12785 | More men? |
12785 | Not yet come? |
12785 | On his way back, Wallace was asked by one of his aids,--"Do you believe the enemy will come to Cincinnati?" |
12785 | Or rather, is not his desire to pay money, to pay anything in reason, for the sake of excellence in his art? |
12785 | Or thet ther''''d ben no Fall o''Man, Ef Adam''d on''y bit a sweetin''? |
12785 | Religious faith, what is it? |
12785 | Seneca says,"Wouldst thou subject all things to thyself? |
12785 | Since He does not punish, dare I invade His prerogative?" |
12785 | So the Satyr, in à � sop''s fable, asked the man coming in from the cold,"Why he blew on his fingers?" |
12785 | Soon after he asked,"Why he blew in his soup?" |
12785 | The American idea, then, what is it? |
12785 | The following lines occur among the verses:--"Or is it thou, all- perfect Austen? |
12785 | Then I,--''Where?'' |
12785 | Think ye I made this ball A field of havoc and war, Where tyrants great and tyrants small Might harry the weak and poor? |
12785 | Was I not myself guilty in attributing to Madame a deed in my eyes worthy of death, and of which she was innocent? |
12785 | Was it not better to play on a golden harp than to be a confectioner? |
12785 | Were not all men, in fact, more or less slayers of their brothers? |
12785 | What am I? |
12785 | What better can a man do than his worst? |
12785 | What department of it shall be excused? |
12785 | What did she see? |
12785 | What else is there for him to seek? |
12785 | What faith or religion is there in believing the world was made in six days? |
12785 | What fell snare environed me? |
12785 | What fitter, therefore, to be paid for? |
12785 | What higher honor could be coveted than to relieve the brave Morgan, pent up as he was with his little army in the mountain- gorges of the Cumberland? |
12785 | What if I should find him out and betray him? |
12785 | What is military law? |
12785 | What is the matter?" |
12785 | What is the minister, then? |
12785 | What more could a father do, situated as that father was, and always in want of his people''s money? |
12785 | What section, of the world should evade or defy the law of God? |
12785 | What should I do? |
12785 | What, after all, if I did lie by for a little while? |
12785 | What, indeed,_ should_ I do? |
12785 | What, then, are the conditions of deriving profit from the contemplation of aphorisms? |
12785 | Where should I hide myself? |
12785 | Where, after a score or two of years, is his church? |
12785 | Who ever heard a uniform estimate of any discourse? |
12785 | Who is more concerned? |
12785 | Who is the owner? |
12785 | Who is the_ minister_, then? |
12785 | Who would not have expected them to be insipid likenesses of each other? |
12785 | Why could not the gypsy be satisfied with her almost angelic happiness? |
12785 | Why does the same sort of attempt cease to be fraudulent when it is carried up to a higher degree and applied to possessions more precious? |
12785 | Why should Colonel Fox dislike Swan so very much because he was a Britisher? |
12785 | Will you thus make him liberal, sympathetic, affable? |
12785 | Will you, conservative men, conserve this, and so regain and multiply the blessing it has already brought? |
12785 | Would he ever forget it? |
12785 | Would his darling Jacques, happy, angelic, condemn his parent for releasing him from the drudgery of life? |
12785 | Would you have a noble and orderly freedom? |
12785 | Would you have the river toil in production of cloths for your raiment? |
12785 | and why was it the last time?--would he give her up? |
12785 | exclaimed the Prince,"would you have me renounce my birthright?" |
12785 | he meant,"How will it be possible to maintain the old aristocratical system of party- government?" |
12785 | or will you destroy it, and wait till, through at least a century of tossing and tumult, another, and that of less value, is grown? |
12785 | why not true to me? |
12785 | why not true to me?" |
12785 | why not true to me?" |
12785 | will he bury me alive?" |
12785 | would_ anything_ help me? |
29244 | ''And what could that be for?'' |
29244 | ''Only two of you, and could you not agree-- what did you quarrel about?'' |
29244 | G. T.[ 4] Mr. McWhorter writes me that two others were Jesse Hughes and John Cutright( corruption of Cartwright? |
29244 | That worse than savage monster, tauntingly replied,"how can I? |
29244 | What must have been the obduracy of those, who could remain inflexible in their doom of death, amid such scenes as these? |
29244 | Why then should you? |
27012 | A gosling negro, I suppose,was Charlie''s answer; and then he asked,"Did old Hobby go on teaching school after little George left him?" |
27012 | And now, Ned, my boy,said Uncle Juvinell, after he had ended this oration,"can you tell me what a charmed life is?" |
27012 | And what is a commissioner, uncle? |
27012 | And what is a minister, uncle? |
27012 | And what is a remonstrance, uncle? |
27012 | And what is a revenue, uncle? |
27012 | And what is an admiral? |
27012 | And why, uncle, was the name''Continental''given to our first Congress? |
27012 | And will you also tell me, uncle, wherein a convention differs from all these legislative assemblies? |
27012 | But I said he was glorious; did n''t I now, Miss Over- nice? |
27012 | Dick,said he to the first one he met,"did you cut that cherry- tree?" |
27012 | Did you, Sam? |
27012 | Does he fight with a sword? |
27012 | Gloriously? |
27012 | I wonder if it will be as interesting as''Robinson Crusoe''? |
27012 | Is it,said Washington in a letter to a friend,"the duty of threepence per pound upon tea that we object to as burdensome? |
27012 | Or''Aladdin and his Wonderful Lamp''? |
27012 | Uncle,inquired Ella,"is transcendentalism an art or a science?" |
27012 | Upon which I said to the Indian,--''I suppose you were lost, and fired your gun?'' |
27012 | What became of black Jerry after he turned a somerset in the snow, and went rolling over and over down the hill? |
27012 | What is a negroling? |
27012 | What is he doing so far away from home without his hat, I wonder? |
27012 | Will you have the kindness, uncle,said Dannie,"to tell us the difference between a legislature and a congress and a parliament?" |
27012 | You do n''t mean to say that Washington was bullet- proof, do you, Uncle Juve? |
27012 | All right? |
27012 | But can a virtuous man hesitate in his choice?" |
27012 | But what could he do? |
27012 | Could he do it without the sacrifice of honor or self- respect? |
27012 | For the four and twenty hours following the battle, Braddock had remained sad and silent; never speaking except to say,"Who would have thought it?" |
27012 | Is it sense, or only poetry?" |
27012 | Now, can you tell me what it is?" |
27012 | Now, what are we to understand by this?" |
27012 | Now, would you know what an aide- de- camp is? |
27012 | Said the Major,--"''Are you shot?'' |
27012 | The fire opened its great bright eye more widely than before, and looked as if it were putting the question,"Well, sir, and what is it now? |
27012 | Thus entreated, what could he do but yield consent to the wishes of a loving and prudent mother, and remain at home? |
27012 | Would you know what they did in this grievous state? |
27012 | he looks just like Uncle Juvinell: now do n''t he, Cousin Mary?" |
27012 | how can you be so wanting in respect as to call such a man as Washington''_ fellow_''?" |
27012 | what song is that high swelling, Like an anthem dropped from heaven, Of some joyful tidings telling, Some rich boon to mankind given? |
21556 | And Meyer,I interrupted,"what of him?" |
21556 | And the horses? |
21556 | Any milk? |
21556 | Are not the Crows, the Bannaxas, the Flat Heads, and the Umbiquas, starving during the winter? 21556 Are you quite sure that the revelation was from the Lord?" |
21556 | Aye, boil, bubble, evaporate,exclaimed I;"what do I care for water or tea now?" |
21556 | Can you give my horse a pail of water? |
21556 | Could you restore him, if his head had been cut off? |
21556 | Does she? 21556 Does your power to raise this man to life again depend upon the particular nature of his disease? |
21556 | Fear has turned the Crows into stones,resumed the Prince,"what has become of their light feet? |
21556 | Flower of the magnolia,said he, taking her by the hand,"wilt thou love me less as a brother than as a husband? |
21556 | How do you know that you can? |
21556 | How far to Little Rock? |
21556 | How far,said I,"to Caledonia city?" |
21556 | How much? |
21556 | Is there no farm on the way? |
21556 | It is a shameful imposition,he cried;"how much do you want after all?" |
21556 | Now, why should not the Shoshones put themselves at once above the reach of such chances? 21556 Oh, Pat, be a good man; ca n''t you go and pick some berries? |
21556 | Slick was thunderstruck,` and the pocket- book?'' 21556 Take them away, then; are they tied?" |
21556 | The bodies of the young women have been atrociously and cowardly abused-- seest thou? 21556 The what?" |
21556 | Well, if this man had been killed, and one of his arms cut off, could you bring him to life, and also restore to him his arm? |
21556 | Well, stranger, what will you give me to ferry you over? |
21556 | What is the matter, Blackey? |
21556 | What the devil can you have babbled about during the whole blessed night? 21556 What,"I exclaimed,"after he was dead?" |
21556 | Where do you come from, eh? |
21556 | Why not settle the matter with them all at once? 21556 Why, you are both of you mere children; she ca n''t get a house, and how could you support her?" |
21556 | Would they not be too happy to exchange their furs against the corn, the tobacco, and good dried fish of the Shoshones? 21556 ` And so you lost the wager?'' |
21556 | ` Faith, have you?'' 21556 ` Where are they?'' |
21556 | ` Why, you fool, you did not give them your money, did you?'' 21556 After a silence of a few minutes, he asked the Comanche chief what he could answer to that? 21556 And next? 21556 Are they not, although rebels and unnatural children, still the children the Shoshones? 21556 At last the judge condescended to cease his whittling, and come to make his own bargain, which he did openly:Any good saddles, Fielding? |
21556 | At last, an old chief rose and addressed Opishka:"Great chief,"said he,"why askest thou? |
21556 | But what could be expected from a Frenchman? |
21556 | But what, indeed, could be expected from a people who murdered their guests, invited by them, and under the sanction of a white flag? |
21556 | Can a Comanche and warrior think in any way but one? |
21556 | Come, old chap, let us have your bill, and mind, make it out as for old customers, for we intend to return often; do n''t we?'' |
21556 | Could he not easily procure plates and inscribe thereon a set of characters, no matter what, and exhibit them to the intended witnesses as genuine? |
21556 | Did I not say so? |
21556 | Didst thou ever dream of another voice than mine, a younger one, breathing of love and despair?" |
21556 | Didst thou ever dream of one? |
21556 | Do my warriors know such a people? |
21556 | Do n''t you hear anything?" |
21556 | Do they intend to conquer Missouri, Illinois, Mexico? |
21556 | Does the snake offer peace to the squirrel when he kills him with the poison of his dreaded glance? |
21556 | Dost thou know the love of a brother? |
21556 | Eh, Boone, my boy, how fares it with ye?" |
21556 | Had they not the unlimited range of the prairies? |
21556 | Hast thou a wish? |
21556 | He was going, but the chief grasped him firmly by the arm:--"Where dost thou wish to go? |
21556 | How long it lasted none is living to say; and who could? |
21556 | I only said,` How dare you, Sir?'' |
21556 | Is not the poison a deadly one? |
21556 | Is the buffalo less a buffalo when he grows old, or the eagle less an eagle when a hundred winters have whitened his wings? |
21556 | Is there a place in the mountains or the prairies where the name of Mosh Kohta has not been pronounced and praised? |
21556 | It is only the white Manitou that speaks to him, and how could the white Manitou know the nature of the Indians? |
21556 | Now I was in uncommon bad temper that morning, and I answered his question with a"What do you mean, you old fool?" |
21556 | Now, is an impure Cayuga a fit tomb for the body of a Comanche warrior? |
21556 | Perceive you not how fast the blood runs into their veins? |
21556 | Reduction of duty on foreign goods? |
21556 | See you not into their hearts? |
21556 | Shall we chastise them and give their carcasses to the crows and wolves? |
21556 | Shall we return, or encamp here?" |
21556 | The Prince spoke:--"Do you not want to become the most powerful nation of the West? |
21556 | The chief looked at him and replied, with the most ineffable contempt:"What should I answer?" |
21556 | The farmer then asked--"You are quite certain that you can bring this man to life again?" |
21556 | The merchant, however, would not:"Why did you take it?" |
21556 | The question was, what was the length of the rope required; i.e., what was the width of the river? |
21556 | The text was:--"Ye are the salt of the earth, but if the salt has lost its savour, wherewith shall it be salted? |
21556 | The young wanderer was amazed; he had now ten thousand dollars, but what could he do with so much money? |
21556 | There stood the bleeding moon;''twas neither light nor obscurity; how could man divide the time and the seasons? |
21556 | Was it good-- was it bad? |
21556 | Was it good? |
21556 | What could he do? |
21556 | What could we do? |
21556 | What does this mean? |
21556 | What evidence, then, have we of the_ existence_ of these plates? |
21556 | What have they to eat? |
21556 | What hunting and what fishing have you had this last year? |
21556 | What must it then be on those who have resided with the Indians for years? |
21556 | What next? |
21556 | What say my warriors: let them speak? |
21556 | What then shall we do? |
21556 | What were the Crows before the coming of the white men, on the shores of the Buona Ventura? |
21556 | What will you bet-- five, ten, fifty, hundred? |
21556 | What would be easier than thus to impose on their credulity and weakness? |
21556 | Where was the boasted superiority of the Texians over the Indian race? |
21556 | Who ever heard of the Arrapahoes entering the war- path in night? |
21556 | Who knows? |
21556 | Who then could resist the Shoshones? |
21556 | Who will say that the Mormon prophet is not among the great spirits of the age? |
21556 | Why ask? |
21556 | Why comest thou, false- hearted, to pour thy deceitful words into the ears of my young men? |
21556 | Why did they act like wolves, biting their benefactors instead of showing to them their gratitude?" |
21556 | Why this exact discipline of the Mormon corps? |
21556 | Why; can two suns light the same prairie, or two male eagles cover the same nest? |
21556 | ` I know better,''he will say,` do n''t I? |
21556 | ` They; who do you mean?'' |
21556 | does an Indian say to the beaver, he comes to offer peace when he sets his traps for him? |
21556 | gentlemen,''exclaimed Slick,` why did you not say so? |
21556 | or could you now bring any dead man to life?" |
21556 | said I,"are they shooting in the bar?" |
21556 | said Number 1, smacking his lips;` now have you the real genuine stuff? |
21556 | suppose they are a vanguard of General Rusk''s army, and one of them should escape? |
21556 | what can we expect from them and their assistance but exorbitant claims and undue interference? |
21556 | why should they not get rich? |
29172 | Do you suspect that I have led your army into these deserts to perish? 29172 These coincidences are certainly remarkable,"replied De Soto;"but what other similarities do you find in the destinies of Nuñez and myself?" |
29172 | Am I their keeper?" |
29172 | And then turning to Pizarro, he said:"Is it possible that you can believe in a God and fear him, and yet dare to commit such an act of injustice? |
29172 | Are they not of the same nation and subject to the same laws? |
29172 | But what reason have I to hope that you can still look with favorable regard on my unworthiness? |
29172 | But why should we hesitate? |
29172 | Do not their manner of life and actions prove them to be the children of the spirit of evil, and not of the Sun and Moon-- our Gods? |
29172 | Is it peace, or is it war?" |
29172 | Tell me, I entreat of you, what sum you think will be sufficient?" |
29172 | The Cacique being questioned upon the subject, angrily and contemptuously replied:"Why do you ask me about your people? |
29172 | The Inca seemed to pay little heed to these words, but with a gesture of impatience and anger, exclaimed:"Oh, where is De Soto? |
29172 | Was he an unmitigated knave, or was he a fanatic? |
29172 | What is your employment? |
29172 | When will that year expire?" |
29172 | Whither could they fly? |
29172 | Without waiting to be addressed by him, they haughtily assailed him with the question,"What is it you seek in our land? |
29172 | _ Is Christianity from God?_ A Manual of Bible Evidence for the People. |
29172 | with as little reverence as if he were one of them? |
1866 | But what,I asked,"would be the effect were he to tell you to put out all your fires at eight o''clock?" |
1866 | But will they be shot? |
1866 | Do you like our institutions, sir? 1866 Sir, what do you think of our Mr. Jefferson Brick? |
1866 | Surely you would have destroyed their bridge? |
1866 | Then would it not be cheaper to let them go? |
1866 | They wear their shirts till they drop off their backs,said he;"and what can you expect from such men as that?" |
1866 | What do you mean by a dressing- room, and why do you want one? |
1866 | Who is he,an American would say,"that he comes and judges us? |
1866 | Who is he,an Englishman would say,"that he comes and teaches us? |
1866 | Why are they not exchanged? |
1866 | Why can not you consume your own smoke? |
1866 | After that who can believe that Stevens was himself allowed to pocket the whole amount of the plunder? |
1866 | After that who will believe that Mr. Morgan had the whole of that £20,000 for himself? |
1866 | After that who will believe that all the money went into Beard''s pocket? |
1866 | All articles manufactured of cotton, wool, silk, worsted, flax, hemp, jute, india- rubber, gutta percha, wood(? |
1866 | And after all what matters the ugly nature of such an occupation when a man is used to it? |
1866 | And had they so promised, would the South have believed them? |
1866 | And is it not well that such tales should be told? |
1866 | And now shall he be divided and shorn? |
1866 | And those ladies of New York-- is it not to be confessed that they are somewhat imperious in their demands? |
1866 | And what can be expected from one who is counting the last lingering hours of his existence? |
1866 | And what living English politician will say even now, with all its troubles thick upon it, that it is the smallest of the five? |
1866 | As for the Van Wyck committee, have I not repeated the tale which you have told yourselves? |
1866 | As to Congress, what could Congress do? |
1866 | At what rate shall we tax coffee so as to get at the people''s money? |
1866 | But how then about the justice? |
1866 | But if they could emancipate those four million slaves, in what way would they then treat them? |
1866 | But is it not the case that every city is beautiful from a distance? |
1866 | But now they must part; and how shall the parting be made? |
1866 | But of what class are the books that are so read? |
1866 | But then comes the great question, What duty will really give the greatest product? |
1866 | But then what would those Americans think of them;--of them and of the country which produced them? |
1866 | But to whom is the power, or rather the duty, of exercising this discretion delegated? |
1866 | But what excuse shall we find for that other dirt? |
1866 | But what if such rebellion be justifiable, or even reasonable? |
1866 | But what individual chooses to yield to such demands; and if not an individual,--then what people will do so? |
1866 | But what shall be done with any State that declines to evince such patriotism? |
1866 | But what then? |
1866 | But who does know to what General Halleck or other generals may come; or how soon a curfew- bell may be ringing in American towns? |
1866 | But who has heard of Polk, of Pierce, and of Buchanan? |
1866 | But who shall say whether or no it be a man''s business to sell horses? |
1866 | But who wastes a thought upon either of these men? |
1866 | But, it will be said,--was it not well to prepare for a growing city? |
1866 | Could any city be safe when such implements of war were about upon the waters? |
1866 | Could they promise to hold their peace about slavery? |
1866 | Do not all great men suffer such ere their greatness be established and acknowledged? |
1866 | Do we not all of us feel assured by the intense nationality of an American that he will not desert his nation in the hour of her need? |
1866 | Does any one imagine that we would not have borrowed faster, if by faster borrowing we could have closed the war more speedily? |
1866 | Eighteen or twenty millions of people who have lived under it,--in what way do they regard it? |
1866 | Faces, houses, doors, and haunts, where are they now? |
1866 | From whence are to come the senators and the members of Congress; the governors and attorney- generals? |
1866 | From whence is to come the national spirit of the two States, and the salt that shall preserve their political life? |
1866 | Had I been comfortable? |
1866 | Had there not been enough at Washington of cotton lords and cotton laws? |
1866 | Has his young life been a dream, and not a truth? |
1866 | Have I as yet said that Washington was dirty in that winter of 1861- 1862? |
1866 | Have they the thews and muscles, the energy and endurance, the power of carrying which we possess? |
1866 | Have we not all declared that some check to that career was necessary? |
1866 | He would probably be a man honoured in the nation; but who now can make a guess as to the next President? |
1866 | How has it come about that in American ears the word politician has come to bear a similar signification? |
1866 | How shall the constitution be constitutionally amended while one- third of the States are in revolt? |
1866 | How should any idle man live in such a country? |
1866 | How should it be otherwise with men of such a race? |
1866 | How would they feed them? |
1866 | How, at least, could the South have escaped slavery any time during these last thirty years? |
1866 | If one thinks of it how could they have been made to contain Christian food? |
1866 | If the future as it has since come forth had then been foretold for it, would not such a prophecy have been a prophecy of success? |
1866 | In a matter of taxation why should States agree to an alteration proposed with the very object of increasing their proportion of the national burden? |
1866 | In what way would they treat the ruined owners of the slaves, and the acres of land which would lie uncultivated? |
1866 | In what way, then, when the question has been settled by the force of arms, will these classes find themselves obliged to act? |
1866 | In whose ears is not their names familiar? |
1866 | Is it to them an old woman''s story, a useless parchment, a thing of old words at which all must now smile? |
1866 | Is not that the best evidence that can be had respecting it? |
1866 | It did not pay him,--but what could he do? |
1866 | It is hard enough, for how could the South have escaped slavery? |
1866 | It was bad enough with us, but what were our numbers compared with those of the southern States? |
1866 | May it not be thought well for us if, with such work on our hands, any scraps of iron shall be left to us with which to pursue the purposes of peace? |
1866 | Moreover, who in England ever dreamed of raising 600,000 new troops in six months, out of a population of thirty million? |
1866 | Must it not be said that a curse has fallen upon the land? |
1866 | Shall he be hemmed in from his ocean and shut off from his rivers? |
1866 | Shall he have a hook run into his nostrils, and a thorn driven into his jaw? |
1866 | Shall he never reach that giant manhood which the growth of his boyish years has promised him? |
1866 | Shall men say that his day is over, when he has hardly yet tasted the full cup of his success? |
1866 | Shall our eldest child become bankrupt in its first trade difficulty; be utterly ruined by its first little commercial embarrassment? |
1866 | Starbuck was merely an agent, and who will believe that he was allowed to pocket the whole difference of £1600? |
1866 | Such a state of things has its picturesquely patriarchal side; but what would be the state of such a man if he were emancipated to- morrow? |
1866 | The question is this,--Should the government have paid so vast a sum for one man''s work for six months? |
1866 | The secessionists of Maryland and of Virginia may consent to live in obscurity; but if this be so, who is to rule in those States? |
1866 | They care nothing for the graces,--or shall I say, for the decencies of life? |
1866 | They form the wealth of the South; and if they were bought, what should be done with them? |
1866 | They have got our blood in their veins, and have these qualities gone with the blood? |
1866 | To what is it that the government of a country should chiefly look? |
1866 | Trollope?" |
1866 | Under such circumstances and with such a lesson, could it be expected that the southern States should learn to love abolition? |
1866 | Under such circumstances how can food be made eatable? |
1866 | Was any people ever truly served by eulogy; or an honest cause furthered by undue praise? |
1866 | Was it not well to lay down fine avenues and broad streets, so that future citizens might find a city well prepared to their hand? |
1866 | Was it probable that General Maclellan should have time to answer questions about Ball''s Bluff,--and he with such a job of work on his hands? |
1866 | What American is proud of them? |
1866 | What Englishman has devoted a room to books, and devoted no portion of that room to the productions of America? |
1866 | What blessing above these blessings was needed to make a people great and happy? |
1866 | What city has done better than this? |
1866 | What concession could they make? |
1866 | What farmer could work or have any hope for his land in the middle of such a crowd of soldiers? |
1866 | What great race has ever been won by any man, or by any nation, without some such fall during its course? |
1866 | What might then be the fate of the cotton- fields of the Gulf States, who shall dare to say? |
1866 | What other town of the same size has done as well in the same short space of time? |
1866 | What special advantages do we expect from our own government? |
1866 | What was I doing in such a galley as that? |
1866 | What was the acquisition of Texas against such hosts as these? |
1866 | When this war be over between the northern and southern States will there come upon us Englishmen a necessity of fighting with the Americans? |
1866 | Where are now the constitutions which were written for France? |
1866 | Where is now the glory of the Antilles? |
1866 | Which of us two could take a thrashing from the other and afterwards go about our business with contentment? |
1866 | While this was so, is it to be conceived that Congress should ask questions about military matters with success? |
1866 | Who does not owe to some of them a debt of gratitude? |
1866 | Who is there among us in England who has not been the better for these men? |
1866 | Who now knows the landlord of an inn, or cares to inquire whether or no there be a landlady? |
1866 | Who shall declare the value of a barrel of wooden nutmegs; or how shall the Excise- officer get his tax from every cobbler''s stall in the country? |
1866 | Who trusted it? |
1866 | Who would buy boots or coats, or want new saddles, or waste money on books, in such days as these, in such a town as Alexandria? |
1866 | Who would put their faith in Seward and Cameron? |
1866 | Who, then, can dare to wish that all that has been done by the negro immigration should have remained undone? |
1866 | Whose arm shall be long enough to stay us, or whose bolt shall be strong enough to strike us?" |
1866 | Why did I speak with such eager enmity of those poor women in the New York cars, who never injured me, now that I think of it? |
1866 | Why had I brought all that useless lumber down to Rolla? |
1866 | Why had I come to Rolla, with no certain hope even of shelter for a night? |
1866 | Why is it that a stout Englishman bordering on fifty finds himself in such a predicament as that? |
1866 | Why need I have told of the mud of Washington, or have exposed the nakedness of Cairo? |
1866 | Why should not General Halleck be as well able to say what was good for the people as any law or any lawyer? |
1866 | Will the Americans honestly wish to pay the bill; and if they do so wish, will they have the power to pay it? |
1866 | With which side shall go this child, and who shall remain in possession of that pleasant homestead? |
1866 | Would Captain Wilkes have been right according to the existing law if he had carried the"Trent"away to New York? |
1866 | Would I come back to him? |
1866 | Would I not remain? |
1866 | on all incomes in each State; but what will be done if Pennsylvania, for instance, should decline, or Illinois should hesitate? |
1866 | was sufficient? |
1866 | what if the rebels have cause for their rebellion? |
1866 | where the riches of Mexico, and the power of Peru? |
13945 | And what is New Place? |
13945 | Annoyance, ma''am? 13945 Any thing contraband here, Mr. Snooks? |
13945 | But do they really turn out the contents of the trunks, and take away people''s daguerreotypes, and burn their books? |
13945 | But do you really believe he never saw it? |
13945 | But how do they shut their eyes to the various cruelties of the system,--the separation of families-- the domestic slave trade? |
13945 | But,said I,"you think the affairs of the working classes much improved of late years?" |
13945 | How many non- slaveholders elsewhere are thus interested in the products of slaves? 13945 Is there a hame in all Scotland for the cleanly but sick servant maid to go till, until health be restored? |
13945 | Is there a school in all Scotland for training ladies in the higher branches of learning? 13945 Is there one school in all Scotland where the helpless, homeless poor are fed and clothed at the public expense? |
13945 | Mr. Sturge is to be there waiting for us, but he does not know us, and we do n''t know him; what is to be done? |
13945 | O,says a bystander,"do n''t you know that''The quality of mercy is not strained''?" |
13945 | Pray tell me,said I to a gentlemanly man, who had crossed four or five times,"is there really so much annoyance at the custom house?" |
13945 | Pray tell, what for? |
13945 | Rooms,said Mr. S.;"why, what are there to have?" |
13945 | They do n''t search our pockets, do they? |
13945 | Thomas the Rhymer? |
13945 | Time- honored,said I;"it looks as fresh as if it had been built yesterday: you do not mean to say that is the real old castle?" |
13945 | Was he any thing remarkable? 13945 What ballad?" |
13945 | What bird is that? |
13945 | What can they be? |
13945 | What does make this river so muddy? |
13945 | What rooms will you have, gentlemen? |
13945 | When does the moon rise? |
13945 | Why, do n''t you remember, in the Lay of the Last Minstrel, the song of Albert Graeme, which has something about Carlisle''s wall in every verse? 13945 A little perverse imp in my heart suggested the questions,If a modern artist had painted these, what would be thought of them? |
13945 | And then I consider, How does he say it? |
13945 | And what kind of slavery is it? |
13945 | And who durst smile when Warwick bent his brow? |
13945 | Any cigars, tobacco,& c.?" |
13945 | Are they bound down to their garrets and cellars for sixteen hours a day? |
13945 | Are they not our bone and our flesh? |
13945 | Are we never to send another missionary, or make another appeal for foreign lands, till we have abolished slavery at home? |
13945 | Are we to listen to the craven and miserable talk about''doing more harm than good''? |
13945 | As I saw the way to the cathedral blocked up by a throng of people, who had come out to see me, I could not help saying,"What went ye out for to see? |
13945 | But are our ragged children condemned to the street? |
13945 | But did not these sacrifices bring with them, even in their bitterness, a joy the world knoweth not? |
13945 | But do you doubt the fact? |
13945 | But does the law compel them to work sixteen hours a day? |
13945 | But here in Scotland, need we tell the children of the Covenant, that the Lord on high is mightier than all human power? |
13945 | But still, what is the aspect which the great American nation now presents to the Christian world? |
13945 | By an enactment of the legislature? |
13945 | Can the slave do that? |
13945 | Do n''t you know Glasgow is celebrated for its iron works?" |
13945 | Do our adversaries, say no? |
13945 | Do they not know, say what they will, that the truth is not fully stated? |
13945 | Do they tell us of our ragged children? |
13945 | Do we not send remonstrances to Tuscany, about the Madiai, when women are imprisoned in Virginia for teaching slaves to read? |
13945 | Do you know that this little daisy is the_ gowan_ of Scotch poetry? |
13945 | Do you want to know how announcing is done? |
13945 | Does not every traveller know what a luxury it is to shut one''s eyes sometimes? |
13945 | For all these kindnesses, what could I give in return? |
13945 | Granted; but is not a serious, respectful_ form_ of religion better than nothing? |
13945 | Has the history of antiquity been written in vain? |
13945 | He had been asked, what right had Great Britain to interfere? |
13945 | How can they be witnesses, if they can not see and be cognizant? |
13945 | How could they be otherwise? |
13945 | How did it cease? |
13945 | How do you suppose such a religious feeling has been preserved in the book to which the address refers? |
13945 | How had they come into that state? |
13945 | How is it possible that it should be the reverse? |
13945 | How would it have been with the primitive church if this doctrine had prevailed? |
13945 | I ask, are they immortal beings? |
13945 | I heard it: when did I hear it? |
13945 | I refer especially to the pulpit; for, if the church and the ministry are silent, who is to speak for the dumb and the oppressed? |
13945 | I said;"what, where Burns lived?" |
13945 | If I did not know it was Raphael, what should I think?" |
13945 | If our Hawthorne could conjure up such a thing as the Seven Gables in one of our prosaic country towns, what would he have done if he had lived here? |
13945 | If the criticism be made that every thing is given_ couleur de rose_, the answer is, Why not? |
13945 | Is all this hypocritical, insincere, and impertinent in us? |
13945 | Is it like the servitude under the Mosaic law, which is brought forward to defend it? |
13945 | Is it not fair to conclude that all the mechanical assistants of painting are improved with the advance of society, as much as of all arts? |
13945 | Is it not worthy the attention of genuine philanthropists to inquire whether cotton can not be profitably cultivated by free labor?" |
13945 | Is it reserved for us, in that"undiscovered country"which he spoke of, ever to meet the great souls whose breath has kindled our souls? |
13945 | Is it to stand still? |
13945 | Is n''t it delightful?" |
13945 | Is not nature ever springing, ever new? |
13945 | It is simply this-- the overwhelming power of the slave system; and whence comes that overwhelming power? |
13945 | It is true that people with immense wealth can live in such regions in cleanliness and elegance; but how must it be with the poor? |
13945 | Lord Carlisle very soon came in, and with him-- who do you think? |
13945 | May not the magical tints, which are said to be a secret with the old masters, be the effect of time in part? |
13945 | May they not go where they like, and ask better wages and better work? |
13945 | Must I confess the truth? |
13945 | My first question, then, when I look at the work of an artist, is, What sort of a mind has this man? |
13945 | Nobody means to defend our defects; does any man attempt to defend them? |
13945 | Now, is he to buy a man and seven children, for whom he has no use, for the sake of having a cook? |
13945 | Now, then, what is our duty? |
13945 | One says,"Do you remember the scene on the sea shore, with which it opens, describing the rising of the tide?" |
13945 | Pretty successful that, was it not, for a first essay? |
13945 | She told me that I should there have positive and perfect quiet; and what could attract me more than that? |
13945 | Surely, without the revelation of God in Jesus, who could believe in the divine goodness? |
13945 | The conscience of the cotton growers was talked of; but had the cotton consumer no conscience? |
13945 | The grave the last sleep? |
13945 | The haughty, cruel, selfish Elizabeth, and all the great men of her court, are still living and acting somewhere; but where? |
13945 | The question then arose, was he justified in using that amount of coercion? |
13945 | There are_ real_ Christians there who do this-- are there not?" |
13945 | Was it not in the tower of the Bass, that overhangeth the wide, wild sea? |
13945 | Was it not pleasant, when I had a heart so warm for this old country? |
13945 | Was it their hardness, their cruelty, their hastiness to take offence, their fondness for blood and murder? |
13945 | Was it true that all this affectionate interest was merited? |
13945 | Well, is it worth while to go to his tower? |
13945 | Well, why should we obey the law of the land in South Carolina on this subject, and disobey the law of the land in Italy? |
13945 | Were not these noble ladies and excellent women, titled and untitled, among the very first to seek to redress them?" |
13945 | What do they do that for?" |
13945 | What force does all this give to the passage in his diary in which he records his estimate of life!--"What is this world? |
13945 | What gave power to the masses in the French revolution, but that the army, pervaded by new ideas, refused any longer to keep the people down?" |
13945 | What gives slavery its great strength in the United States? |
13945 | What had caused the change? |
13945 | What has been the effect of this expansion of slave territory? |
13945 | What has he to say? |
13945 | What shall meaner mortals do, when law itself, in all her majesty, wig, gown, and all, goes by the board? |
13945 | What then is there for the women of Scotland? |
13945 | What''s that?" |
13945 | What, then, do we admire? |
13945 | When her father, who lay on his death bed at that time in Falkland, was told of her birth, he answered,"Is it so? |
13945 | Whence does it arise? |
13945 | Where are all those great souls that have created such an atmosphere of light about Edinburgh? |
13945 | Who is it that always speaks first? |
13945 | Who knows not Melville''s beechy grove, And Roslin''s rocky glen, Dalkeith, which all the virtues love, And classic Hawthornden? |
13945 | Who would come to any other conclusion, except from the pages of the Bible? |
13945 | Who would not long to enjoy a freer communion, and rejoice in a prospect of days spent in unreserved fellowship with its grand and noble nature? |
13945 | Why can they not work together, so far as they are agreed, and let those points on which they disagree be waived for the time? |
13945 | Why do n''t they wash it?" |
13945 | Why does a writer want to break up so laudable a poetic design in the guides? |
13945 | Why is it a sin? |
13945 | Why is it that we admire ragged children on canvas so much more than the same in nature? |
13945 | Why should we send missionaries across the ocean?'' |
13945 | Why, I wish to know, should none but_ old_ masters be thought any thing of? |
13945 | Why, sir, how can it be otherwise? |
13945 | Why, what is pomp, rule, reign, but earth and dust? |
13945 | a reed shaken with the wind?" |
13945 | and if so, where and how? |
13945 | and that?" |
13945 | and their character, whatever it is, is it any thing more than our own, a little exaggerated, perhaps? |
13945 | and whether the privilege of shooting was not confined to the actual proprietor? |
13945 | are they exhaled like the breath of flowers? |
13945 | are they spent like the lightning? |
13945 | or are they still living, still active? |
13945 | or may not modern artists have their secrets, as well, for future ages to study and admire? |
13945 | said I,"the lord mayor of London, that I used to read about in Whittington and his Cat?" |
13945 | said I;"what''s that?" |
13945 | said I;"what, the Carlisle of Scott''s ballad?" |
13945 | will they take our_ dresses_?" |
13945 | you say;"the house where Shakspeare lived?" |
28064 | 30 min., to extend slavery into such territory? |
28064 | 30 min., under the law of March 6th 1820, as impliedly devoted to slavery as the country north of it was to freedom? |
28064 | Are free white American citizens in American territories, as well as American States, competent to decide the question of African slavery or not? |
28064 | Are they competent to govern themselves or not? |
28064 | Does any man believe there is any constitutional right in Congress to do any such thing? |
28064 | Does it mean that slavery can not exist in any territory of the United States over which the constitution extends? |
28064 | I ask again, where does the real National Democratic party of the people, headed by Douglas, now stand on the question of slavery? |
28064 | If so, of what avail is it for a State constitution or State law to prohibit slavery? |
28064 | Is it not slavery rather than freedom that needs the protection of positive law? |
28064 | Is slavery more progressive and expansive than freedom? |
28064 | Is there reason in this cry, for argument it can not be called? |
28064 | Now, who shall say that the compromise of 1850 was a law to extend slavery over the free territory covered by it? |
28064 | Were the people senseless or did they mean nothing when they endorsed those laws? |
28064 | What are the plain facts? |
28064 | What says Judge Burnett, of Cincinnati, himself a squatter sovereign, of the first territorial legislature of the North- west territory? |
28064 | What then becomes of the asserted"right of each State to order and control its own domestic institutions according to its own judgment exclusively?" |
28064 | What was the state of this institution at the adoption of the Constitution, and how did the Constitution deal with it? |
28064 | Which is the Democratic position? |
28064 | Why is this? |
28064 | and are the men who form Free States afraid to meet the men who form Slave States on common ground and take an even chance for control? |
28064 | and, 2d-- How do the parties and the candidates now before the people stand in regard to it? |
29306 | And thet thar new Shanghai rooster, mister, ai n''t he a beauty? 29306 And were n''t we really show- people, going down the river this way, in a skiff? |
29306 | But what is the matter down there? |
29306 | How far below is Big Bone? |
29306 | How many miles? |
29306 | I thote I''d come to visit uv ye,he had said by way of introduction;"ye''re frum a city, ai n''t yer? |
29306 | What creek is this? |
29306 | What is the matter with this town? |
29306 | What''n''tarnation air ye, anny way? 29306 Who is there to mourn for Logan?" |
29306 | Who you holl''rin''at, you brack island niggah? |
29306 | Ye see that? 29306 Yees be one o''them photygraph parties, hey?" |
29306 | And in that of a steamboat captain? |
29306 | But all same, we''ll be friends, wo n''t we? |
29306 | But what of the Maysville of to- day? |
29306 | He looked surprised, and took a fresh chew while cogitating on my alarming ignorance of Point Sandy affairs:"Why, ain''ye heared? |
29306 | How fur down be yees goin''?" |
29306 | I took a snap- shot at the fleet, and heard one man shout to another,"Bill, did yer notice they''ve a photograph gallery aboard?" |
29306 | In tones half- choked with tears, he expressed the sentiment of all:"Mother, is it really ended? |
29306 | Say, hones''Injun, how fur down air yew fellers goin'', anyhow?" |
29306 | The Dynamiter confided to his listeners that he was going down the river for"a clean hundred miles, and that''s right smart fur, ai n''t it? |
29306 | Their chief concern centered in the query, how Pilgrim could hold that goodly heap of luggage and still have room to spare for four passengers? |
29306 | Thet there red flag? |
29306 | We are not in trade? |
29306 | Whar your shanty- boat been beached, thet ye ain''heared thet yere?" |
29306 | What killed it?" |
29306 | What was he going to make of himself? |
29306 | Why ca n''t we go back to Brownsville, and do it all over again?" |
29306 | Why? |
29306 | Would n''t the Doctor go into partnership with him? |
29306 | Would we object if, for a few moments, he tarried here by the roadside? |
29306 | Ye''re welcome t''all in this yere shanty boat-- ain''t no bakky''bout yer close, yew fellers?" |
29306 | and perhaps we could accommodate him with a drink of water? |
29306 | or, if we were n''t show- people, had we an agency for something? |
29306 | or, were we only in trade?" |
29306 | we are not canvassers? |
29306 | we are not fishing? |
29306 | we are not show- people? |
29306 | whar you git dat mule?" |
25966 | ''Spose dot de horse is with them-- what den? |
25966 | After we finds out vot we does den? |
25966 | And why should n''t I do it? |
25966 | Are you really sure Otto is alive? |
25966 | Ca n''t I have breakfast before I go? |
25966 | Ca n''t you kick him loose? |
25966 | Confound the cur,muttered Jack, rubbing the injured limb,"is that the style of these dogs when a stranger calls?" |
25966 | Deerfoot tells me what the Great Spirit says to him; how does he hear the Great Spirit speak? |
25966 | Deerfoot, do you think I am right? |
25966 | Did I not tell you to go and not come back until you brought him with you? |
25966 | Did n''t Deerfoot tell you? |
25966 | Did you see it done? |
25966 | Did your father tell you to stay away till you recovered the animal? |
25966 | Do n''t you know? |
25966 | Do you think so, Deerfoot? |
25966 | Do you think they are still hunting for him? |
25966 | Have they gone to look for the horse that was lost? |
25966 | How can I tell, mother, except that he is in the woods? 25966 How could I see it when I was n''t there?" |
25966 | How did my brother meet his death? |
25966 | How is that? |
25966 | How should we hear of it,asked Crumpet with a growl,"when we was on this side of the Mississippi?" |
25966 | How, in the name of conscience, did you ever find me at all? |
25966 | I judged not; how then do you propose to obtain him? |
25966 | I wonder whether he means to attack me? |
25966 | I''m Burt Hawkins-- you remember me? |
25966 | I''ve heard tell of you; you''re the chap that always uses a bow and arrow instead of a gun? |
25966 | No, I does not; he says he goes off mit your poy, but dey both lies-- don''t it? |
25966 | Oh, it''s you, is it? |
25966 | So you''re Deerfoot, are you? 25966 Then where_ is_ he?" |
25966 | Toby, the colt belonging to Otto''s father, is wandering in the woods not very far away----"How do you know he is? |
25966 | Vell, vot does we does now? |
25966 | Vot does they mean to do mit us? |
25966 | Vy do n''t they finds him? |
25966 | Was harm done him? |
25966 | Was n''t I over in Kentucky about three years ago? 25966 What do they care for_ me_?" |
25966 | What do you intend to do? |
25966 | What do you say? |
25966 | What were you about to say? |
25966 | What''s that? |
25966 | What''s the matter with him? |
25966 | Where does the Great Spirit that Deerfoot tells me about live? |
25966 | Where is he? 25966 Where is the other?" |
25966 | Where is the village of my brother? |
25966 | Where shall I begin? |
25966 | Who the deuce did that? |
25966 | Who_ can_ he be? 25966 Whose neck is broke?" |
25966 | Why ca n''t you talk with a fellow,asked Kellogg,"without breaking his neck?" |
25966 | Why did Deerfoot not come here or to one of the other cabins? |
25966 | Why did he do that? 25966 Why do you ask that?" |
25966 | Why does the brother of Deerfoot hunt the woods alone? |
25966 | Why is my brother in the woods alone? |
25966 | Why? |
25966 | Will Deerfoot tell Hay- uta about the Great Spirit of the white man? |
25966 | Yes,answered the lady, with a smile;"I am ashamed to say they have; but I ask your pardon; have you had supper? |
25966 | You have never seen Deerfoot, have you, mother? |
25966 | You means to kills me, eh, do n''t it? 25966 But of what avail? 25966 Can it be these warriors have their hunting grounds away out toward the Rocky Mountains? 25966 Carleton? |
25966 | Could it be done? |
25966 | Could it be the chief had read in the captive''s face the evidence of his intention? |
25966 | Deerfoot looked calmly in the forbidding countenance, and asked, more directly than was his custom:"Are you the father of my brother, Otto?" |
25966 | Deerfoot saluted all whose eyes met his, calling out:"Good day; how is my brother?" |
25966 | Deerfoot, ca n''t you go with us?" |
25966 | Deerfoot, is that you?" |
25966 | Did the red men belong to the Osage tribe of Indians, or was theirs some fiercer or milder totem from a distant part of the country? |
25966 | Did they intend to kill them with rifle, tomahawk, or knife? |
25966 | Did they mean to hold him a permanent captive, or, as is often the case with their race, would they put him to torture and finally to death? |
25966 | Had any of those Shawanoes pushed the pursuit still further? |
25966 | Had these Indians formed any purpose respecting their prisoners? |
25966 | Had they lingered near the settlement, awaiting just such an opportunity as was given by Jack and Otto when they went off on their hunt? |
25966 | Have you the money with you to buy one?" |
25966 | I believe, Deerfoot, that you are a Shawanoe, ai n''t you?" |
25966 | I do n''t think dot was much play, do you, Jack?" |
25966 | I say, Ogallah, will you back me up and see that I have fair play?" |
25966 | I suppose your father gave you a whipping for losing Toby?" |
25966 | I wonder how Otto is getting along?" |
25966 | If so, what was it likely to be? |
25966 | Is he days''journey to the south? |
25966 | Is there any hope of him playing the part of a friend for Otto and me?" |
25966 | It was,"Can it be that the horse we are seeking is with them?" |
25966 | May I stay here all night?" |
25966 | O Deerfoot, wo n''t you find my Jack and bring him home to me?" |
25966 | Or would they be taken away captives? |
25966 | See?" |
25966 | Sure enough, and why had he not thought of it before? |
25966 | What do you think of_ that_?" |
25966 | What do you''spose Relstaub did? |
25966 | What greater feat could the young Sauk perform than to follow and secretly slay the detested lad? |
25966 | What had become of him? |
25966 | Which should he first seek? |
25966 | Whither would these red men take him? |
25966 | Why is he in the village of the Sauks?" |
25966 | Why, indeed? |
25966 | Why, then, should Deerfoot be perplexed over the matter, when even the mother of Jack expressed no fear concerning him? |
25966 | Will you not permit me to give you to eat?" |
25966 | With the truth came the startling question-- Where was Otto? |
25966 | exclaimed the impulsive Jack, springing to his feet;"you''ll let me, mother, wo n''t you?" |
25966 | finally asked Jack, in a guarded voice;"shall we go forward and make their acquaintance?" |
25966 | thought he,"they have come from a long distance; what could have taken them down near Martinsville and so near the Mississippi? |
25966 | uttered to the first settlers at Plymouth, who were at a loss to understand where the red man learned the pleasant words? |
25966 | where did that gun come from, and that tomahawk?" |
30244 | I asked him,said Smith,"if the beaver was an amphibious animal, or if it could live under water? |
30244 | Where is your ensign? |
30244 | Where is your lieutenant? |
30244 | Where is your second lieutenant? |
30244 | ''For what purpose do you come here?'' |
30244 | As the beaver does not eat fish, I inquired of Tecaughretanego why the beavers made such large dams? |
30244 | But how were the savage wards occupying these lands, and thus suddenly coming under the guardianship of the republic, to be dealt with? |
30244 | For what ties, let me ask, should we have upon these people? |
30244 | Has not the Prophet told them that the white man''s bullets are harmless, and that his powder will turn to sand? |
30244 | If you become indifferent about them, they may perhaps be given up; what security would you then have? |
30244 | Is he not every year giving you fresh proofs of his friendship? |
30244 | St. Clair is valorous, but what can valor do in a tempest of death? |
30244 | The Great Spirit gave the soil in common to all the tribes; what single tribe could alienate any particular portion of it? |
30244 | The question was asked:"Do they confess all the bad things they ever did?" |
30244 | They claimed an equal right to the land in question with the Miamis, but what of this? |
30244 | What is that great collection of people at the mouth of the Tippecanoe intended for? |
30244 | What right had the old village chiefs to dispose of the common domain without the consent of the warriors who had fought to maintain it? |
30244 | What then the prospect of binding any new states to be formed out of this western territory in the interest of the federal union? |
30244 | What then would be the result? |
30244 | What was Tecumseh''s object? |
30244 | What would that"father"now do for his ruined and sorrowing children? |
30244 | Where did they come from? |
30244 | Why hesitate? |
30244 | Why then, are you about to purchase it from others?" |
15099 | ''Have you on your Sabbath shoon or have you no on your Sabbath shoon?'' 15099 And what about t''others?" |
15099 | Aunt Matilda, do you think Dorcas was afraid of sore eyes? |
15099 | Beautiful sunshine, is n''t it? |
15099 | But you''ll tell me what It''s all about, wo n''t you? |
15099 | Can you prove your age? |
15099 | Can you spell? |
15099 | Confound''The Pleasures of Hope,''he protested;"ca n''t I write anything else?" |
15099 | Did I ever go with your daughter Miranda? |
15099 | Did it? |
15099 | Did n''t you see the Sarpent inspirin''him? |
15099 | Did you hear the news? |
15099 | Did you see my boy? |
15099 | Do n''t you think I might go home now? |
15099 | Do n''t you think they ought to let me go home? |
15099 | Do you think I could begin without being baptized? |
15099 | Do you think he means you? |
15099 | Do you think he''d help a feller? 15099 Do you think that Jesus Christ would-- would-- well, do you think he''d help a poor, unlarnt Flat Cricker like me?" |
15099 | Does he? |
15099 | Has Henry fallen in and got a ducking, Shocky? |
15099 | Have you any friends? |
15099 | He do n''t scare you? |
15099 | How did you get here so early, Ralph? |
15099 | How do I''low? |
15099 | How do you''low he''ll get in? |
15099 | How long has the claimant lived on his claim? |
15099 | How old did you say you were? 15099 How old?" |
15099 | How_ did_ this happen? |
15099 | I guess you''re a little skeered by what the old man said, a''n''t you? |
15099 | I say, ole woman,broke in old Jack,"I say, wot is all this''ere spoutin''about the Square fer?" |
15099 | I suppose Mr. Hartsook rode your horse to Lewisburg? |
15099 | If it was n''t for what? |
15099 | Is my mother in that place? 15099 Is that the poor- house?" |
15099 | Is your arm improving? |
15099 | It was real good in Mr. Pearson to take me, was n''t it? 15099 No-- sir-- I was waitin''to see if you warn''t a- goin'', too-- I--""Well?" |
15099 | Pap wants to know ef you would spend to- morry and Sunday at our house? |
15099 | Want to be a school- master, do you? 15099 Well, a''n''t you afraid of me, then?" |
15099 | Well, fer one thing, what kind of gals did he go with? 15099 Well, what are you a- tremblin''about, you coward?" |
15099 | What d''ye say, Marthy? |
15099 | What is the condition of the enemy? 15099 What ort I to do?" |
15099 | What will you do with the tough boys? 15099 What would you do with me, for instance?" |
15099 | Where are you going? 15099 Where is Walter?" |
15099 | Who are you? |
15099 | Who d''ye s''pose''tis? |
15099 | Who goes there? |
15099 | Why a''n''t you afraid of me? |
15099 | Why do you say''poor old tree''? |
15099 | Why not? 15099 Why, Ralph Hartsook, where did you drop down from-- and what have you got?" |
15099 | Why, Shocky, have n''t you gone yet? |
15099 | Why, Shocky? |
15099 | Why, do you think an old soldier like me, hobbling on a wooden leg, is afraid of them thieves? 15099 Why, how do you feel?" |
15099 | Why, plague take it, who said Hanner? |
15099 | Would he thrash? |
15099 | Ya- as,said Schroeder,"put how did Yinkins vellers know dat I sell te medder to te Shquire, hey? |
15099 | You a''n''t a- goin to fight_ me_? |
15099 | You do n''t say? |
15099 | You do n''t say? |
15099 | You here, Miss Hawkins? |
15099 | You mean, then, that I''m to begin now to put in my best licks for Jesus Christ, and that he''ll help me? |
15099 | You''re a purty gal, a''n''t you? 15099 A purty son, a''n''t you? |
15099 | And he read about Nathanael, who lived only six miles away, saying,''Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?''" |
15099 | And he would come? |
15099 | And how could he explain his own walk through the pasture and down the road? |
15099 | And then what would be the effect on his prospects? |
15099 | And you know the cure fer rheumatiz?" |
15099 | Any other trustees? |
15099 | But had he turned coward and deserted his friend? |
15099 | But has n''t this little boy-- Shocking, or what do you call him?--got any mother?" |
15099 | But how should he influence Martha to give up Bud? |
15099 | But just at this moment who should stride into the school- house but Pearson, the one- legged old soldier basket- maker? |
15099 | But what about Bud? |
15099 | But what right had he to supplant Bud? |
15099 | But why speak of the driving of duty? |
15099 | But--""But what?" |
15099 | Could it be that Hannah''s mother was the room- mate of this loathsome creature, whose profanity and obscenity did not intermit for a moment? |
15099 | Could n''t you git him over to Lewisburg? |
15099 | Did Dr. Small shrug his shoulder? |
15099 | Did God concern himself with these things? |
15099 | Did he inflict corporal punishment? |
15099 | Did n''t I come home late last Wednesday night? |
15099 | Did n''t I face the Britishers? |
15099 | Did n''t he?" |
15099 | Did n''t she go all over the neighborhood a- warnin''people? |
15099 | Did not Miss Nancy enjoy a hundred weddings and have the love of five hundred children? |
15099 | Do n''t you?" |
15099 | Do not even the Pharisees the same? |
15099 | Do you know I think that hoss knows something''s up? |
15099 | Do you think He does? |
15099 | Fetch her here out of the poor- house? |
15099 | For if it wurn''t fer spellin''-books and sich occasions as these, where would the Bible be? |
15099 | For what is a bulldog but a stoic philosopher? |
15099 | For, was not the pure, unconscious face of Hannah on the Devil''s side? |
15099 | HAS GOD FORGOTTEN SHOCKY? |
15099 | Had Mr. Hartsook offered any explanations? |
15099 | Had he ever paid her any attention afterward? |
15099 | Hartsook?" |
15099 | Has God Forgotten Shocky? |
15099 | Hey? |
15099 | Hey? |
15099 | Hey?" |
15099 | Hey?" |
15099 | How tid Yinkins know anyting''bout the Shquire''s bayin''me dree huntert in te hard gash-- hey?" |
15099 | How''s that?" |
15099 | I wonder if God forgets all about poor folks when their father dies and their mother gits into the poor- house? |
15099 | I wonder what becomes of folks when God forgets''em?" |
15099 | Is it a poorer place than Means''s? |
15099 | Is it not wise to be happy? |
15099 | Is not that what He meant when he said of such as Miss Sawyer that they should have a hundred- fold in this life for all their sacrifices? |
15099 | Means?" |
15099 | Of his own accord? |
15099 | On Hannah? |
15099 | On the people at Lewisburg? |
15099 | Or, was it the recollection that Shocky was Hannah''s brother? |
15099 | Or, was it the weird thoughts that he expressed? |
15099 | Ought an old country to sow the fertile soil of a colony with such noxious seed? |
15099 | Pearson?" |
15099 | Ralph shivered a little at thought of this, but if it was right to knock Jones down at all, why might not Bud do it"heartily as unto the Lord?" |
15099 | Ralph would have explained, but how? |
15099 | See it nodding its head to them other trees in the woods? |
15099 | She could get happy in class- meeting( for who had a better right? |
15099 | Should he rise and give the alarm? |
15099 | So, with many adjustings of that most adjustable wig? |
15099 | The blue- grass pasture( was it not like unto the garden of Eden?) |
15099 | The trustees have n''t come to fill it up, have they?" |
15099 | Thomson?" |
15099 | To stay, or to flee? |
15099 | Underwood?" |
15099 | Was Hannah deceitful? |
15099 | Was it respect for muscle, or was it the influence of Small? |
15099 | Was it the brotherhood in affliction that made Shocky''s words choke him so? |
15099 | Was there any God? |
15099 | Well, what would_ you_ do in Flat Crick deestrick,_ I''d_ like to know? |
15099 | Were the robbers breaking into the house below? |
15099 | What about it? |
15099 | What business had he being out of bed at two o''clock in the morning? |
15099 | What business had he watching Dr. Small as he went home from the bedside of a dying patient near daylight in the morning? |
15099 | What could Bud do if he were there? |
15099 | What did Henry Small want to visit this old quack for? |
15099 | What did I take you fer? |
15099 | What did she mean? |
15099 | What do you want to know the meaning of a word for? |
15099 | What had the current of conversation to do with him? |
15099 | What if Shocky should die? |
15099 | What if he joined the conspiracy to marry him to this weak- eyed, weak- headed wood- nymph, or backwoods nymph? |
15099 | What is it?" |
15099 | What kind of a place is a poor- house? |
15099 | What need of analyzing her experiences_ in vacuo_ to find out the state of her soul? |
15099 | What shall I do?" |
15099 | What though she had not tasted food since the morning of that exciting day? |
15099 | What though the rain was in her face? |
15099 | What though there might be robbers in the woods? |
15099 | What though there were ten rough miles to travel? |
15099 | What was he that he should aspire to possess her? |
15099 | What was the connection between her and Shocky? |
15099 | What was the hidden part of her life? |
15099 | What would Gin''ral Winfield Scott say ef he knew that one of them as fit at Lundy''s Lane backed out, retreated, run fer fear of a passel of thieves? |
15099 | What would she say if he should confess? |
15099 | What''s him and her been a- courtin''fer for a year ef he did n''t think she was smart? |
15099 | What''s the use of tryin''? |
15099 | When Hannah was in one scale and the whole world in the other, of what account was the world? |
15099 | Which way did you come, Shocky?" |
15099 | White?" |
15099 | Who could it be? |
15099 | Who knows whether he''s a fit man fer anybody to go with? |
15099 | Who will volunteer to take turns sitting up with Henry?" |
15099 | Who would not stay in an earthy paradise ten minutes longer, even though it did make purgatory the hotter afterward? |
15099 | Why else did he avoid the session of the court? |
15099 | Why not walk? |
15099 | Why should he? |
15099 | Why should his evil genius haunt him? |
15099 | Why should men on horseback have any significance to him? |
15099 | With another he asked himself, What shall I do about the robbery? |
15099 | Would God indeed bring things out right? |
15099 | Would Small try to win Hannah''s love to throw it away again, as he had done with others? |
15099 | Would it all come out right if Bud married Hannah? |
15099 | Would it all come out right if he were driven from Flat Creek with a dark suspicion upon his character? |
15099 | Would you inflict corporal punishment if you were tiger- trainer in Van Amburgh''s happy family? |
15099 | Would"Meanses''Hanner"beat the master? |
15099 | You need not answer unless you choose; but what prompted you to take the direction you did in your walk on that evening?" |
15099 | You would n''t like to take a coon hunt nor nothin'', would you?" |
15099 | You''re a purty gal, a''n''t you? |
15099 | You? |
15099 | [ Illustration: BETSY SHORT]"Well, Shocky, what is it?" |
15099 | [ Illustration: MRS. MEANS]"Did you use the blood warm?" |
15099 | _ Wo n''t_ you take me in there, so as I can just kiss her once? |
15099 | beat the master that had laid out Jim Phillips? |
15099 | do n''t I remember when he was poarer nor Job''s turkey? |
15099 | is that you? |
15099 | said that astounded saint,"fetch a pauper here? |
15099 | why what do you think- ah? |
15099 | with many turnings of that reversible glass eye? |
17412 | ''Most time for that cake to be done, is n''t it? |
17412 | Ai n''t no hy_dro_pics, is there, Bert? |
17412 | An''what am yo''gwine to be, Master Bert? |
17412 | And have you been down here ever since? |
17412 | And was it as high as a tree? |
17412 | And what is Mr. Tetlow going to do? |
17412 | And who are you? |
17412 | Are n''t you glad, Bert? |
17412 | Are n''t you, Snoop? |
17412 | Are there any cows here? |
17412 | Are you all ready? |
17412 | Are you going down alone, or are you going to carry somebody? |
17412 | Are you going to turn or not? |
17412 | Are you quite sure no bones have been broken? |
17412 | Are you ready? |
17412 | Are you sure he does n''t know? |
17412 | Are you sure of that? |
17412 | Are you the kid that got lost this afternoon, youngster? |
17412 | Are you the man who owns the store? |
17412 | Bert Bobbsey, did you have a fight with him? |
17412 | Bert, whatever shall we do now? |
17412 | Bert, will you clean them? |
17412 | Bones broken? 17412 But I never heard of fat fairies, did you?" |
17412 | But it was a close race, was n''t it? |
17412 | But what will you do, Bert? |
17412 | But, Nan, what do you think he meant when he said he''d make trouble about Mr. Ringley''s broken window? 17412 But-- but how are we to get back?" |
17412 | But-- but supposing he is-- is eating his dinner? |
17412 | But-- but-- he does n''t have to throw his baby away, does he? |
17412 | But-- but-- how did it get here? |
17412 | Ca n''t I be a soldier? |
17412 | Ca n''t I? |
17412 | Ca n''t you drive him over? |
17412 | Ca n''t you get a ladder? |
17412 | Can I go along? |
17412 | Danny Rugg, what do you mean? |
17412 | Did Mr. Ringley come to see your father? |
17412 | Did Mr. Ringley know it was you? |
17412 | Did he hit you? |
17412 | Did he hurt you very much, Bert? |
17412 | Did n''t you see any-- any ghosts? |
17412 | Did you ever see such a sight before? |
17412 | Did you promise to keep still, Bert? |
17412 | Did you see it come in, or go out? |
17412 | Did you see the ghost after that? |
17412 | Do n''t you know, the kind that fold up? |
17412 | Do n''t you see you are making paste of the flour? |
17412 | Do you believe in ghosts, mamma? |
17412 | Do you see anything of Danny Rugg? |
17412 | Do you think that is the nicest, Flossie? |
17412 | Do you think you two boys can be trusted alone with the horse? |
17412 | Do you want to help me raise the ladder, Danny? |
17412 | Do you-- you think he can get in at the window? |
17412 | Does Mr. Ringley think you broke the window? |
17412 | Does mamma mean a ghost? |
17412 | Fire enjuns, am it, Freddie? 17412 Freddie dear, are you there?" |
17412 | Freddie, is it you? |
17412 | Going to take a sail through the air, was he? 17412 Grace Lavine dead?" |
17412 | Had a runaway, eh? |
17412 | Have another? |
17412 | Have you been good while I was gone? |
17412 | He''s a very nice fellow, he is, and likes boys and gals fust- rate; do n''t ye, Tige? |
17412 | Hi, Tige, what''s the matter? 17412 How do you like that?" |
17412 | How many heads did it have? |
17412 | How much money-- a thousand dollars? |
17412 | How would he dare, when he broke it himself? |
17412 | How would we ever get out? |
17412 | Hullo, what''s on the tail? |
17412 | I say, who''s there? |
17412 | I-- I-- oh, Mr. Tetlow, wo n''t you please let Bert off this time? 17412 If I am sent home, what will mamma and papa say?" |
17412 | Is Grace really dead? |
17412 | Is it far from here? |
17412 | Is it still living at your house? |
17412 | Is that a cat? |
17412 | Is this Mr. Bobbsey''s house? |
17412 | It will make an awful bill to pay, wo n''t it? |
17412 | It''s awful, is n''t it? |
17412 | Kitten on my barn? 17412 Lavater?" |
17412 | Mamma, where are you? |
17412 | May I ask what you be a- doin''on the road all alone and in this snowstorm? |
17412 | Me? 17412 Must be''bout ten millions of them, do n''t you think so?" |
17412 | Nice as Aunt Emily''s? |
17412 | Not at all? |
17412 | Oh, Bert, ca n''t I go and look on? |
17412 | Oh, Bert, please let my dear kitten down, wo n''t you? |
17412 | Oh, Bert, supposing it was a real ghost? |
17412 | Oh, Bert, what is the matter? 17412 Oh, Bert, what made you fight?" |
17412 | Oh, Bob, can you hold him? |
17412 | Oh, Freddie, how will we ever set that on such a little pasteboard table? |
17412 | Oh, Freddie, was it really you? |
17412 | Oh, Freddie, why did you go into the barrel? |
17412 | Oh, Grace, had n''t you better stop? |
17412 | Oh, Mr. Daly, did you catch our horse? |
17412 | Oh, Nan, where is yours? |
17412 | Oh, dear me, what will you do now? |
17412 | Oh, mamma, are we going to Uncle Dan''s farm this summer? |
17412 | Oh, mamma, did you put them there? |
17412 | Oh, mamma, why do n''t you come? |
17412 | Oh, papa, she-- isn''t de-- dead, is she? |
17412 | Oh, papa, you wo n''t laugh? |
17412 | Oh, that''s it? |
17412 | Oh, what do you think? |
17412 | Oh, what shall I do? |
17412 | Please, Mr. Roscoe, is that you? |
17412 | Really? |
17412 | So that''s your cat, is it? |
17412 | So the boat up an''run away with ye, did she? 17412 So you won, did you?" |
17412 | Tell me what? |
17412 | The ghost? |
17412 | The-- the forters are beaten, are n''t they? |
17412 | Think you are smart, do n''t you? |
17412 | Was it really Danny? |
17412 | Was it? 17412 Was n''t he to see my father last night?" |
17412 | Was n''t it splendid? |
17412 | Went and saw Ringley, did n''t you? |
17412 | What are you doing here? 17412 What are you doing with old Roscoe''s ladder?" |
17412 | What boy was that who threw the stone? |
17412 | What can make it so awful dark? 17412 What can you tell?" |
17412 | What did he have to say? |
17412 | What did the principal do? |
17412 | What did you do next, Nan? |
17412 | What did you do that for? |
17412 | What did you want the umbrella for? |
17412 | What do you mean by bowling me over like that? |
17412 | What do you mean by_ spirit_ himself, mamma? |
17412 | What do you think of that? |
17412 | What do you want? 17412 What do you want?" |
17412 | What does it say in the newspapers? |
17412 | What happened to her? |
17412 | What happened to you? |
17412 | What has happened? |
17412 | What in the world is the matter? |
17412 | What is it, Nan? |
17412 | What is it? |
17412 | What is the trouble, Nan? |
17412 | What is the trouble? |
17412 | What shall we buy? |
17412 | What were you doing near the flour barrel? |
17412 | What will mamma say? 17412 What''s that? |
17412 | What''s the matter with you, Bert? |
17412 | What''s the matter? 17412 What, of the shoe store?" |
17412 | What, the ghost that I saw? |
17412 | When shall the battle begin? |
17412 | When was this? |
17412 | Where in the world did they come from? |
17412 | Where in the world have you been? |
17412 | Where is he? |
17412 | Where is it? |
17412 | Where is she? |
17412 | Where shall I put the bay window? |
17412 | Where? |
17412 | Who be you? |
17412 | Who is talking? |
17412 | Who were they? |
17412 | Who''s there? |
17412 | Who''s there? |
17412 | Why did n''t we think of this before? |
17412 | Why should I be still? 17412 Why should I? |
17412 | Why, Bert, what makes you sleep so soundly this morning? |
17412 | Why, Bert, why do you run so hard? |
17412 | Why, Freddie, what do you mean? |
17412 | Why-- why-- is it Rusher? |
17412 | Will they shoot? |
17412 | Will you be still, or not? |
17412 | Will you lend me a ladder? |
17412 | Will you promise not to tell? |
17412 | Wo n''t you take us before the snow is all gone? |
17412 | Wonder what will happen if I grab it, or yell? |
17412 | Wot yo''make of it, hey? |
17412 | Wot''s dat yo''say, Flossie? |
17412 | Would he have to throw his jam away, and his pie? |
17412 | Would n''t it be_ beau_tiful? |
17412 | Would you hit the horse that gave you such a nice ride? |
17412 | You ca n''t prove that Danny did it, can you? |
17412 | You want your mamma? |
17412 | You-- you wo n''t laugh, papa? |
17412 | And Nan is scared to death of it, is n''t she?" |
17412 | And then he added:"Mamma, do you believe in ghosts?" |
17412 | Are you alone?" |
17412 | Are you hurt?" |
17412 | Are you hurt?" |
17412 | But if he did, what do you suppose Mr. Ringley would do?" |
17412 | But we can feel it, ca n''t we? |
17412 | But-- but-- what do you think Mr. Ringley will do?" |
17412 | CHAPTER II ROPE JUMPING, AND WHAT FOLLOWED"Oh, mamma, what have you brought?" |
17412 | Ca n''t we get it and take it home?" |
17412 | Can you lend me a ladder to get him down with?" |
17412 | Did this have six heads, Bert?" |
17412 | Do you feel sick?" |
17412 | Do you imagine he''ll tell Mr. Ringley I broke it?" |
17412 | Had the thing in white been a ghost? |
17412 | Have you any news?" |
17412 | Have you spotted a tramp in the shed?" |
17412 | How did he get there?" |
17412 | If so, where had it come from? |
17412 | Is the cutter broken?" |
17412 | Is this true?" |
17412 | Lavine?" |
17412 | Let me see, what is your name?" |
17412 | Now that sounds funny, does n''t it? |
17412 | Now then, are you ready?" |
17412 | Oh, why do n''t you turn around?" |
17412 | Queer that a boy should think of it, was n''t it? |
17412 | Reckon yo''is gwine to be a fireman when yo''is a man, hey?" |
17412 | So you keep quiet; do you hear?" |
17412 | Want a race?" |
17412 | Was he dreaming, or was that really a figure in white standing at the foot of his bed? |
17412 | Was the cutter a new one?" |
17412 | Wha-- what do you want? |
17412 | What could it have been?" |
17412 | What if he should be expelled? |
17412 | What put that into your head?" |
17412 | Why did n''t you stop and tell the truth?" |
17412 | You''ll have to build him a balloon, eh?" |
17412 | You''ve got the ghost, have n''t you? |
17412 | You''ve got your sister with you? |
17412 | are you hurt?" |
17412 | how do you like that?" |
17412 | how''s the ghost?" |
17412 | what can it mean?" |
17412 | what does this mean?" |
17412 | what have you done?" |
17412 | what shall we do?" |
29558 | Any of you got any matches? |
29558 | Did you ever get lost in the woods? |
29558 | Then how is it that we never see any? |
29558 | Whence did he come? 29558 Will you hear it through once more?" |
29558 | ( tr)]{ 369} Hat Size of hat Size of linen collar worn Answer following questions plainly: Age? |
29558 | And his father seeing the wonder in the mother''s eyes, said,"Whence came he from?" |
29558 | And the stars not as an astronomer, but as a traveler? |
29558 | And where is that band who so vauntingly swore,''Mid the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion, A home and a country they''d leave us no more? |
29558 | At night he cried to the moon"Whither?" |
29558 | At the close of dinner one day, my father turned everybody out of the cabin, locked the door, and said to me:"David, what do you mean to be?" |
29558 | But does a strong boy need a stimulant? |
29558 | But what enemy? |
29558 | But which owl? |
29558 | Coffee and Tea Should a boy drink coffee or tea? |
29558 | Could you use the above gases to extinguish fire? |
29558 | Did you ever see the newt roll her eggs in small leaves, or the caddis fly make a case of bits of stick, leaves, and sand? |
29558 | Do these things appeal to you? |
29558 | Do you believe in loyalty, courage, and kindness? |
29558 | Do you desire the knowledge to help the wounded quickly, and to make yourself cool and self- reliant in an emergency? |
29558 | Do you love the woods? |
29558 | Do you understand? |
29558 | Do you wish to have all- round, well- developed muscles, not those of a great athlete, but those of a sound body that will not fail you? |
29558 | Do you wish to learn the trees as the forester knows them? |
29558 | Ever tasted one? |
29558 | Had n''t you better give him that match?" |
29558 | Have you anything for me? |
29558 | Height? |
29558 | How to Make Fire by Rubbing Sticks"How do the Indians make a fire without matches?" |
29558 | How? |
29558 | In the morning he stood on a mountain top and stretching out his hands cried,"Whence?" |
29558 | O say, does that star- spangled banner yet wave O''er the land of the free and the home of the brave? |
29558 | Shall I use it to get a new course from the compass, or shall we make a fire and stay here till morning?" |
29558 | So also on the plains, the old folks would ask the children at night,"Can you see the pappoose on the old squaw''s back?" |
29558 | That''s my fate is it? |
29558 | Weight? |
29558 | What compound is formed when carbon is burned in air? |
29558 | What does it mean? |
29558 | What is a stimulant and what does it do? |
29558 | What is that which the breeze, o''er the towering steep, As it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses? |
29558 | What scout can add to this list? |
29558 | Which track belongs to which bird? |
29558 | Whither was he going? |
29558 | Why can baking soda be used to put out a small fire? |
29558 | Why did life burst into leaf and flower with the coming of spring? |
29558 | Why did the child become a man and the man grow old and die?" |
29558 | Why did the sun rise and set? |
29558 | Why do n''t you laugh, and make us all laugh too, And keep us mortals all from getting blue? |
29558 | Why do n''t you laugh? |
29558 | Why lift extra weight when tramping? |
29558 | Why will fresh plaster harden quicker by burning charcoal in an open vessel near it? |
29558 | Would you like to be an expert camper who can always make himself comfortable out of doors, and a swimmer that fears no waters? |
29558 | Would{ xii} you like to form habits that will surely make your success in life? |
29558 | [ Illustration: Tracks; Walking, Trotting, Canter, Galloping, Lame Horse Walking: Which leg is the lame in?] |
29558 | { 358} The Star- Spangled Banner O Say, can you see, by the dawn''s early light, What so proudly we hail''d at the twilight''s last gleaming? |
29558 | { 401} Do You Know This Manual From Cover To Cover? |
28703 | And my sweet little Kate, did you too stand up for kindness to servants? |
28703 | Are the fishes always hungry?--does the water make them hungry too? |
28703 | Are you going to put me into the water now? |
28703 | Both asleep in the great chair? |
28703 | Brothers?--where? |
28703 | But what happened after that? |
28703 | Can it be a brother, a real live brother? |
28703 | Dear Grandma,said the little girl,"will it hurt me_ very_ much?" |
28703 | Dear Mother, may I help you take care of my little brother? |
28703 | Dear Mother,said he,"will Jesus let my brother come to me? |
28703 | Did you hear me, Emma? 28703 Do you know,"said her Mother,"that it was naughty for you to say that?" |
28703 | Emma,replied her Mother,"do you know that I ought to punish you, because you do not mind?" |
28703 | Grandma,said Emily,"may I look at the books on the table? |
28703 | Grandma,said Willy,"I hung up my stocking last night, and what do you thing I got in it?" |
28703 | Have I a brother? |
28703 | I wonder who she will choose for her King? |
28703 | Is it alive? |
28703 | It ca n''t be mended at all, can it, brother? |
28703 | James,said his Father,"do you know where my wig is?" |
28703 | Master Henry,said she,"what do you think happened last night?" |
28703 | Mother,said Frederick Stanley,"is it not wrong to treat servants unkindly?" |
28703 | She_ looks_ like a Queen, do n''t she? |
28703 | That''s a great deal too much; but what_ did_ you find to quarrel about? |
28703 | Well, Susan,said her Father,"do you like the monkeys?" |
28703 | What are their names, Father? |
28703 | What can have put that into your head? |
28703 | What did the tiny bit of a bear do for his dinner? |
28703 | What did? |
28703 | What makes you ask that question? |
28703 | Who did it? |
28703 | Whom will you have for King? |
28703 | Why, what has Julia been doing? |
28703 | Annie said she was glad it meant such good things, and added,"Mamma, will you play I am a lady, coming to see you, if you are not too busy?" |
28703 | Browne?" |
28703 | But what was that in the middle of the room? |
28703 | But who was to have the little house under the table, I wonder? |
28703 | Dear Father, what is the matter with her? |
28703 | Did they buy new play things for her every day? |
28703 | Did they give her plenty of candy? |
28703 | Did they take her very often to the Museum, or the Circus, or the Menagerie? |
28703 | Did you ever hear of such a naughty boy before? |
28703 | Do n''t you see that I am making a mouse?" |
28703 | Do n''t you think Annie was a happy little girl? |
28703 | Frisby?" |
28703 | He looked very much offended, indeed; and asked in a stern voice,"Which boy went into the play- room with fire?" |
28703 | He rang the bell, and said to the servant,"Do you know any thing about my wig?" |
28703 | Her Mother kissed her, and said,"I am very weak, my dear child; but do you not want to see your little brothers?" |
28703 | I would rather lose twenty vases than have you tell a lie; but you knew it was wrong to play in the parlors, did you not?" |
28703 | Is that right?" |
28703 | Mamma, do n''t they duck us?" |
28703 | May I go in to her if I will step very softly?" |
28703 | Now was not this thoughtful and good, in a little girl, only seven years old? |
28703 | One day when Charles was about four years old, he said,"Dear brother, will you ride me on your back?" |
28703 | Presently the teacher said,"James, do you know your lesson?" |
28703 | Pretty soon she said to herself,"I wonder what I shall have for dinner? |
28703 | She began to sing softly this little song, that she had learned in school--"What is it shines so very bright, That quick dispels the dusky night? |
28703 | She began:"What is the reason that your little Scottish friend Jessie has not been here lately? |
28703 | She knit eight times round the stocking, and then she said to herself,"I wonder if the dumpling is done?" |
28703 | She knit six times round the stocking, and then she said to herself--"I wonder if the dumpling is done?" |
28703 | She knit twice round the stocking, and then she said to herself--"I wonder if the dumpling is done?" |
28703 | She went to her and said--"Dear Mother, are you sick? |
28703 | The room was black with smoke, and they looked on dismayed, as they heard the popping and banging of their precious fireworks, while"Who did it?" |
28703 | Then the great big bear said--"''Who is this in the bed?'' |
28703 | WHICH IS THE WISER? |
28703 | WHO SHALL BE GREATEST? |
28703 | What could it be? |
28703 | What do you think it was? |
28703 | What have you been doing?" |
28703 | What is diligent, Mamma?" |
28703 | What is the name of my ship?" |
28703 | When she came home, her Mother kissed her, and said--"Have you been a good little girl in school to- day?" |
28703 | Would you like to know what they had for dinner? |
28703 | do n''t it make it bright, Edward?" |
28703 | for shame,"said his Mother;"why, which is the biggest-- the spider or you? |
28703 | how could a boy of your politeness be so rude to a young lady? |
28703 | how it hurts me-- will it kill me, Mamma?" |
28703 | said Henry, sitting up in the bed;"is my Mother better?" |
28703 | what little monkey is this in the bed?" |
28703 | wo n''t it be a grand play?" |
28703 | wo n''t it be nice? |
28454 | All''s well as common, at home? |
28454 | An''could ye buy me purty clo''s an''sech- like? 28454 Be that you- all, Uncle Dick?" |
28454 | Bear- traps? |
28454 | Been a sailor long? |
28454 | Ca''late to stay away till ye''ve made yer fortin, in course, sonny? |
28454 | Can you dig up a pair of jumpers? |
28454 | Does the pest go, too? |
28454 | Ever fire a boiler? |
28454 | Hain''t ye got any tongue? |
28454 | Howdy, Plutina? |
28454 | Howdy, my little honey? |
28454 | Howdy, yerse''f, Stranger? 28454 If I agrees to save Gran''pap an''''is land, an''takes ye, have ye got money''nough fer us to git along among the furriners down below?" |
28454 | Kin you- all meet me, an hour by the sun in the mornin'', on the trail to Cherry Lane post- office jest beyond the Widder Higgins''clearin''? 28454 Nobody in the neighborhood''s disappeared, has there?" |
28454 | Oh-- straighteners? |
28454 | On yer way to the Lane, I reckon? |
28454 | Seen anything of a big nigger or a hound passing this way? |
28454 | Tell me,she said softly, with a sympathetic lure in her tones,"is Plutina so very beautiful?" |
28454 | Then, this person you speak of, Plutina, is deformed? |
28454 | Want a return- trip ticket? |
28454 | Whar is she? |
28454 | Whar-- whar is she-- Tiny? |
28454 | What about the effect on the young fellow, himself? |
28454 | What in hell''s the matter on ye? |
28454 | What is it? |
28454 | What the devil do you want? |
28454 | What''ll we do with the corpse? |
28454 | What''s a- bitin''on ye? |
28454 | What''s he done? |
28454 | What''s it all about? |
28454 | Where''s Jack? |
28454 | Why should I? |
28454 | Why, indeed? |
28454 | Why? |
28454 | Will ye take yer nigger thar first? |
28454 | Ye do n''t opine thet- thar gran''pap o''your''n aims to git hitched ag''in at his age, do ye, Tiny? 28454 Ye hain''t a- goin''to put''em on yit, be ye?" |
28454 | You mean, they''re still there, and set? |
28454 | You''re tied up near here? |
28454 | Can we get hold of something to give him the scent-- an old shoe, or cap-- anything?" |
28454 | Could you- all direct me to the abode o''one Widder Brown? |
28454 | Did ye see hit? |
28454 | He chuckled again, as he meditated a humorous effort:"Ye know thet pore feller what ye winged yistiddy?" |
28454 | He fairly winced as the rider drew rein before him, with a cheery,"Howdy?" |
28454 | He questioned Seth Jones harshly, with a single word:"Hodges?" |
28454 | He stopped short, puzzled, and spoke:"What''s the matter with ye, anyhow?" |
28454 | I''low ye hain''t familiar round these- hyar parts?" |
28454 | If you''re so anxious to do your duty, officer,"she added, bitterly,"why do n''t you arrest that horrid, hulking man over there?" |
28454 | Kase why? |
28454 | Kase why? |
28454 | Kin ye make a guess who hit mout be, Mister Siddon?" |
28454 | Kin ye meet me in an hour by the sun, at the ole gate on the east end o''Wolf Rock?" |
28454 | Now, have you?" |
28454 | Of what avail? |
28454 | Quite some spit- fire, hain''t ye? |
28454 | So, why?" |
28454 | Then he voiced the question that hammered in his brain:"Whar be they?" |
28454 | There was a forced cheerfulness in his tones when he continued:"But how did you get into the swamp? |
28454 | They hain''t no more chance fer a good set o''men to make a run-- to say nothin''of a wuthless gang like your''n.... What ye want o''me?" |
28454 | Was it Hodges whom he had seen plunge into the depths, or was it-- Zeke? |
28454 | Was it possible, they wondered, that the hound would be baffled, even as they had been, there at the pool? |
28454 | What hidden force held him back from working his will against her? |
28454 | What mattered the history of evil days? |
28454 | What mout your''n be?" |
28454 | What''s the answer?... |
28454 | What, then, interposed to check him? |
28454 | Who be you?" |
28454 | Why should a hanging, long- past, thus haunt him? |
28454 | Why should she not slay this creature who outraged her self- respect, who threatened her every hope? |
28454 | Wo n''t you- all, mum?" |
28454 | Ye hain''t a- cussin''o''me, be ye?" |
28454 | You''ll appear against him, miss?" |
3073 | 117 Does the bold savage color of this picture affright us? |
3073 | And the windowpanes? |
3073 | And was it any wonder that they now doubted the love the parent State professed to feel for them? |
3073 | As for the puerile threat of blood, had their quality really so soon become obliterated from the memory of North Carolina? |
3073 | Cornstalk, in irony, demanded of them; No? |
3073 | He may have put the question to them in the biblical words, Whither shall I flee? |
3073 | He sees ahead-- the days of his great explorations and warfare, the discovery of Kentucky? |
3073 | If Daniel be beside her, what does she see when she looks at him? |
3073 | Or were these, the ethical tenets of almost all uncorrupted primitive tribes, transmitted from the Indian strain and association? |
3073 | Shall we first kill all our women and children and then 126 fight till we ourselves are slain? |
3073 | Surrender to those damned banditti? |
3073 | What of the man? |
3073 | Who is there to mourn for Logan? |
3073 | Who shall venture to say it is not better worth preserving than many a classic? |
3073 | Would we veil it? |
22464 | Ai n''t that an answer for you? 22464 Albert at the creek, ill?" |
22464 | And so you think that it is time for you to go? |
22464 | And this? |
22464 | Anything in sight, Dick? |
22464 | Are we going to hide somewhere near by and watch during the night? |
22464 | Are you a Sioux? |
22464 | Are you sure? |
22464 | Are you telling''em, Bright Sun, when we''ll reach California? |
22464 | Bright Sun said I was waiting here for you, and had something important to tell you? |
22464 | Bright Sun, I suppose, is with them? |
22464 | Bright Sun,he said,"it was you, our guide, who led the train into the pass that all might be killed?" |
22464 | But we had to leave sometime or other,said Dick,"and how could we tell that we were going to run into anything like this? |
22464 | Can we eat him? |
22464 | Decided to come home, have you? 22464 Did you ever see anybody so eager over anything?" |
22464 | Did you ever see so much jumping for so little reward? |
22464 | Do you dare tell me that Custer and his entire command have perished? |
22464 | Do you know, Al, how long we have been in this valley? |
22464 | Do you know,asked Bright Sun,"that reports of gold in the region to the north, called by you the Black Hills, have come to us?" |
22464 | Do you mean that they were all killed, Dick? |
22464 | Do you mean, Dick, that you''re going back down there in that awful pass? |
22464 | Do you think it can really happen, Dick? 22464 Do you think they''ll rush us?" |
22464 | Do you think we''ll meet''em? |
22464 | Get back alive? 22464 Have you broken down? |
22464 | Have you thought, Dick, what you and I are? |
22464 | He''s as big as a mountain, is n''t he, Dick? |
22464 | How are you feeling, Al? |
22464 | How did I get here, Al? |
22464 | How long do you think you''ll be gone? |
22464 | How many warriors do you suppose this place could turn out, Dick? |
22464 | How much long, Bright Sun, will it take us to reach the gold country? |
22464 | How''s that brother of yours? 22464 How?" |
22464 | I see,he said;"and you''ve been at work sometime, Do you feel fully equal to the task?" |
22464 | I wonder if they mean to starve us to death? |
22464 | I wonder, Al, what Bright Sun is doing now? |
22464 | I''d like to be seeing them now,responded Dick;"but do you believe everything that Bright Sun says?" |
22464 | If I am willing for what? |
22464 | Indians? |
22464 | Is it a fight or a foot race? |
22464 | Is it a fox? |
22464 | Is it you, Al? 22464 Is it you, Dick? |
22464 | Night and the camp, Al,said Dick cheerfully;"feel better, do n''t you? |
22464 | No doubt,said Dick, and after a moment''s pause he added,"Did it snow much up here?" |
22464 | Now what shall we do? |
22464 | Now, I wonder what they''re after? |
22464 | Now, I wonder what they''re after? |
22464 | Now, are n''t they silly? |
22464 | Now, what will Mr. Cougar do? |
22464 | See, Dick,he said,"what is that?" |
22464 | So it''s decided, then, is it? |
22464 | Suppose a panther should come snooping along,said Albert,"and think this the proper place for his bed and board?" |
22464 | That so? 22464 The Sioux are a great and warlike tribe, are they not?" |
22464 | The Sioux are making war upon our people,he said,"and why should they stay around here? |
22464 | Then I ask you again,said Bright Sun,"where have you been all this time?" |
22464 | Then why do you refuse to tell of this place? |
22464 | What are you bristling up about? |
22464 | What are you doing, you boy? |
22464 | What are you expecting, Dick? |
22464 | What are you going to do to me? |
22464 | What did Conway say? |
22464 | What do you make of him? |
22464 | What do you make of it, Al? |
22464 | What do you mean? |
22464 | What does Bright Sun mean by what he said to us? |
22464 | What does he want with us? |
22464 | What does it mean? |
22464 | What is it, Bright Sun?? 22464 What is it, Bright Sun?? |
22464 | What is it? |
22464 | What meaning do you give to it, Dick? |
22464 | What under the sun are those sticks and cords for? |
22464 | What we wish to know,said Bright Sun--"and we have ways to make you tell us-- is whether you saw the white troops before we took you?" |
22464 | What would you ask of me? |
22464 | What''s that? |
22464 | What''s the trouble, Al? |
22464 | What''s this? |
22464 | What''s up now, Mr. Lone Wolf? |
22464 | When shall we slip out? |
22464 | Where have you come from to- night? 22464 Who are you?" |
22464 | Who led them? |
22464 | Why could n''t we go on with them, Dick? |
22464 | Why have you come here? |
22464 | Why not? |
22464 | Why should n''t it be, when the best carpenters in the world did the job? |
22464 | Why, Dick,exclaimed Albert,"what on earth is the matter with you?" |
22464 | Why, what''s this, Al? |
22464 | Why? |
22464 | Will it work? |
22464 | Will they keep it up all night? |
22464 | Work? |
22464 | Would n''t the presence of buffalo and antelope indicate that there are not many Indians hereabouts? |
22464 | Would you tell me where you have been in the last two years and all that you have done? |
22464 | You were brought, and by my warriors; but why were you upon these hills? |
22464 | You would know what we have been doing? |
22464 | Albert was up, rifle in hand, crying:"What is it, Dick?" |
22464 | And all those beautiful streams that came jumping down between the mountains?" |
22464 | And how about the Annex and the Suburban Villa? |
22464 | And how?" |
22464 | Bound, helpless, and shut off from the rest of the world, this question suddenly became vital to him: Would that Indian ever move, or would he not? |
22464 | But his mind now came back to the anxious question:"Where is my brother Albert, who was taken with me? |
22464 | But was it near enough? |
22464 | Could it be he who had slain the mightiest buffalo that ever trod the earth? |
22464 | Could such a thin white hand as that belong to him who had lately owned such a big red one? |
22464 | Dick, have you robbed a treasure ship?" |
22464 | Dick, was n''t that the most beautiful lake of ours that you ever saw? |
22464 | Did Bright Sun think that Albert and he were not equal to the task? |
22464 | Did he not hear hoof beats? |
22464 | Did these men who rode so well know unto what they were riding? |
22464 | Did you ever see another house as snug as Castle Howard? |
22464 | Did you ever see such a whopper?" |
22464 | Did you ever see such a wolf?" |
22464 | Do these men with whom you travel go to anything certain far over on the coast of the Western ocean? |
22464 | Do you feel strong enough to walk now, Al? |
22464 | Had he escaped all the dangers of the Sioux for this? |
22464 | Has n''t he brought us along all right? |
22464 | He and Albert had escaped the massacre, but how were they to live in that wilderness of mountains? |
22464 | He tried to be resigned, but how could one be resigned when one was so young and so strong? |
22464 | How could he do it? |
22464 | How could he have such control over his nerves and body? |
22464 | How could he stand this and the snow together? |
22464 | How did you see all this?" |
22464 | How is Mr. Albert Howard now?" |
22464 | How on earth did you ever get here?" |
22464 | How was he to take care of such riches? |
22464 | How were the Sioux to know that these two would keep their promised word? |
22464 | How were they to save themselves from death by exposure? |
22464 | I wonder if some such penalty is put on us, and if so, what for?" |
22464 | Is it Daniel Boone or Davy Crockett?" |
22464 | Is that you, Dick?" |
22464 | It does n''t look much like our own valley, does it, Al?" |
22464 | It was so surprising that Dick forgot for a moment the question that he was eagerly awaiting a chance to ask-- where was his brother Albert? |
22464 | Now what under the moon is about to happen?" |
22464 | Say, young fellow, what''s your name? |
22464 | Should he run, taking to the deepest snow, where the wolves might sink to their bodies and thus fail to overtake him? |
22464 | To freeze to death merely because he did not have a dry lucifer match? |
22464 | To rescue Albert would be in itself difficult enough, but how was he ever to find him in that huge village, five miles long? |
22464 | Torture or death? |
22464 | Was he waiting for the others to come up? |
22464 | What are you driving at?" |
22464 | What did it mean? |
22464 | What do you mean?" |
22464 | What does it mean?" |
22464 | What is it?" |
22464 | What''s the use of being on the losing side? |
22464 | Where have you been?" |
22464 | Where on earth did you come from?" |
22464 | Where were you? |
22464 | Which way do you think those troops on your side of the village retreated?" |
22464 | Which way would it go? |
22464 | Why are n''t you with them Dick?" |
22464 | Why did n''t you get into the wagon?" |
22464 | Why else are they holding this great council of the Seven Fireplaces? |
22464 | Why not do all we can while we can? |
22464 | Why should he be careful? |
22464 | Why should he, strong and armed, seek to evade a lone pursuer? |
22464 | Why should he? |
22464 | Why throw away pawns that we hold? |
22464 | Will it hurt me?''" |
22464 | Would they drive the Sioux away? |
22464 | You have not killed him?" |
18163 | Fortune, my foe, why dost thou frown on me, And will thy favors never better be? 18163 A gipsy? 18163 A merry stave, a cup of cherry wine, or a maypole dance? 18163 A physic? 18163 A shadow? 18163 A signal? 18163 Accused? 18163 And for the rest? 18163 And if I do not apply myself, how am I like to learn? 18163 And if it were, would your work be only_ girl''s_ work, Colby? 18163 And is it so strange a thing to bring one''s wheel outdoors? 18163 And is that witchcraft, too? 18163 And the hunting? 18163 And what better companion could I have? 18163 And where are you going, Lucy? 18163 And where can Carey be? 18163 And why come ye here unbidden? 18163 And will you, Deborah, forgive me my blunt speeches? 18163 And wilt thou not restore my joys again? |
18163 | And you, Washington? |
18163 | Any news, Tom? |
18163 | Anybody got one? |
18163 | Anything I can do for you, Noctah? |
18163 | Are folk still in the Old South Meeting- house? |
18163 | Are they still at the meeting? |
18163 | Are we on time? |
18163 | Are ye children round the nursery fire that such things should be to you as signs? |
18163 | Are you bewitched? |
18163 | Are you not coming? |
18163 | Are you not feared to speak them? |
18163 | Asks them, by gesture:"What will they give?" |
18163 | Boonesborough? |
18163 | Burgundy for your betters, eh, lad? |
18163 | But at night, Tabitha, who can tell how many witches may be abroad? |
18163 | But my deeds-- what can a lad do when he goes through life halting? |
18163 | But when Francois plays the fiddle you ca n''t think of anything else, eh? |
18163 | But where are our disguises? |
18163 | By what right can a Jackanapes confront his elders? |
18163 | By what right have ye bound this poor old woman? |
18163 | Can you not see she would rather go straight to perdition than vouch us a word or a glance? |
18163 | Can you not see? |
18163 | Canst thou not picture them whirling over the tree- tops? |
18163 | Carry more water? |
18163 | Come, Amy, what do you think he''ll be? |
18163 | Come, where are we all? |
18163 | Corn- husking? |
18163 | Cream? |
18163 | D''ye catch my meaning? |
18163 | Did I seem to you only a waistcoat with buttons? |
18163 | Did n''t you know there was to be one? |
18163 | Did you see any_ bears_ in the woods? |
18163 | Do blisters burn as keen as words, I wonder? |
18163 | Do not the sunlight, the blue sky, and the budding trees make your heart sing with joy? |
18163 | Do you not suffer, too, for the same cause? |
18163 | Do you remember the Spring in Leyden, Diantha? |
18163 | Do you think we waste our time with games and-- and snowball forts, Tom Rigby? |
18163 | Does Black Fish give me leave to speak to my comrades apart? |
18163 | Does he mean it? |
18163 | Does thee know, Elizabeth, that in so quiet a room as this I can scarce believe that a great city lies about us? |
18163 | Does thee not, William? |
18163 | Does thee note its profusion? |
18163 | Followers, said I? |
18163 | Going, Noctah? |
18163 | Goodwife Anne Brown, who helped thee keep watch the night thy father''s ship was lost at sea? |
18163 | Guessing? |
18163 | Hath the Puritan turned your head? |
18163 | Have I again displeased you? |
18163 | Have my blunt ways offended you? |
18163 | Have you eaten? |
18163 | Have you ever pondered, Mistress, that pride that dines on vanity sups on contempt? |
18163 | Have you ever seen the place where Philippe lives? |
18163 | Have you- all heard the news? |
18163 | Heaven''s mercy, Bess, what is it they''re bringing? |
18163 | Here? |
18163 | How came this cap to your door, Goody Gurton? |
18163 | How comes it that you were leaving the streets of Salem, and walking here in the forest? |
18163 | How comes the salt, Rigdon? |
18163 | How comes the salt, Rigdon? |
18163 | How is it that you know my name, and yet I do not remember you? |
18163 | How is your fever, Aunt Rachel? |
18163 | How old are you, young tapster? |
18163 | How say you, Washington? |
18163 | How shall we pass our leisure? |
18163 | How should a worldly maid of Philadelphia give ear to me? |
18163 | How should they guess in me Tom the patriot, Tom the hero- worshiper? |
18163 | How would_ you_ deal with the taxers? |
18163 | How''s the wolf- hunting getting on? |
18163 | How''s your supper, Abe? |
18163 | I wonder where your Uncle is, and Colonel Fairfax? |
18163 | If I can serve you, sir, to anything? |
18163 | If I may serve you-- some cider, sir, or steaming lemon punch? |
18163 | In what way can national hero- days and festivals be more fittingly commemorated than by giving a glimpse of the hero for whom the day is named? |
18163 | Is it Indians? |
18163 | Is it burnt? |
18163 | Is it not true that half the town hath searched for Barbara Williams since yesterday at sundown, and not a trace of her hath been found? |
18163 | Is n''t Abe coming? |
18163 | Is n''t the corn splendid? |
18163 | Is the posset done? |
18163 | Is there naught ye can say for her-- ye who have known her kindness? |
18163 | Is there one who hath spoken a word for her? |
18163 | Is this all ye can say against her? |
18163 | It must have a new flavor? |
18163 | John Giles, who sat with thy brother when he had the fever? |
18163 | Luck? |
18163 | May I not step from my door to do a deed of kindness for an old woman but what the whole of Wollaston is at my heels? |
18163 | Mock at him? |
18163 | Not Boone a traitor? |
18163 | Not e''en a light in the rigging o''Francis Rotch''s ships? |
18163 | Not even a word of thanks from a model of worshipful manners? |
18163 | Not pay it? |
18163 | Oh, what was that? |
18163 | Or give a lesson in spinning without a cry being raised that I am stolen? |
18163 | Others before us-- Do you mean witches, Tabitha? |
18163 | Pray to River God? |
18163 | RED ROWAN( offended).Do I look like a witch? |
18163 | Remember the raccoon hunt we had last summer? |
18163 | Shall a pack o''Puritans match their wits against ours? |
18163 | Shall we go yonder? |
18163 | She taught me to play games, and angle for fish, and----What be they staring at? |
18163 | Some cider? |
18163 | Some one whose purse is not too over- burdened? |
18163 | Sugar? |
18163 | Supper? |
18163 | Suppose we call for tea? |
18163 | Sure, none sent for you? |
18163 | Tabitha Brett, who healed thy childish hurts, and drove away thy tears with sweetmeats? |
18163 | The wilderness makes men of lads right quickly; does it not, Master Boone? |
18163 | Then who will serve Benjamin Franklin? |
18163 | Then you''re not coming? |
18163 | They''ll defy us? |
18163 | Think you not so, my brother? |
18163 | Waste our substance on a Puritan? |
18163 | We meet misfortune with a laugh instead of with a groan: where is the harm in that? |
18163 | We''ve seen strange things about, have we not, neighbors? |
18163 | Well, Carey, what luck? |
18163 | Well, John, how are you? |
18163 | Well, Kenton, what news from the springs? |
18163 | Well, and have you no word of greeting? |
18163 | What answer does Long Knife Boone make? |
18163 | What answer does Long Knife Boone make? |
18163 | What better place have we in which to try a witch? |
18163 | What cause is there to fight for? |
18163 | What do you say? |
18163 | What do you think he''ll be, Polly? |
18163 | What do you think those chests are full of? |
18163 | What does Black Fish answer? |
18163 | What does he mean? |
18163 | What does this mean? |
18163 | What dost think? |
18163 | What dost thou make of it, Sarah? |
18163 | What else, lad, what else? |
18163 | What have I to do with valor? |
18163 | What have you been doing, Tom? |
18163 | What have you planned for us, Dick? |
18163 | What have you to say to these things, Goody Gurton? |
18163 | What have you to say? |
18163 | What if the moon rose red? |
18163 | What if the wind wailed in the chimney? |
18163 | What is his name? |
18163 | What shall I do next? |
18163 | What signs, sir? |
18163 | What time is it? |
18163 | What tune will ye have, Simon Scarlett? |
18163 | What will you have, Mistress Endicott? |
18163 | What would you wish to be? |
18163 | What''s happened? |
18163 | What''s in the box, Richard? |
18163 | What''s that you''re carrying as carefully as if''twas your book? |
18163 | What''s that? |
18163 | What''s this? |
18163 | What''s to be done when this meal is finished? |
18163 | What''s to become of the tea we wo n''t pay taxes on? |
18163 | Where are they going that they do not hear me? |
18163 | Where are you going, Susy? |
18163 | Where are you? |
18163 | Where are yours, Dick? |
18163 | Where be ye? |
18163 | Where did I put my cloak? |
18163 | Where did she turn after she left your doorway? |
18163 | Where hast thou been since yesternight? |
18163 | Where is the maid ye stole? |
18163 | Where''s the landlord? |
18163 | Wherever can Nancy be? |
18163 | Whither now, Goody Gurton? |
18163 | Who comes? |
18163 | Who else accuses Goody Gurton? |
18163 | Who ever heard the like? |
18163 | Who follows me? |
18163 | Who goes with us? |
18163 | Who said_ debate--?_ AMY( jumping up with a burst of delighted laughter). |
18163 | Why now be down- hearted? |
18163 | Why use ye such words as stole? |
18163 | Why, lass, do you not catch Simon''s meaning? |
18163 | Will the posset never be done? |
18163 | Will thee not do us the pleasure to sup with us? |
18163 | Will thee not sup here? |
18163 | Will you come for me when the shadows o''the pines grow long across my doorway? |
18163 | Will you forgive me? |
18163 | Will you forgive that, too? |
18163 | Will you forgive? |
18163 | Will you have some bread, Mistress? |
18163 | Will you have tea, Master Franklin? |
18163 | Will you not have some bacon and bread? |
18163 | Will you not rest you, while I blow this flicker o''fire? |
18163 | Will you not serve us-- serve us here on land? |
18163 | Will you not sup with us first? |
18163 | Will you remember? |
18163 | Will you-- will you not be seated? |
18163 | Wilt thou, I say, forever breed me pain? |
18163 | Would he challenge us? |
18163 | Would you have me put faith in witchcraft? |
18163 | You are quick to laud a brave front in yourselves: are you less quick to laud it in your neighbors? |
18163 | You laugh? |
18163 | You let them capture her? |
18163 | You smile? |
18163 | You''re not fond of hunting, are you, Abe? |
18163 | You, Tom Rigby? |
18163 | _ They_ defy_ us_? |
18038 | ''Do you insult me?'' 18038 ''What are you doing here?'' |
18038 | ''Your master is the Admiral of the Indies, no?'' 18038 And how be all your folk?" |
18038 | And kept it? |
18038 | And so you''re wayfarin'', be you? 18038 And there is no Norumbega really?" |
18038 | And what is in your mind to do next, Captain? |
18038 | And what may wampum be? |
18038 | And who is Helêne? |
18038 | And will you look on and tell us if we do it right? |
18038 | And you think we shall win it for the Cross and the King? |
18038 | And you were hearing about the discovery of Madeira? |
18038 | And you would like to go back? |
18038 | Any folks? |
18038 | Are you Catholics or Lutherans? |
18038 | Art not going on any more voyages to the Virginias? |
18038 | Ay, would you now? 18038 Ay,"said the man,"and you seek not the Golden Fleece?" |
18038 | Before we sailed to Roanoke? |
18038 | But is there a Sea of Darkness, verily, verily, tio caro? |
18038 | But tell me, my dear fellow,said Champlain when the happy hubbub had a little subsided,"how have your gardens prospered? |
18038 | But why Sainte Marthe? |
18038 | But you do not expect to get a crop this year-- and in this climate? |
18038 | But you will sail to Paradise some day, will you not, senhor? |
18038 | Can she speak their language? |
18038 | Cattle? |
18038 | Coudouagny? |
18038 | D''ye think he''ll find out anything, tending that there Spanisher? |
18038 | D''you ever hear what become of the old Don we picked up that time? |
18038 | D''you think the straits are here, Dad? |
18038 | Dad,he inquired solemnly,"vat is a locked harbor?" |
18038 | Dad,said John that night,"do you think any ship with white men ever came up here before?" |
18038 | Did the animals know it? |
18038 | Did they try to drive the people away? |
18038 | Did you know that Pizarro has adopted that dog-- the Spitfire-- Enciso''s brute? |
18038 | Do you know what ails your ship over there? |
18038 | Do you not believe in omens, Pedro? |
18038 | Does one steal from a robber? |
18038 | Eh? |
18038 | Has she been in Greenland? |
18038 | Has the dog adopted him? |
18038 | Have you a plan, Ojeda? |
18038 | Have you been in foreign parts? |
18038 | Have you heard of that foolhardy Frenchman? |
18038 | Have you seen them, then, sir? 18038 How did she ever get away?" |
18038 | How soon? |
18038 | How would you like to be shot at? |
18038 | I wonder if Sainte Marthe blessed this garden? |
18038 | I wonder now,said Armadas thoughtfully,"how much of prophecy there may have been in that mascarado? |
18038 | Is it like anything you have seen, Vespucci? |
18038 | Is that a little more of Pizarro''s wisdom? 18038 Is that the Bible you got there?" |
18038 | Latin? |
18038 | Mademoiselle la bien- aimée de la bonne Sainte Marthe,he said gravely,"may I come in?" |
18038 | Master Hudson, d''ye think the new King will light them other fires-- the ones at Smithfield? |
18038 | May there not be wild men in remote islands of the Indian seas? |
18038 | Miracles? 18038 Moccasins?" |
18038 | Not Brazil? 18038 Not I,"growled Barlowe, and Armadas laughed,"My Lord, do you think so ill of us as to deem us weathercocks in the wind?" |
18038 | Now what madness has taken you? |
18038 | Now what''s the lad up to? |
18038 | Oh, what are you doing, Uncle Marc? |
18038 | Only six of you? 18038 Pedro,"he said to the boy near him,"do you see a light out there? |
18038 | Pedro,he said,"have you told this to any one else?" |
18038 | Pedro,said the Admiral quietly,"what do you think?" |
18038 | People often do, but in what way, especially? |
18038 | See here, young chap,he said,"we are running along the shore of this island and there is no difficulty-- take my place will you, while I get a nap?" |
18038 | Senhor,asked Fernao with sudden daring,"what is beyond the edge of the world?" |
18038 | She is no ship of mine,he growled,"and anyway, what do you know about it?" |
18038 | She was very old, you say? |
18038 | Since all enlisted in the expedition are at his service, why does he demand lackeys? |
18038 | Son,he said seriously,"what do you know of this matter?" |
18038 | The_ Golden Fleece_? |
18038 | Then why did n''t he die? |
18038 | They have got the creature now,he added,"You are not hurt?" |
18038 | Well, and what of it? |
18038 | Well? |
18038 | Were n''t you very scared, Tio Sancho? |
18038 | What a pox right had they to be tempting me to be false to the salt that I and they had eaten? 18038 What are sea- wolves?" |
18038 | What does it mean? |
18038 | What has Fernao been saying to thee, pombinha agreste? |
18038 | What has that to do with it? |
18038 | What in heaven''s name are those? |
18038 | What is Knutson like? |
18038 | What is it doing here? |
18038 | What really happened? |
18038 | What say you to a western voyage? |
18038 | What shall you do? |
18038 | When will I be old enough to go to sea? |
18038 | Where did it come from? |
18038 | Who brought them? |
18038 | Who can that be? |
18038 | Who did that? |
18038 | Why ca n''t you see when to let go the cat''s tail? |
18038 | Why do you ask me questions when you know my mind almost as well as I do? 18038 Why do you quarrel over this trash?" |
18038 | Why do you think we are not? |
18038 | Why not? |
18038 | Why wo n''t the Company send you to the Americas, Dad? |
18038 | Why, how is it with thee, Master Poope? 18038 Why?" |
18038 | Will a wolf bite? 18038 Will you ask the Admiral if he can see me for a few minutes, this morning?" |
18038 | Would you like to sail with us? |
18038 | You called him off, eh, General? |
18038 | You have been here only two days,he said,"and already demand an audience with the Emperor?" |
18038 | You heard, you little beggar? |
18038 | You think it may be Indian, do you? |
18038 | [ 3]Yes, but might there be an isthmus-- or the like?" |
18038 | [ 4]( Is Klooskap yet alive?) 18038 --_Page_ 191]Why do you do this?" |
18038 | --_Page_ 204]"Gentlemen, whence does this fleet come?" |
18038 | A hand was laid on his shoulder, and a friendly voice inquired,"Did you get your share of the plunder, my son?" |
18038 | Alone with all the stars of Christendom He set his course,--if he had known his fate Would he have stayed his hand? |
18038 | And a mountain of ice half a league long and as high as the Giralda at Seville, floating in a sea as blue as this one, and as warm? |
18038 | And how goes the Latin?" |
18038 | And islands with mountains that smoke, appearing and disappearing in broad daylight? |
18038 | And no demand for redress has as yet been made?" |
18038 | And now about this road to India; what have you to suggest?" |
18038 | And shall you be a soldier also, my lad?" |
18038 | And the Captain added,"Who are you yourself?" |
18038 | And where will you find better forest than along that shore? |
18038 | And who may you call yourself, zagallo( strong youth)?" |
18038 | And you think, senhor, that the world is not yet all known to us?''" |
18038 | Are you a voyager?" |
18038 | Bacalao-- er-- that is cod, is it not? |
18038 | But how in the name of Sao Cristobal did it come here? |
18038 | But now I put thee out of door and set the bandog to guard it; thou art locked out though the door be wide open, seest thou? |
18038 | But what are you scheming?" |
18038 | But what commodity in England decays faster than wood? |
18038 | But why didst do it?" |
18038 | By the way, did the Skroelings in Greenland understand that language the Wind- wife spoke?" |
18038 | Can you not be friends for a day? |
18038 | Could he mean that? |
18038 | Could this be the place? |
18038 | D''you look to see me set up an image to be worshiped?" |
18038 | D''you think we might take him to Granny Toothacre''s, Tom?" |
18038 | Dauntless he fronted the Presence,--and the courtiers whispered low,"Doth Elizabeth send us madmen, to tempt the torture so?" |
18038 | Did it exist, or was it a fairy tale, born of mirage or a lying brain? |
18038 | Did you ever see, in your voyages to Africa or elsewhere, any such carving as this?" |
18038 | Did you go to Greenland?" |
18038 | Do babes take a ship round Bojador? |
18038 | Do you know, old lad, we may be taken for gods ourselves in two months''time? |
18038 | Do you think that because I am Spanish, and a girl, I am without understanding? |
18038 | Ever see the map that Doctor Dee made for Queen Bess near thirty years ago? |
18038 | Fish, I think you said, abound in those waters? |
18038 | Had help come too late? |
18038 | He went forward a step or two, lifted his hand in salutation, and called,--"Klooskap mech p''maosa? |
18038 | Hey, lads, what''s all the pother about? |
18038 | How could he leave his father''s cattle unfed and uncared for? |
18038 | How do you know that the sea turns black and dreadful just behind those heavenly clouds? |
18038 | How were their cabins planned? |
18038 | Hush-- did a man''s foot fall in the pasture where we go straying? |
18038 | I wonder whether in the end we shall conquer this land, or find that the land has conquered us?" |
18038 | IX WAMPUM TOWN"Elephants''teeth?" |
18038 | Is he a caballero then?" |
18038 | Listen-- is that the call of a man aware of his right? |
18038 | Look at that sea, can there be anything in the world more beautiful?" |
18038 | Now who in Spain will believe that?" |
18038 | Now who is to be surety that yonder interpreter does not change your words in repeating them?" |
18038 | Now why should that be, and he a Spaniard? |
18038 | Say who you are, and from what realm you hail, White spirits that in winged peraguas sail? |
18038 | Shall we go into the house, or will you find it pleasanter in the garden?" |
18038 | THE ESCAPE Why do you come here, white men, white men? |
18038 | The cacique thought he was impressed, and concluded triumphantly,"Who can resist the gods? |
18038 | The little inn at the Sign of the Rose,--ah, who can forget the place Where Titania danced with the children small and lent them her elfin grace? |
18038 | The road to the capital might be perilous, but what was that to him? |
18038 | The young Indian went on, with the same careless contempt,"You see those mountains over there? |
18038 | Then he slipped away as some companions of his own age, or a little older, came by, and one said enviously,"Where have you been, Hernan''Cortes? |
18038 | Then said Bjarni, for the lot was fairly cast,''What else can be done?'' |
18038 | Then spoke the terrible Ivan,"His Queen sits over sea, Yet he hath bid me defiance,--would ye do as much for me?" |
18038 | Tio Sancho, is it true that there is a Sea of Darkness?" |
18038 | VI LOCKED HARBORS"But of what use is a King''s patent,"said Hugh Thorne of Bristol,"if the harbors be locked?" |
18038 | We who were so free, are we evermore to be Prisoned in your narrow hateful bounds? |
18038 | Were Pontgravé and Champlain all dead with their people? |
18038 | Were the Indians cannibals? |
18038 | Were they, Spaniards and Christians, to be outdone by Portuguese and Arab traders? |
18038 | What can be more easy than to tell them that there is plenty of it somewhere else-- in the land of your enemies? |
18038 | What can you do to get your bread?" |
18038 | What can you tell me?" |
18038 | What could England do against the landing of such an army? |
18038 | What did he intend to do? |
18038 | What if he were to drive the cows himself to the saeter and tend them through the summer? |
18038 | What is this that holds thee fast In old histories of the past? |
18038 | What room was left for a knight- errant in the Spain of to- day, ruling by steel and shot and flame and gold? |
18038 | What was the Fürdürstrand? |
18038 | What was there about the man that made his arguments so plausible when one heard them, so false when his engaging presence was withdrawn? |
18038 | What were the grapes of Tyrker? |
18038 | What''s the great question to settle now-- predestination or infant baptism?--Why, where under the canopy did you come from, you pint o''cider?" |
18038 | Where did they beach their galleys? |
18038 | Where had the fleet found refuge? |
18038 | Where is Francisco Hernan?" |
18038 | Where shall I find you if I want you?" |
18038 | Which of you is Thorolf Erlandsson?" |
18038 | Who could say? |
18038 | Who were the fearful Skroelings? |
18038 | Why do you bend the knee When your priests before you, singing, singing, Lift the cross, the cross of tree? |
18038 | Why do you chain us in the mines of the mountains? |
18038 | Why do you frighten us, white men, white men? |
18038 | Why do you hunt us with your hounds? |
18038 | Why do you suppose I told you all this?" |
18038 | Why? |
18038 | Why?" |
18038 | Would he not consent to make a visit to the colony, with a view of becoming the Admiral''s ally and friend? |
18038 | Would the old gods destroy the invaders and all who joined them, or was this the great change which the prophets foretold? |
18038 | Wouldst like to sail with us, and learn more of the ways of Indian Princes?" |
18038 | XII GIFTS FROM NORUMBEGA"What shall I bring thee then, from the world''s end, Reine Margot?" |
18038 | XVII THE GARDENS OF HELÊNE"Is there not any saint of the kitchen, at all?" |
18038 | Yes? |
18038 | Yes? |
18038 | You-- Spaniards-- ran away from savages and left a comrade to die? |
18038 | [ Illustration:"''GENTLEMEN, WHENCE DOES THIS FLEET COME?''" |
18038 | called Nils,"where are you going?" |
18038 | called Nils,"where is Mother Elle? |
18038 | or had it been hurled to destruction by the rage of wind and sea? |
18038 | said Thorolf,"who?" |
18038 | the annoyed commander called from his quarter- deck,"what is all this hullabaloo about?" |
18038 | who is that up there like a cat?" |
10763 | Ai n''t I been,the child replied to her,"a- doin''ob jes''dat Twel I''s got a turble empty feel right whur I wears muh hat? |
10763 | And is mine one? |
10763 | And where''s the joy the poets sing, the merriment and fun? 10763 And which is second?" |
10763 | But why that tossing ringlet on your brow? |
10763 | Oh, what''s the blooming use? |
10763 | What do you do when a wheel does n''t sound right? |
10763 | What of Abe Lincoln? |
10763 | What of Ben Franklin? 10763 What rope?" |
10763 | What shall I say, brave Adm''r''l, say, If we sight naught but seas at dawn? |
10763 | What''s de use ob raisin''chickens ef dey wo n''t stay riz? 10763 What''s that?" |
10763 | Why do you pick out those few? |
10763 | Would you say That he was much richer than you are to- day? 10763 ***** Too late to win? 10763 ABOU BEN ADHEMForgive my enemies?" |
10763 | Among her books are"The Rose- Garden Husband,""Winona of the Camp Fire,""Factories, with Other Lyrics,""Why Not?" |
10763 | And electric lights-- you use them; did you also put them there? |
10763 | And then--? |
10763 | And though you be done to the death, what then? |
10763 | And what is so huge as the aim of it? |
10763 | And what is so kind as the cruel goad, Forcing us on through the rugged road? |
10763 | And what''s a Grumpy Guy to do except to go to bed? |
10763 | And you would have me go--? |
10763 | And-- a seventh time? |
10763 | Are we equally quick to recognize the kindly influences that speed us on our way? |
10763 | Are you in earnest? |
10763 | Are you one of the timid souls that quail At the jeers of a doubting crew, Or dare you, whether you win or fail, Strike out for a goal that''s new? |
10763 | Are you scared of the job you find? |
10763 | Art thou a mourner? |
10763 | Art thou poor, yet hast thou golden slumbers? |
10763 | Art thou rich, yet is thy mind perplexed? |
10763 | Art thou weary, tender heart? |
10763 | As long as the soul''s a- wing, As long as the heart is true, What power hath trouble to bring A sorrow to you? |
10763 | Beat, torn fists bleeding, pathways rugged, grand, By sheer brute strength and bigness, nothing less? |
10763 | Beefsteak, coal, your mail, shoes, street cars-- do they come like rain from air? |
10763 | Both exist,--but why drag in Gloom? |
10763 | Brave Adm''r''l, say but one good word: What shall we do when hope is gone?" |
10763 | Brave Adm''r''l, speak; what shall I say?" |
10763 | But hard put to it to obey her? |
10763 | But stay, can you add to that line That he lived for it, too? |
10763 | But why not take matters the other way about? |
10763 | But would he live for them? |
10763 | CAN YOU SING A SONG? |
10763 | Can I ignore the lesson they have taught? |
10763 | Can you sing a song to greet the sun, Can you cheerily tackle the work to be done, Can you vision it finished when only begun, Can you sing a song? |
10763 | Canst drink the waters of the crispéd spring? |
10763 | De sunflower ai n''t de daisy, and de melon ai n''t de rose; Why is dey all so crazy to be sumfin else dat grows? |
10763 | Did he grieve that his ol''friends failed to call When the airthquake come an''swallered all? |
10763 | Did he set an''cry An''cuss the harricane sweepin''by? |
10763 | Did his life do the same in the past From the days of his youth? |
10763 | Did you ever want to take your two bare hands, And choke out of the world your big success? |
10763 | Did you tackle that trouble that came your way With a resolute heart and cheerful? |
10763 | Do n''t help only those who''ve helped you, count the rest as strangers, foes; How long now would you have lasted had all done as you propose? |
10763 | Do others fail? |
10763 | Do others fear? |
10763 | Do you grapple the task that comes your way With a confident, easy mind? |
10763 | Do you laugh tho''you pull up lame? |
10763 | Do you sneer at the man in case that he can And does, do better than you? |
10763 | Do you stand right up to the work ahead Or fearfully pause to view it? |
10763 | Do you start to toil with a sense of dread Or feel that you''re going to do it? |
10763 | Do you take your rebuffs with a knowing grin? |
10763 | Do you understand?" |
10763 | Do you wilt and whine, if you fail to win In the manner you think your due? |
10763 | Do you wish the world were better? |
10763 | Do you wish the world were happy? |
10763 | Do you wish the world were wiser? |
10763 | Does it end in self, or does it include our relations and our duties to our fellows? |
10763 | Does your faith hold true when the whole world''s blue? |
10763 | Dost reel from righteous Retribution''s blow? |
10763 | Dost thou behold thy lost youth all aghast? |
10763 | Dost thou laugh to see how fools are vexed To add to golden numbers, golden numbers? |
10763 | Dyin'', asked of him that night( Sperrit waitin''fer its flight),"Brother, air yer prospec''s bright?" |
10763 | Ef you ask him, day or night, When the worl''warn''t runnin''right,"Anything that''s good in sight?" |
10763 | FOUR THINGS What are the qualities of ideal manhood? |
10763 | For do not braver men than I decline To bow to troubles graver, far, than mine? |
10763 | For what are we thankful for? |
10763 | For what are we thankful for? |
10763 | For what are we thankful for? |
10763 | Go there? |
10763 | Go_ there_, through that live darkness, hideous With stir of crouching forms that wait to kill? |
10763 | Gray days? |
10763 | Grin and Barrett, Who can scare it? |
10763 | Grin and Barrett, Who can scare it? |
10763 | Grin and Barrett, Who can scare it? |
10763 | HOW DID YOU DIE? |
10763 | He has come the way of the fighting men, and fought by the rules of the Game, And out of Life he has gathered-- What? |
10763 | He replied:"Madam, why drag in Velazquez?" |
10763 | Her book of fiction"The Imprisoned Splendor"contains well- known stories("What Shall We Do with Mother?" |
10763 | Here hath been dawning Another blue day; Think, wilt thou let it Slip useless away? |
10763 | His poem"How Did You Die?" |
10763 | How are you playing the game? |
10763 | How do you tackle your work each day? |
10763 | How do you tackle your work each day? |
10763 | How many smiles-- a score? |
10763 | I breathed a song into the air, It fell to earth, I knew not where; For who has sight so keen and strong, That it can follow the flight of song? |
10763 | I thought I heard you rapping, To shut you out were sin, My heart is standing open, Wo n''t you walk right in? |
10763 | I''m glad to be living: Are n''t you? |
10763 | I''m lonesome here without you, A weary while it''s been, My heart is standing open, Wo n''t you walk right in? |
10763 | II Did he moan an''sigh? |
10763 | If you did, who made the hammer and who cleared for you the land? |
10763 | In all the thousand men we''ve hired Where shall we find a man?" |
10763 | Is fear ever running through it? |
10763 | Is he therefore to abstain from all effort? |
10763 | Is it raining, little flower? |
10763 | Is not the fight itself enough that man must look to some behest? |
10763 | Is the fault less when men are guilty of it? |
10763 | Is there, for honest poverty, That hangs his head, and a''that? |
10763 | It is n''t the fact that you''re licked that counts; It''s how did you fight-- and why? |
10763 | It says,"Can bread Be made from mouldy bran? |
10763 | It was a failure, yes; but was it not also magnificent success? |
10763 | Join the firm of Grin and Barrett? |
10763 | Just go grinning on and bear it; Have you heartache? |
10763 | Kiser._ OPPORTUNITY What is opportunity? |
10763 | LIFE"What is life?" |
10763 | Let''s brush it away Now and forever, so what do you say? |
10763 | Life does nothing for you, sonny? |
10763 | Love of our fellow men-- has humanity reached any height superior to this? |
10763 | Mine or another''s day, So the right word be said And life the sweeter made? |
10763 | Nature''s soft nurse, how have I frighted thee, That thou no more wilt weigh my eyelids down And steep my senses in forgetfulness? |
10763 | No chance? |
10763 | No more? |
10763 | Now, think you, Life, I am defeated quite? |
10763 | Of what use is it to be irritating in our turn or to add to the trouble? |
10763 | Oh, what is so fierce as the flame of it? |
10763 | Oh, what is so good as the pain of it, And what is so great as the gain of it? |
10763 | On whom would we wish to depend in a time of need? |
10763 | Once the welcome light has broken, Who shall say What the unimagined glories Of the day? |
10763 | Or do countless men, far- scattered, toil that you may have more ease?-- Stokers, hodmen, farmers, plumbers, Yankees, dagoes, Japanese? |
10763 | Or hide your face from the light of day With a craven soul and fearful? |
10763 | Pain twists this body? |
10763 | Pity you? |
10763 | RULES FOR THE ROAD Ardor of sinew and spirit-- what else do we need to make our journey prosperous and happy? |
10763 | Rain an''storm have come to fret me, Skies were often gray; Thorns an''brambles have beset me On the road-- but, say, Ai n''t it fine to- day? |
10763 | Red is the mist about me; Deep is the wound in my side;"Coward"thou criest to flout me? |
10763 | Rouse thee from thy spell; Art thou a sinner? |
10763 | STABILITY Whom do we wish for our friends and allies? |
10763 | Scare the firm of Grin and Barrett? |
10763 | Scare the firm of Grin and Barrett? |
10763 | Scare the firm of Grin and Barrett? |
10763 | Shall we turn back, or shall we, like Columbus, answer the falterers in words that leap like a leaping sword;"Sail on, sail on"? |
10763 | She says,"Oh, there are men enough, But where''ll I find a man?" |
10763 | Since you''ve looked so much at this side, wo n''t you have a look at that? |
10763 | Sleep when he wakes, and creep into a jaundice By being peevish? |
10763 | So here hath been dawning Another blue day; Think, wilt thou let it Slip useless away? |
10763 | Some way, I keep forgetting I have to toil or spin When you are my companions, Wo n''t you walk right in? |
10763 | Submission? |
10763 | Swimm''st thou in wealth, yet sink''st in thine own tears? |
10763 | THE GIFTS OF GOD Why are we never entirely satisfied? |
10763 | THE WOMAN WHO UNDERSTANDS"Is this the little woman that made this great war?" |
10763 | The men come swarming here in droves, But where''ll I find a man?" |
10763 | The saddest? |
10763 | Then did his soul Thank silently the gods that gave him strength To win, while I so sorely missed the goal? |
10763 | There is sunshine yet, The gloom that promised, let''s forget, The quip and jest are on the wing, Why sorrow when we ought to sing? |
10763 | They have won a good prosperity; Why not join the firm and share it? |
10763 | To what should we be more hospitable than a glad spirit or a kind impulse? |
10763 | Trouble face to face with you? |
10763 | Trouble? |
10763 | Upon this trouble shall I whet my life As''twere a dulling knife; Bade I my friend be brave? |
10763 | WHEN EARTH''S LAST PICTURE IS PAINTED What is it that a human being wants? |
10763 | Was it harder for him? |
10763 | Was the world against him? |
10763 | Was the world against him? |
10763 | What are they? |
10763 | What care I that the profit''s theirs? |
10763 | What cares he when out he''s flattened by the cruel blow it deals? |
10763 | What if this year has given Grief that some year must bring, What if it hurt your joyous youth, Crippled your laughter''s wing? |
10763 | What is the thought that is in your mind? |
10763 | What matter, I or they? |
10763 | What of frets and fears? |
10763 | What of the outer drear, As long as there''s inner light; As long as the sun of cheer Shines ardently bright? |
10763 | What right hast thou to be afraid When all the universe will aid? |
10763 | What say you to''t? |
10763 | What the evil that shall perish In its ray? |
10763 | What though I live with the winners Or perish with those who fall? |
10763 | What to yourself do you stop and say When a new task lies ahead? |
10763 | What tonic is there in a frown? |
10763 | What''s de use ob blowin''noses ef dey wo n''t stay blowed?" |
10763 | What''s de use ob freezin''sherbet ef it wo n''t stay friz? |
10763 | What''s de use ob payin''debts off ef dey''s gwine stay owed? |
10763 | What''s life? |
10763 | What''s life? |
10763 | What''s the use of always keepin''Thinkin''of the past? |
10763 | What''s the use of always weepin'', Makin''trouble last? |
10763 | When everything that ever ran has, so to speak, been caught?-- When every game''s been played before and every battle fought?" |
10763 | When the cat that Care killed without excuse With your inner self''s crying,"Oh, what''s the use?" |
10763 | Where does the Victor''s cry come in for wreath of fame or laureled brow If one he vanquished fought as well as weaker muscle would allow? |
10763 | Wherein does Failure miss Success if all engaged but do their best? |
10763 | Who dares to go who sees So perfectly the lions in the path? |
10763 | Who owns, the jeweler or I, Yon gems by window- bars confined? |
10763 | Why are we never at absolute peace or rest? |
10763 | Why doan''you pump de bellers from de inside ob yo''nose?" |
10763 | Why go back to that? |
10763 | Why not go forward to the things we really desire? |
10763 | Why not see the situation clearly and then throw our own strong purpose in the scales? |
10763 | Why should a man whose blood is warm within Sit like his grandsire cut in alabaster? |
10763 | Why sit down in gloom and darkness, With your grief to sup? |
10763 | Why the difference? |
10763 | Will you give it tit for tat? |
10763 | With confidence clear, or dread? |
10763 | With doubt and dismay you are smitten You think there''s no chance for you, son? |
10763 | Would n''t you like to join the business? |
10763 | You are beaten to earth? |
10763 | You envy them their proud success? |
10763 | You may go up and I go down, Or I go up and you-- who knows The way that either of us goes? |
10763 | You''d serve mankind? |
10763 | You''re sick of the game? |
10763 | You''ve a house or room to sleep in-- did you build it with your hand? |
10763 | [ Illustration: BERTON BRALEY] IS IT RAINING, LITTLE FLOWER? |
10763 | _ A Lesson from History; Borrowed Feathers; Can You Sing a Song? |
10763 | _ Ca n''t; How Do You Tackle Your Work? |
10763 | _ Can You gaze them down, old man?__ William Rose Benét._ From"Merchants from Cathay." |
10763 | _ De Sunflower Ai n''t de Daisy; Hope; I''m Glad; Is It Raining, Little Flower? |
10763 | _ Edmund Vance Cooke_ How Do You Tackle Your Work?............... |
10763 | _ How Did You Die? |
10763 | _ They_ own, you say? |
10763 | _ William Shakespeare._ HOW DO YOU TACKLE YOUR WORK? |
10763 | he yelped, his face an angry red,"When everything''s been thought before and everything''s been said? |
10763 | why liest thou with the vile In loathsome beds, and leav''st the kingly couch A watch- case or a common''larum bell? |
3098 | Do you think so, Sir? |
3098 | But how were cargoes to reach these vessels from the vast regions beyond the Great Lakes? |
3098 | But what of this West for whose commerce the great struggle was being waged? |
3098 | If roads and canals would not serve the city on the Chesapeake, what of the railroad on which so many experiments were being made in England? |
3098 | Is there any young fellow of the present time, who aspires to take the place of a stoker? |
3098 | Now, with canals building to the north of her and canals to the south of her, what of her prestige and future? |
3098 | Were their efforts to keep the Chesapeake metropolis in the lead to be set at naught? |
3098 | What land canoes could compete with the flotillas that brought their priceless cargoes of furs each year to Montreal and Quebec? |
3098 | Where are you, O rattling Quicksilver, O swift Defiance? |
3098 | Where are you, charioteers? |
30058 | ( Example: economic differences) What was the influence of environment in the colony of Virginia? |
30058 | Are restorations in agreement with the written records? |
30058 | But how? |
30058 | Can the American Revolution be termed a social movement? |
30058 | Do articles listed together say something about the use of a room? |
30058 | How can Virginia serve as one illustrative study of these factors? |
30058 | How can the Colonial Period serve as a foundation for developing those threads which are inherent in a study of Virginia and United States history? |
30058 | How can the following themes be used to coordinate various aspects of the American Revolution and the"American Experience"? |
30058 | How can this theme of liberty be integrated so as to serve to link all facets of the"American Experience"to a common chain? |
30058 | How could a case study of Virginia during this period illustrate these developments? |
30058 | How did capitalism influence the American Revolution and how was capitalism influenced and/or changed by the American Revolution? |
30058 | How did the Founding Fathers exemplify the young nation''s aspiration? |
30058 | How did the first representative assembly at Jamestown reflect the needs of a group of people for government? |
30058 | How did these constitutions reflect the"spirit of the American Revolution"and the foundations of the Colonial Period? |
30058 | How did this intellectual ferment influence the American Revolution and the"American Experience"? |
30058 | How do man''s varied forms of expression reflect"the spirit of an era"? |
30058 | How were males, females, indentured servants, and slaves treated in wills? |
30058 | How will a study of the American Revolution illustrate self- interest versus concern for principle? |
30058 | How will a study of the following topics establish a framework for an inquiry into the Colonial Period? |
30058 | How will a study of the similarities and differences help to explain the character of the American Revolution and the"American Experience"? |
30058 | How will a study of these factors help to explain the differences which developed in the thirteen colonies? |
30058 | How would these differences influence the nature of the participation of the thirteen colonies in the Revolution? |
30058 | How"American"was the Revolution? |
30058 | How"American"were the colonies? |
30058 | In what areas was there cohesiveness and what were the factors which contributed to the development of this situation? |
30058 | In what ways can a study of Virginia illustrate the beginnings of the"American Experience"? |
30058 | In what ways can one account for the impact of the Declaration of Independence on modern day political thought? |
30058 | In what ways did the colonial rebellion become an avenue for nationalism? |
30058 | In what ways did the"European Enlightenment"influence American thought after 1700? |
30058 | The essential question was"What was the political relation between us and England?". |
30058 | Was there a discrepancy between the objectives of the European colonizers and the growth and development of the Virginia colony? |
30058 | What are the most famous streets in town? |
30058 | What distinctive political, intellectual, and economic modes of life began to develop in the different colonies? |
30058 | What do"Folk Art"paintings and other art forms tell us about the period? |
30058 | What early experiences did the colonies have which led them to formulate the type of state constitutions which they adopted? |
30058 | What environmental factors influenced colonial settlements? |
30058 | What factors were involved in the formation of this representative assembly? |
30058 | What foundations were being established which would be reflected in the years ahead? |
30058 | What have been the different boundaries of Virginia? |
30058 | What impact did writers have on the American Revolution? |
30058 | What is the role of primary sources in developing empathy for a period? |
30058 | What is the town''s most famous landmark? |
30058 | What percent of the people were self- sufficient on the frontier? |
30058 | What public demands are reflected in continuing industries? |
30058 | What role did religion play in the life of a person during this time? |
30058 | What role do ideas play in a study of history? |
30058 | What was significant about colonial cooperation in resisting British measures? |
30058 | What was the nature of Virginia''s first state constitution? |
30058 | What was the nature of the movement in Virginia? |
30058 | What was the nature of the movement in Virginia? |
30058 | What was the nature of these developments in Virginia and why? |
30058 | What was the town, city, or county like then? |
30058 | What were the effects on the institutions of society? |
30058 | What were the significant contributions of American writers to colonial thought and political maturity? |
30058 | What, if any, battles were fought in or near your town? |
30058 | Where did the first settlers of your town come from? |
30058 | Who are those named for? |
30058 | Why is it that the state constitutions are often considered one of the most important developments in the aftermath of the Revolution? |
30058 | Why stand we here idle? |
30058 | Why? |
31594 | Silent? |
31594 | What bedews the starry emblem, With the startling shade of crimson? |
31594 | What broad stream pursues its flowing, Through the fateful, dark camera? |
16608 | ''Ai n''t Miss Doc bin told-- and her the only decent woman in the camp? |
16608 | ''Ai n''t we all laughed at them things enough to suit you yit? |
16608 | ''Ai n''t you got him, boys-- all the time? |
16608 | Ai n''t got the stuff, hey? |
16608 | Ai n''t there no other way? |
16608 | Ai n''t there nuthin''more I kin mend? |
16608 | All? |
16608 | And cranberry sauce and mince- pie? |
16608 | And how''s the tree? |
16608 | And mine? |
16608 | And rich brown gravy? |
16608 | And what''s catechism? |
16608 | Are you plum dead sure he''s went? |
16608 | Are you plum dead sure he''s went? |
16608 | Boys,cried Jim, as he hastened towards the group,"has any one seen little Skeezucks? |
16608 | Bread and milk? |
16608 | Broke, I s''pose? 16608 Bruvver Jim?" |
16608 | But what about that rich brown gravy? |
16608 | But what''s the little youngster''s name? |
16608 | But who? |
16608 | But-- what can I do? |
16608 | But-- where are we likely to find accommodations? |
16608 | But-- you''ll bring him back in the spring, of course? |
16608 | Ca n''t you come to, long enough to eat? |
16608 | Can you do it any better? |
16608 | Could n''t you hold on jest a week or two and see if he wo n''t get over thinkin''''bout the little gals? |
16608 | Did he bring a nightie? |
16608 | Did n''t you find little Skeezucks? |
16608 | Did she scare the boy? |
16608 | Did you come down here to tell me right to my face I stole from your dirty little shanty? |
16608 | Did you look all over the cabin? |
16608 | Did you think old brother Jim was lost? 16608 Do n''t you know she''d be dead sure to play a trick like that?" |
16608 | Do n''t you know the presents all belong to little Carson? |
16608 | Do n''t you like him any more? |
16608 | Do n''t you see she could n''t do anything else, bein''a woman? |
16608 | Do n''t you want to hear it go? |
16608 | Do n''t you? |
16608 | Do you like old brother Jim and the pup? |
16608 | Do you like that little dog? |
16608 | Do you think he runs a pawn- shop, Field? |
16608 | Do you want him to come here and play? |
16608 | Do you want to give her a name? |
16608 | Does he savvy shakin''hands? |
16608 | Does he think Miss Doc can git the little feller fixed all up to celebrate to- night? |
16608 | Does little pardner like the pup? |
16608 | Does, hey? |
16608 | Found him-- out in the brush? |
16608 | Guess that''s so, but-- who wants church? |
16608 | Has he got any name? |
16608 | Has she gone for good? |
16608 | Have you got a name? |
16608 | He ai n''t agoin''to be right down sick, of course? |
16608 | He could n''t git grub here now for no money-- savvy? |
16608 | He''s alive? 16608 How about that, Keno?" |
16608 | How can I? |
16608 | How da''st you come in my kitchen with your dirty boots? |
16608 | How did Parky happen to tell you his intentions? |
16608 | How do you do it? |
16608 | How does he know it''s a doll? |
16608 | How does she go? |
16608 | How many kinds is there? |
16608 | How''d you make it? |
16608 | How''s he feelin''? |
16608 | How''s the little shaver? |
16608 | How? |
16608 | Howdy, stranger? |
16608 | I s''pose we''d better begin to invite all the boys? |
16608 | If the father came and took the little shaver, do you think he''d hide him''round here in somebody''s cabin? |
16608 | If they do n''t get their fun when they''re little, why, when is it ever goin''to come? 16608 If you did n''t do it, who would?" |
16608 | Is he gittin''hungry? 16608 Is it a hopeless case?" |
16608 | Is n''t Carson a sweet little boy, mammy? 16608 Is that a doll?" |
16608 | Is that the bill of fare? |
16608 | Is there any hotel or boarding- house in camp? |
16608 | Is there anything the baby wants? |
16608 | Is''Nuisance''all the name the baby''s got? |
16608 | It would n''t be so far off the mark for a little kid like him,tentatively asserted Field, the father of the camp,"S''pose we give it a shot?" |
16608 | Jim, how you goin''? |
16608 | Jim, what we goin''to do? |
16608 | Jim, you do n''t suppose his father, or some one who lost him, come and nabbed him while you was gone? |
16608 | Jim, you said the little feller kin talk? |
16608 | Jim,he said,"what about poor little Skeezucks? |
16608 | Jim,said Stowe, in the easy way so quickly adopted in the mines,"how does the camp happen to have this one little child? |
16608 | Jim,she said, in a voice that shook with emotion,"do you think I''m a kind enough woman?" |
16608 | Jim,she said,"if you think you kin, anyhow, git that Injun stuff, why do n''t you go and git it?" |
16608 | Kin he read an''write? |
16608 | Little Skeezucks, who made you? |
16608 | Me? 16608 Miss Doc?" |
16608 | Natchelly, we''d better go on, gittin''ready fer the banquet? 16608 No? |
16608 | Nobody wants you, little boy? 16608 Not home?" |
16608 | Now what are you needin''at the shack? |
16608 | Nuisance? |
16608 | Oh,said Jim, instantly relieved,"is that all?" |
16608 | Out in the hills-- in this? |
16608 | Parky, hey? |
16608 | S''posen she seen me? |
16608 | S''posen she''ai n''t? |
16608 | S''posen we do n''t have turkey and cranberry sauce and a big mince- pie? |
16608 | Scared? 16608 Skeezucks, do you want the little girls to play with all the things?" |
16608 | So the little feller said nobody wanted him, did he? |
16608 | So? |
16608 | Stole him? |
16608 | Then what more would the baby like? |
16608 | Then why not have the tree down yonder, into Webber''s shop, same as church? |
16608 | Then you ai n''t agoin''to take him down to the tree? |
16608 | Then, kin he walk? |
16608 | Tintoretto? |
16608 | Want it, Skeezucks? |
16608 | Want some breakfast, all pretty, in our own little house? |
16608 | Was he all alone? |
16608 | Well, about how far you goin''? |
16608 | Well, not exactly-- is there, Webber? |
16608 | Well, what you goin''to do with him, Jim? |
16608 | What about your mine? |
16608 | What are you goin''to do fer a turkey? |
16608 | What day is to- day? |
16608 | What do you take us fellers fer-- since little Skeezucks came to camp? 16608 What does baby want old Jim to do?" |
16608 | What fer did you ever call him that? |
16608 | What for? |
16608 | What happened? |
16608 | What have you got? 16608 What is it?" |
16608 | What is your nice little name? |
16608 | What kin we do? |
16608 | What kind of a calamity? |
16608 | What kind of a mongrel is he, anyway? |
16608 | What kind? |
16608 | What sort of a celebration is there that we''ai n''t never had in Borealis? |
16608 | What time do you think you''ll fetch the little shaver, then, this afternoon? |
16608 | What was it? |
16608 | What we goin''to put our offerings into? |
16608 | What would be the good of that? |
16608 | What would little Skeezucks like for his Christmas? |
16608 | What would little Skeezucks like old brother Jim to make for breakfast? |
16608 | What would little Skeezucks like? |
16608 | What you goin''to do with Tinterretter? |
16608 | What you up to, young feller, sittin''here by yourself? |
16608 | What''s he got to cry about, now he''s here in Borealis? |
16608 | What''s his name? |
16608 | What''s his name? |
16608 | What''s that? |
16608 | What''s that? |
16608 | What''s the fight? |
16608 | What''s the matter with Washington''s birthday? |
16608 | What''s the matter with a good old home- made name like Si or Hank or Zeke? |
16608 | What''s the matter with it? |
16608 | What''s the matter with me namin''you, hey? 16608 What''s the matter with repeatin''the programme we had for the Fourth of July?" |
16608 | What''s the matter with''Swing Low, Sweet Cheery O''? |
16608 | What''s the matter? 16608 What''s the matter?" |
16608 | What''s went wrong? |
16608 | Whatever do you want in my house at this time of mornin'', you Jim lazy- joints? |
16608 | Where did you come from, pardner, anyhow? |
16608 | Where''s Shorty Hobb with his fiddle? |
16608 | Where''s your old one went? |
16608 | Where''s your old one? |
16608 | Where? |
16608 | Who gets the collection? |
16608 | Who''d be preacher? |
16608 | Why ca n''t she come? |
16608 | Why not call me gently? |
16608 | Why not give''em''Down on the Swanee River''? |
16608 | Why not now? |
16608 | Why not wait till Christmas and git good and ready? |
16608 | Why not? |
16608 | Why, where was you and Keno? |
16608 | Will you let us know? |
16608 | Would n''t you rather I''d stay home and git the breakfast? |
16608 | Would you keep it, sure, and feed it to''em all the same? |
16608 | Y- e- s, but would it be just the tip- toppest, tippe- bob- royal of a place? |
16608 | Yes, what''s the little shaver''s name? |
16608 | You ai n''t goin''to hit the pie with your pick? |
16608 | You could n''t bring yourself to that? |
16608 | You do n''t mean, Jim, you found him jest a- settin''right in the bresh, with them dead jack- rabbits lyin''all''round? |
16608 | You do n''t really think he''d up and die? |
16608 | You do n''t s''pose mebbe he''s lost? |
16608 | You do n''t s''pose that Parky might have took him, out of spite? |
16608 | You do n''t think he''s sick? |
16608 | You got anything to say about the biz? |
16608 | You have to have lemon extract-- you know that? |
16608 | You''ll let me wrap him up real warm? |
16608 | Your little boy? |
16608 | And ai n''t that dolly nice?" |
16608 | And bein''undergrowed, why, how could he go on a rabbit- drive along with the Injuns? |
16608 | And you got left?" |
16608 | And you kin jest clear out o''my house, do you hear? |
16608 | Any one remember the words all straight?" |
16608 | Anyway, you''ai n''t yet told us his name, and how kin any little shaver walk which ai n''t got a name?" |
16608 | Are there any objections? |
16608 | Baby boy,"he said, in a gentle way of his own,"who is it makes everything?--who makes all the lovely things in the world?" |
16608 | Baby want anything else?" |
16608 | Contrary minded? |
16608 | Could n''t drink the coffee or go the beans? |
16608 | Could n''t you get me a horse? |
16608 | Did you want to go home and get some bread and milk?" |
16608 | Do you fellers think we''d ought to git up a party and take''em all to Fremont, as soon as they''re able to stand the trip?" |
16608 | Do you think you could put up with him-- and with me?" |
16608 | Does pardner want some breakfast?" |
16608 | He''ll be all right fer to- morrow?" |
16608 | How do you know?" |
16608 | How long do you think it will take you to put us in shape?" |
16608 | Injun, what''s your name?" |
16608 | Is these here over- halls your''n?" |
16608 | Jim said,"What do you s''pose he''s wearin''pants for, if he could n''t?" |
16608 | Jim, what you got to say''bout the subject?" |
16608 | Jim, wherever did you git him?" |
16608 | Now, the question is, what we goin''for to do? |
16608 | Now, then, all together--''Darling--''Why do n''t you all git in?" |
16608 | Say, you''ai n''t been left here for good? |
16608 | She''s all lit up, and the doors all shut to make it dark, and you bet she''s a gem-- a gorgeous gem-- ain''t she, fellers?" |
16608 | So you wo n''t bring him down this mornin''?" |
16608 | Suppose I call you Aborigineezer? |
16608 | That it? |
16608 | The teamster inquired,"Why do n''t Jim git any more grub?" |
16608 | Then Jim said,"Was it all the hair- oil I had?" |
16608 | There are stables where I can put up the horses, of course?" |
16608 | There seem to be no families, and that I can understand, for Bullionville is much the same; but where did you get the pretty little boy?" |
16608 | Time for breakfast?" |
16608 | Want to come with me and ride on the outside seat to Borealis?" |
16608 | What about the horse, Jim, if it starts to snow?" |
16608 | What did I do with my pick?" |
16608 | What do you say? |
16608 | What hymn do you fellows prefer?" |
16608 | What in mischief do you think you''re doin''here?" |
16608 | What was the good of digging here? |
16608 | What''s he got-- a rabbit?" |
16608 | What''s the matter with me and the pup?" |
16608 | Where could we have it?" |
16608 | Where do you s''pose he come from first? |
16608 | Where should he go, and how could he go, did he wish to leave? |
16608 | Which opening do all you fellers prefer?" |
16608 | Why could n''t the hill break open, anyhow, and show whether anything worth the having were contained in its bulk or not? |
16608 | Why do n''t you git up and cook your breakfast?" |
16608 | Would little Skeezucks like a train of cars?" |
16608 | You fellows are sure you ai n''t a- foolin''?" |
16608 | Young feller, where''d you come from, hey? |
16608 | cried Miss Doc, and, running forward, she threw her arm around his waist to keep him up, for she thought he must fall at every step,"He''s-- alive?" |
16608 | he would say, in his questioning little voice--"Bruvver Jim?" |
16608 | what do you think?" |
11524 | ''M offered fifteen,cried the White Bear, pricking up his ears;"goin''to the tahvern at fifteen; who says fifteen''n''arf?" |
11524 | Ah, must I lose you, too, my dear, best friend? |
11524 | Ah, uncle, is there any hope for him? |
11524 | And Lois and the swarming mass yonder in those dens? 11524 And did you ever see that her eye followed him with pleasure?" |
11524 | And is not the good Lord our protector?--has He not always kept us, grandmother? |
11524 | And is there any message from my little Agnes to this young man? |
11524 | And it is not true that he is captain of a band of robbers in the mountains? |
11524 | And this wretched huckster carries her deity about her,--her self- existent soul? 11524 And yet?" |
11524 | At any rate,said Elsie,"do n''t you approve of my plan?" |
11524 | Back? 11524 But can not our holy father, the Pope, protect him? |
11524 | But look here, Agnes, are you quite sure? 11524 But what will this life, or the lives to come, give to you champions who know the truth?" |
11524 | But you will come back and stay with us to- night, uncle? |
11524 | But your grandmother? |
11524 | But, Agnes, my pretty one, what can be the objection? |
11524 | But, in point of fact,he continued,"was there not another question involved? |
11524 | But, my good Antonio, if you really do like me and wish me well, you will not want to distress me? |
11524 | But,said Agnes, with flushed cheeks,"why does not our blessed Father excommunicate this wicked duke? |
11524 | Call_ what_''twelve''n''''arf,''Sheep- Shanks? |
11524 | Dear uncle, have you heard any ill- tidings of late? |
11524 | Did you find that young sculptor? |
11524 | Do you not think he will? |
11524 | Giulietta gone? |
11524 | God help us, how can yoh? 11524 Has anything happened?" |
11524 | How about the boys, now? |
11524 | Is that really so? |
11524 | May I tell Father Francesco that it is not so? |
11524 | My mother was a hard woman,--you knew her? |
11524 | My sweet heart, what have you done? 11524 My uncle, have you not, then, succeeded in bringing this young man to the bosom of the True Church?" |
11524 | Now, dear grandmother,said Agnes,"have I not said I would do everything for you, and work hard for you? |
11524 | Oh, grandmamma, am I not a good girl? 11524 Oh, what pretty things!--where did they come from?" |
11524 | Ruth,he said,"it is a bitter time for us, and we are sore oppressed; but what does the Psalmist say to such poor, worn- out creatures as we are? |
11524 | Shepherd of Israel,he said,"why hast Thou forgotten this vine of Thy planting? |
11524 | Should you? 11524 Sir,"said Jacob,"what do you want here to- night?" |
11524 | Then Agnes hath not even seen him? |
11524 | Then you will come back? |
11524 | To the convent, pretty Agnes? 11524 Uncle, are there such dreadful things really before you?" |
11524 | Uncle,she said, hesitatingly,"may I tell Father Francesco what you have been telling me of this young man?" |
11524 | Wedding finery, grandmamma,said Agnes, faintly,--"what does that mean?" |
11524 | Well, Agnes,said Antonio,"so you really are in earnest?" |
11524 | Well, sister,said the monk,"hath our little maid any acquaintance with this man? |
11524 | Well, then, sister,said the monk, soothingly,"why press this matter? |
11524 | What does that mean, sly- boots? 11524 What is a girl worth that can be won at the first asking?" |
11524 | What is it your Novalis says? 11524 What is the matter with you, dear uncle?" |
11524 | What pleases my little girl? |
11524 | What shall I do? |
11524 | Where did they? 11524 Who is that lady?" |
11524 | Who seconds? |
11524 | Why am I not joyful? 11524 Why am I not thankful?" |
11524 | Why do you stand there at the door? 11524 Why?" |
11524 | Yes, have n''t you heard of it? 11524 Yoh''ll think o''Yare''s case?" |
11524 | You go with_ him_? |
11524 | ***** Concerning the actual fruits of Emancipation, it may be asked, What have they been? |
11524 | After all, sister, what need of haste? |
11524 | All things were made for man, were n''t they? |
11524 | And if you do n''t go, you must marry somebody; and who could be better than Antonio?" |
11524 | And pray, what do you mean by saying that some of my countrymen are to be exhibited on the stage? |
11524 | And what is this which is so strange in his case? |
11524 | And why should they care? |
11524 | And why was lawless violence allowed to run such riot in Italy, as it had in the case of the unfortunate cavalier? |
11524 | Are all male beings so much stupider by nature than the other sex, that men require stimulants and narcotics to make them mutually endurable? |
11524 | But are we ever, any of us, in too good condition? |
11524 | But how can I help it,"Holmes said, lightly,"if I am like my mother here?" |
11524 | But how is it to be done? |
11524 | But meanwhile has not this been very much the case with our critics themselves? |
11524 | But was he reconciled with the Church? |
11524 | But was it statesmanlike, or in any high sense patriotic or manly? |
11524 | But was it such a triumph as a great and far- reaching statesman would have desired? |
11524 | But why do I put confidence in man? |
11524 | But, uncle,"she added, in a hesitating voice,"did you see anything of that-- other one?" |
11524 | Concernin''Joe Yare,--Lois''s father, yoh know? |
11524 | Could June become incarnate with higher poetic meaning than that which this woman gave it? |
11524 | Could such an event as the release from slavery of eight hundred thousand negroes in the British Colonies pass by unnoticed? |
11524 | Curious, eh?" |
11524 | D''yoh see?" |
11524 | Did he not ask you to marry him?" |
11524 | Do you take Americans for mountebanks?" |
11524 | Does not our dear Lord and Saviour reign in the heavens yet?" |
11524 | Does she not make this garden a sort of Paradise with her little ways and her sweet words? |
11524 | Five goodly spirits await us in heaven; will_ he_ be there, also? |
11524 | Had he found bayonets? |
11524 | Had he really gone to that enchanted cloud- land, in the old purple Apennines, whither he wanted to carry her,--gone, perhaps, never to return? |
11524 | Had the Lords the right to reject a Money Bill which had passed the House? |
11524 | Has he been encouraged to works of skill, to manufacturing arts even of the ruder kind? |
11524 | Has he been taught the use of improved methods of agriculture, the application of machinery to the production of required results? |
11524 | Have all the sanitary conventions yet succeeded in detecting one man, in our high- pressure America, who finds himself too well? |
11524 | Have n''t I heard you talk to Sam in that way, long ago?" |
11524 | Have they ever spoken together?" |
11524 | Have you considered the unsettled roads, the wild, unruly men that are abroad, the robbers with which the mountains are filled?" |
11524 | Heh?" |
11524 | His hair is gray? |
11524 | How does this happen? |
11524 | How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost Thou not judge and avenge?" |
11524 | How will my brothers and sisters welcome me home?" |
11524 | How, in God''s name, is her life to set it free?" |
11524 | How, indeed? |
11524 | I come half hoping and half fearing; tell me what I am to expect? |
11524 | I see him a- watchin''yoh; what d''yoh think, if we give him a chance?" |
11524 | I,--that covers the whole ground, creation, redemption, and commands the hereafter?" |
11524 | I-- I do n''t see him here to- night,"--the stranger''s voice trembled now,--"where is he?" |
11524 | If a man goes into training for the mimic contest, why not for the actual one? |
11524 | If admitted to officiate in the wards, how far shall that function extend? |
11524 | If for any reason this last expedient does not succeed, must we despair for this evening? |
11524 | If he needs steady nerves and a cool head for the play of life,--and even prize- fighting is called"sporting,"--why not for its earnest? |
11524 | If he took it, then? |
11524 | If the mere discussion of Slavery were fraught with such terrible consequences, how could safety ever consist with the thing itself? |
11524 | If you do not know him, you''ll excuse me?" |
11524 | In preparing to do the duty of society towards the wounded or sick soldier, the first consideration is, What is a Military Hospital? |
11524 | In such a community, what need of duels to vindicate wounded honor or establish a reputation for courage? |
11524 | Is it a relief that their precept is less tedious than their practice? |
11524 | Is the gallery immediately cleared? |
11524 | Is this, then, to be a commonplace war, a prosaic and peddling quarrel about Cotton? |
11524 | It is late for them to begin the fight?" |
11524 | June? |
11524 | Loved her? |
11524 | No girl in Sorrento will have such wedding finery as this?" |
11524 | Now how did the Premier deal with this issue? |
11524 | Now what is the secret of this vigorous old age, after a life spent in such arduous avocations? |
11524 | Now, being prepared for disappointment, will you see my hero? |
11524 | Now, what is anybody to do with a heroine like that? |
11524 | Of all things, what should you want to go to the convent for? |
11524 | Patchouli or copperas,--what was the difference? |
11524 | S''pose,--what d''yoh think, if we give him a chance? |
11524 | Shall not the dear God give thee The child of thy many prayers? |
11524 | Shall their office be confined to the care of the linen and stores, and the supplying of extra diets and comforts? |
11524 | Shall there be nothing to enlist enthusiasm or kindle fanaticism? |
11524 | Shall we meet him? |
11524 | Shall we meet him? |
11524 | Suppose I should make a pilgrimage? |
11524 | Surveying the question from this high vantage- ground, what wonder that in dignity and grandeur he towered above his fellows? |
11524 | The rule may work occasional injustice, but is it after all so very unreasonable? |
11524 | Thou, hast united us: who shall divide us? |
11524 | To eat and drink,--was that what he was here for? |
11524 | To speak plain,--yoh''ll mind that Stokes affair, th''note Yare brought? |
11524 | Was that great, splendid soul that looked out of those eyes to be forever lost, or would the pious exhortations of her uncle avail? |
11524 | Was this to be always? |
11524 | Were there ghosts, then, in mills in broad daylight? |
11524 | Were these few golden moments of life to be traded for the bread and meat he ate? |
11524 | What are the functions of General Hospitals, besides curing the sick and wounded? |
11524 | What has he ever done, that such good- fortune should befall him? |
11524 | What have I done, that you are so anxious to get me away from you?" |
11524 | What is one little life? |
11524 | What is the direction, in a vague, general way, in which the path or river runs, or the sea- coast tends? |
11524 | What is the least distance that I can with certainty specify, within which the path, the river, the sea- shore, etc., that I wish to regain, lies? |
11524 | What is your objection to Antonio?" |
11524 | What matter, then, though our way lie through dungeon and chains, through fire and sword, if we may attain to that glory at last?" |
11524 | What were the changes in organization needed to produce such a regeneration as this? |
11524 | What were you and Antonio talking about all the time this morning? |
11524 | What would it matter to him then, if he had starved with them or ruled over them? |
11524 | What would it matter to him then, the misery or happiness of those yet working in this paltry life of ours? |
11524 | What would it matter to his soul the day after death, if millions called his name aloud in blame or praise? |
11524 | What, then, can I do? |
11524 | When I last left the path, etc., did I turn to the left or to the right? |
11524 | When the wounded were brought from the Alma, embarked on crowded transports straight from the battle- field, how could they bring their kits? |
11524 | Where are_ they_?" |
11524 | Wherewithal shall a man be clothed? |
11524 | Who bids?" |
11524 | Who knows what mischief this cavalier might have done, if I had not been so watchful? |
11524 | Who says sixteen''n''''arf?" |
11524 | Who thanks him?" |
11524 | Who will dispute their claims to this distinction? |
11524 | Why can not we live together just as we do now? |
11524 | Why did not England attack Irish Catholicism in 1848? |
11524 | Why does not Louis Napoleon settle the Papal Question with a stroke of his pen? |
11524 | Why not come in?" |
11524 | Why not, then, at once lay the axe to the root of the mischief? |
11524 | Why push it out of the nest? |
11524 | Why should he? |
11524 | Will God desert His own? |
11524 | Would he hear or answer then? |
11524 | Yes? |
11524 | Yoh''ll come an''see us, soon? |
11524 | You have noticed that peculiarity in your remembrance of some persons? |
11524 | You know no higher God? |
11524 | You may say that the victims must have been constitutionally nervous; but where is the native- born American who is not? |
11524 | You would put away wrath, would you not? |
11524 | _ All_? |
11524 | but ca n''t I ask a civil question, if I did? |
11524 | by whom the loving, Though erring, are forgiven, Hast Thou for him no refuge, No quiet place in heaven? |
11524 | cried the White Bear, growing much excited,--"an''who says sixteen?" |
11524 | he said,"is the martyr''s crown of fire indeed waiting thee? |
11524 | he thought,"are my father and mother yet living? |
11524 | if he married her? |
11524 | suddenly and sharply to the Funny Man,"what do_ you_ think o''_ that_?" |
11524 | supposing there is?" |
11524 | we must be obliging to Americans, or who knows what may come of it?" |
11524 | what foe shall assail thee, Bearing the standard of Liberty''s van? |
11524 | what should you say to him?" |
11524 | why hurry? |
11524 | wilt thou let thy prophet perish?" |
15424 | ''And my mother?'' 15424 ''Are you mad,''cried I,''that you thus seek my life, after the wrongs you have done me?'' |
15424 | ''Perhaps you think to escape?'' 15424 ''Whither, father?'' |
15424 | Aha-- yes; a hunter I presume? |
15424 | All? |
15424 | And are you too awake? |
15424 | And did you venture here at once on your arrival in this western country? |
15424 | And do you think it''s through fear? |
15424 | And had you no personal fears? |
15424 | And how appeared he, Ella? |
15424 | And now-- a-- how do you call yourself? |
15424 | And pray which did look the most foolish of the two?--or was it a drawn- game, as we sometimes say of draughts? |
15424 | And so, Isaac, you have really proposed to darling Peggy, then? 15424 And so, lads, you do n''t see no trail thar, eh?" |
15424 | And who told you the past tortured me? |
15424 | And would you prefer being wedded to death, rather than me? |
15424 | And you did n''t inquire his name? |
15424 | And you do n''t know him? |
15424 | And you''ve come from a good ways east o''the Alleghanies? |
15424 | And-- and did the wound prove mortal? |
15424 | Any more, David? |
15424 | Are there any we do understand, Ella? |
15424 | As how? |
15424 | As how? |
15424 | At the time? |
15424 | But are you sure, Peshewa? |
15424 | But did not he, yon gray- headed man, then and there curse me to my face? |
15424 | But do you not weary of this fatiguing and dangerous mode of life? |
15424 | But do you think they''re still living? |
15424 | But tell me, Simon Girty, as the only favor I''ll ever ask o''ye-- war my wife and Ella rescued? |
15424 | But whar d''ye get your news? |
15424 | But what is it?--what is it as troubles her so? |
15424 | But what''s to be done? |
15424 | But when did this happen, David? |
15424 | But-- but Isaac-- our friends here-- are they-- all-- all well, Isaac? |
15424 | By the way,said the other,"pray tell me how you chanced to be so opportune in saving my life?" |
15424 | Daughters? |
15424 | Dead? |
15424 | Dead? |
15424 | Did I not tell you his life must be spared for the stake? |
15424 | Did I say more? 15424 Did it never strike you, dear Ella, that we are all strange beings, subject to strange influences, and destined, many of us, to strange ends?" |
15424 | Do they suspicion who war the spy? |
15424 | Do you think we''re invisible, and they ca n''t see us? |
15424 | Ef the seige be protracted, what are we to do for water? |
15424 | Even complimentary adjectives, eh? |
15424 | Had you no fears for yourself individually? |
15424 | Halloo yourself!--what''s wanted? |
15424 | Has he any sons? |
15424 | Have the red devils got possession of the fort? |
15424 | Have ye looked to the stranger agin, Ella, and moisted his bandage? |
15424 | Have you really, then, sad forebodings? |
15424 | How he rides!--Who is it?--What can have happened? |
15424 | How''s this, Sammy? |
15424 | I presume you have heard of the battles of Guilford and Camden, in both of which General Greene was defeated? |
15424 | I suppose in reality the present war with England does not trouble you here? |
15424 | I suppose you now consider yourself in a measure safe from Indian encroachments? |
15424 | In this perplexity what are we to do? |
15424 | Is it you? |
15424 | Is the great chief a child, or in his dotage,he said to Girty, in the Shawanoe dialect,"that he lets passion run away with his reason? |
15424 | May I ask his occupation? |
15424 | May I ask the cause? |
15424 | Or bullet proof? |
15424 | Or of so little account you arn''t afeared to lose us? |
15424 | Or that our scalps arn''t worth as much as yourn? |
15424 | Pardon me again-- but are there more indwellers here than you have mentioned? |
15424 | See here, stranger, I reckon you''ve not been long in these parts? |
15424 | Speak out, then--_how_ do you know? |
15424 | Surely, Algernon,exclaimed Ella, with pale features,"you are not going to leave us again so soon?" |
15424 | Thar''s my neighbor Millbanks''family--"Well? 15424 The Shemanoes--"[9]"Well?" |
15424 | Then you consider free agency only a chance game, depending, as it were, upon the throw of a die? |
15424 | Think you, stranger, ef I wanted to harm ye, I could n''t have done it without you seeing me? |
15424 | To what renegade agents do you allude? |
15424 | True,returned the other;"but what''s the meaning of this?" |
15424 | Weary, stranger? 15424 What discovery have you made now?" |
15424 | What is it, CÃ ¦ sar? |
15424 | What new troubles ha''ye got, Simon Girty? |
15424 | What on yarth shall we do, ef them plaguy Britishers git uppermost? 15424 What''s happened, Dick Allison?" |
15424 | What''s in a name? |
15424 | What''s the news, David Billings? |
15424 | What, therefore, does my brother propose? |
15424 | Who are they? |
15424 | Who are you, sir? |
15424 | Who''ll volunteer to go with me on the dangerous mission? |
15424 | Who''s that you said war dead, Isaac? |
15424 | Why, Ella, you know--"Yes, yes, Isaac-- what of her? |
15424 | Why, colonel, how are ye? 15424 Why, how in the name o''all Christen nater did you find out I''d done it?" |
15424 | Why, what in the name o''all creation can a stranger be wanting with me? 15424 Why,"answered Isaac, in a somewhat hesitating manner,"I do n''t know''s thar''s any body exactly sick-- but--""But what, Isaac?" |
15424 | Will you favor me with a description of his personal appearance? |
15424 | Will you have the goodness, madam, to inform me where I am? |
15424 | You are, too, I infer, a native of----, Connecticut, and son of Albert Reynolds of that place? |
15424 | You love her? |
15424 | You''d kill me, would ye? 15424 Your name, then,"returned the other, quietly,"I presume to be Algernon Reynolds?" |
15424 | Advancing directly to the prisoners, the renegade now said, with a sneer:"Well, my beauties, are you ready to die?" |
15424 | Again: What is the soul? |
15424 | Algernon, what is the matter?--what has happened?--are you in your senses? |
15424 | And so you''re Simon Girty, hey? |
15424 | And would the white chief give him the death of a warrior?" |
15424 | At length he advanced to the side of the Indian, and said in the Shawanoe dialect, with a sneer:"Is Oshasqua a squaw, that he should turn nurse?" |
15424 | At these words Ella started to her feet, and exclaiming wildly,"Who are they-- who are Girty''s victims?" |
15424 | But how came we here, and why? |
15424 | But how you come all tied so?'' |
15424 | But the squaw?" |
15424 | But what child is this?" |
15424 | But what could avail heroism here on that ill- fated day? |
15424 | But what have you got thar in your arms, that seems so heavy, David?" |
15424 | But what was to be done? |
15424 | But what''s been done here?" |
15424 | But where are they who once inhabited it? |
15424 | But who comes here?" |
15424 | Colonel Daniel Boone?" |
15424 | Could it be a presentiment, he asked himself, sent to warn him of danger and prepare him to meet it? |
15424 | Could it be some strange hallucination of the brain-- some wild imagining-- caused by my previous exercise and over heat? |
15424 | Could it indeed be a dream? |
15424 | Could you indeed for a moment suppose such a thing possible? |
15424 | D''ye think, dog, it war Indians as done it?" |
15424 | Did n''t two o''them set out in advance?" |
15424 | Did they? |
15424 | Do n''t you know, sir, that if we wait for Logan, he will gain all the laurels?--and that if we press forward, we shall gain all the glory?" |
15424 | Do you not know me? |
15424 | Ella, child-- don''t you say so?" |
15424 | Give me your name?" |
15424 | Han''t I bin amongst''em once?--and did n''t the Lord preserve me?--and shall I doubt His protection now, when a hundred lives is at stake? |
15424 | Have you more to ask?" |
15424 | He did n''t appear to have his senses, I reckon?" |
15424 | How do we exist? |
15424 | How do we think, reason, speak, feel, move, see, hear, smell, taste? |
15424 | Immediately after I had finished my repast, Logan approached me, and, in tolerable good English, said:"''White man, where from?'' |
15424 | Is not the Big Knife already doomed to the tortures? |
15424 | Is this a proper return therefor, think you?" |
15424 | Know you? |
15424 | Mr. Allprayer, who tuk some on''t once for the gout; and he said as how the contracting( counteracting?) |
15424 | Now why do they act together here? |
15424 | Now why was this? |
15424 | Pardon me,"added he, again addressing Algernon;"but may I inquire concerning yourself?" |
15424 | Reynolds?" |
15424 | Reynolds?" |
15424 | Reynolds?" |
15424 | Reynolds?" |
15424 | Say, dearest, will you be mine?" |
15424 | Simon Girty,"said the other, with a slight start and change of countenance;"what know you of him?" |
15424 | Then addressing herself to Reynolds, she continued:"Whar are you, stranger, do you ax? |
15424 | Then wherefore should both cease?--and with them the power of thought, reason, speech, and all the other senses? |
15424 | Then, turning to the stranger, he added:"But wo n''t you accompany us, sir?" |
15424 | Those hoary headed veterans-- those middle aged men-- or those fiery and impetuous youths ever ready for either love or war? |
15424 | To what awful end had fate destined them? |
15424 | Weary, friend? |
15424 | What construction did you put upon my words, Ella?" |
15424 | What is a spirit? |
15424 | What more could he ask? |
15424 | What want you here?'' |
15424 | What would you more? |
15424 | When, O when, I humbly beg to know, will your philanthropic efforts end? |
15424 | Where are they now? |
15424 | Whither does it go when separated forever from the body? |
15424 | Who can comprehend it? |
15424 | Who shall say he was not secretly repenting of that life of crime, which had already drawn down the curses of thousands upon his head? |
15424 | Who shall say he was not then and there meditating upon death, and the dread eternity and judgment that must quickly follow dissolution? |
15424 | Who shall say what guilty deeds of the past might have been harrowing up his soul to fear and even remorse? |
15424 | Who''ll follow me?" |
15424 | Why ca n''t you be more quiet?" |
15424 | Why can not a dead person do the same? |
15424 | Why was not each placed in its separate sphere of action? |
15424 | Why when did you come-- and how on yarth did ye git here-- and what in the name o''all creation has been happening? |
15424 | Why, what on yarth be you grinning at agin, Isaac?--jest for all the world like a monkey for?" |
15424 | Will you share with me, and be partner of my lot, be it for good or ill, through life? |
15424 | You say there are many things we may not understand concerning ourselves-- what ones, I pray you, do we fully comprehend? |
15424 | You''d kill me, would ye? |
15424 | a thought strikes me, Peshewa: You have no wife--(the savage gave a grunt)--suppose you take her?" |
15424 | and are you really there, carrying out another of your noble and humane designs? |
15424 | and in what place were they to drain the last bitter dregs of woe? |
15424 | and that the boats of the other division, unless they have recrossed, may still be secreted not far hence?" |
15424 | and we are to have a wedding shortly?" |
15424 | but let me ask you_ why_ that life is extinct?--why that breath has stopped?--and why that blood has ceased to flow? |
15424 | cried I in frenzy;''devil in human shape!--do you seek me in the body? |
15424 | cried she again, turning from one to the other, rapidly, with an anxious look:"who are the victims of the renegade Girty?" |
15424 | cried the other;"start off agin, and put your scalp into the hands of the infernal, ripscallious, painted Injens? |
15424 | did I indeed say this?" |
15424 | go right straight in among the Injen warmints-- them male critters?" |
15424 | my gallant lads-- what say ye?" |
15424 | not know the amiable Simon Girty, surnamed the Renegade? |
15424 | of what avail was coolness, impetuosity, or desperation now? |
15424 | repeated Reynolds, with a slight fall of countenance;"have you then seen or heard any thing since to make you suspicious?" |
15424 | retorted the other, in a sneering, sarcastic tone;"but I was speaking of the defeat of General_ Greene!_""At Camden?" |
15424 | that thar sneaking, red- coat renegade? |
15424 | then you have been a spy upon me, have you?" |
15424 | to whom could she look for protection now? |
15424 | well?" |
15424 | what a flustration they has made about ye, sure enough, for sartin-- han''t they? |
15424 | what do we with squalling children? |
15424 | what is it?" |
15424 | what mean you?" |
15424 | where in marcy''s sake is my dear, darling Ella?" |
314 | A_ Lady''s Experiences in the Wild West in 1883_, London( 1883? |
314 | At a pause the bishop shook his long, wise head and remarked,"My son, when DO you get time to think?" |
314 | But knowledge of what? |
314 | Do I contradict myself? |
314 | Figureless and with more human interest is_ Prairie Experiences in Handling Cattle and Sheep_, by Major W. Shepherd( of England), London? |
314 | In an article entitled"What Ideas Are Safe?" |
314 | In_ Our Southwest_, Erna Fergusson has a whole chapter on"What is the Southwest?" |
314 | With Boyce House''s earlier_ Were You in Ranger?_, this book gives a contemporary picture of the gushing days of oil, money, and humanity. |
314 | _ Cow- Boys and Colonels: Narrative of a Journey across the Prairie and over the Black Hills of Dakota_, London, 1887; New York( 1888?). |
19495 | A what? |
19495 | And that''s what a breed sign is, eh? |
19495 | And what do you call a breed mark? |
19495 | And you mean that relationships can be determined by these breed signs? |
19495 | Are we going to try to take it? |
19495 | Are we in France? |
19495 | Are you all right? |
19495 | Are you going? |
19495 | But his credentials will have to be something that can be seen, wo n''t they? |
19495 | But how do you know it''s north? |
19495 | Can you speak English? |
19495 | Collie? 19495 Could I tell you about that other idea of mine?" |
19495 | D''you mean the front line trenches? |
19495 | Did the officer put his head up? |
19495 | Did you mean to come here? 19495 Did you really mean you named it after me-- honest?" |
19495 | Dieppe? |
19495 | Do n''t you know me? 19495 Do you mean me?" |
19495 | Do you mean to let the wire rest on this? |
19495 | Do you remember the color of the officer''s eyes? |
19495 | Do you think you could make Dieppe before morning-- eighty to ninety miles? |
19495 | Does it mean we''ve won? |
19495 | Ever hear of Paul Revere? |
19495 | General Pershing? |
19495 | Going to throw them away, eh? |
19495 | Got any cigarettes, kiddo? |
19495 | Hear that, Paul Revere? |
19495 | Hey, Fritzie, have they got any Boy Scouts in Germany? |
19495 | How about the smell, Tommy? |
19495 | How did you get back of the French lines? |
19495 | How do you feel about going over the top? 19495 How do you like my private camp? |
19495 | How in the world did you get here, anyway? |
19495 | How long you in France? |
19495 | I do n''t think they''ve got us spotted,Tom whispered, moving cautiously toward the trunk of the tree;"the private had a rifle, did n''t he?" |
19495 | I''ll tell you all about it,said Tom,"only first tell me, are you the feller they call the Jersey Snipe?" |
19495 | If you have to come back with any message, you''ll remember Headquarters, wo n''t you? |
19495 | Is Cantigny near here? |
19495 | Is our friend here dead? |
19495 | Is that Napoleon''s tomb? |
19495 | Is the brook water all right? |
19495 | Is the_ Texas Pioneer_ in? |
19495 | Kind of? |
19495 | La route, est- belle bonne? |
19495 | Looks as if Snipy must have had his eye on you, huh? |
19495 | Maybe you saved a whole lot of lives, hey? |
19495 | Never been under fire, I suppose? |
19495 | Not nervous, are you? |
19495 | Not the Americans? |
19495 | Often I wished----"Care to volunteer? |
19495 | Oh, that''s so''s they can open this little cock here, see? 19495 Pershing?" |
19495 | S''pose we dig a little trench running away from the brook and then turn on the cock and let the stuff flow off? |
19495 | See there? 19495 See what he was going to do?" |
19495 | See? |
19495 | She come to Havre-- vat? |
19495 | So? |
19495 | Somebody been spinning him around? |
19495 | Still got the same old scowl on your face, have n''t you? 19495 The French did n''t put that on?" |
19495 | There you are, see? |
19495 | There you are,he said, removing the handkerchief so as to get a better look at the cruel sore beneath;"did n''t hurt much, did it? |
19495 | They''ll be able to''phone back, wo n''t they? |
19495 | Think they can hit us from there? 19495 Vat is diss, huh?" |
19495 | Vat ship you come on? |
19495 | Ve know just how many,the officer added;"vell, vat you got, huh?" |
19495 | Vell, anyway, you haf good muscle, huh? |
19495 | Vell, we rattle you some more-- vat? |
19495 | Vell, you go home, huh? |
19495 | Vy not_ billions_, huh? |
19495 | Watching, Tommy? |
19495 | Well, what are we going to do now? |
19495 | Were you the kid on that wheel? |
19495 | What are you going to do? |
19495 | What can we-- you-- do? |
19495 | What village? |
19495 | What''s going to be doing? |
19495 | What''s the matter with Snipy, anyway? |
19495 | What''s the matter-- run into something? |
19495 | What''s the wire for? |
19495 | What-- do-- you-- say? 19495 What?" |
19495 | What_ do_ you know? |
19495 | When you first met these Germans,the officer asked,"did the big fellow have anything to say?" |
19495 | Where are we at, anyway? |
19495 | Where you going-- north? |
19495 | Where''s the Boiderberlong, anyway? |
19495 | Where''s the wharves? |
19495 | Which is the quickest way to Berlin? |
19495 | Who goes there? |
19495 | Who''s Collie? |
19495 | Who''s Snipy? |
19495 | Why did n''t you show me that compass, Tom? |
19495 | Why do n''t you wear it? |
19495 | Why should I be? |
19495 | Why? 19495 Yes? |
19495 | You English-- no? |
19495 | You always kill, do n''t you? |
19495 | You carrying wire, Bricky? 19495 You come to Havre, vat?" |
19495 | You do n''t think you can show_ me_ how to stalk, do you? |
19495 | You escape? |
19495 | You hear about more doctors coming-- no? 19495 You know the_ Texas Pioneer_?" |
19495 | You never hear of dis ship, huh? |
19495 | You remember that mountain up in the Catskills? |
19495 | You thought all I was good for was to jolly Margaret Ellison, huh? |
19495 | _ Kind of?_ Tommy, old boy, do n''t forget it was_ you_ made me a soldier,Roscoe said soberly. |
19495 | _ Try_ to? 19495 All right? |
19495 | And he had a Gold Cross that he used to get the money, huh? |
19495 | And once he said in that funny way of his,"All right, Tommy?" |
19495 | Anything else?" |
19495 | Been trying to wipe out the Germans alone and unaided, like the hero in a story book?" |
19495 | But may we not suppose that he urged his trusty steed forward with resolute and inspiring words about the glorious errand they were upon? |
19495 | But what about_ Uncle Sam_? |
19495 | CHAPTER TWELVE WHAT''S IN A NAME? |
19495 | Care to volunteer? |
19495 | Close quarters, hey?" |
19495 | Could he have expected to find another camouflaged figure, Tom wondered? |
19495 | Could it have been the breeze? |
19495 | Could the gasoline have flowed out of the tank while the machine was hanging up and down? |
19495 | Did he mention any particular ship-- do you remember?" |
19495 | Did you ever notice how you get fool ideas when there''s a steady noise going on?" |
19495 | Did you know the old gent is here?" |
19495 | Did you win yet?" |
19495 | Do you get me?" |
19495 | Do you know what-- what''s off beyond there?" |
19495 | Do you think I forget you named that rifle after me? |
19495 | Ever been to Paris, kid?" |
19495 | Feel like eating?" |
19495 | Funny, was n''t it?" |
19495 | Give me a bullet, will you?" |
19495 | Got Temple Camp beat, hey?" |
19495 | He looked something like-- something like-- oh, who? |
19495 | How about it, Toul sector?" |
19495 | How are you and how''d you get here, you sober old tow- head, you?" |
19495 | How are you off for gas-- you-- you old tramp?" |
19495 | Huh?" |
19495 | It''s named_ Tom Slade_ because it makes good-- see? |
19495 | Killed? |
19495 | Know what I mean?" |
19495 | Machine in good shape?" |
19495 | Noise do n''t bother you?" |
19495 | Now what did he ask you?" |
19495 | Safety first, hey? |
19495 | See how the pipe from this one leads into the stream?" |
19495 | See? |
19495 | Should he speak? |
19495 | Should he, Tom Slade, surrender or ask for help in one of these mere incidental places along his line of travel? |
19495 | So I followed--_stalked_--how''s that?" |
19495 | So they kid you a lot, do they?" |
19495 | Soon?" |
19495 | That''s Dieppe, where the white[2] is and those steeples, see? |
19495 | That''s a ship coming in-- see? |
19495 | The roads were full of Americans and as he passed a little company of them he called,"How far is----?" |
19495 | They fight pretty good for swine, do n''t they, Tommy? |
19495 | They have to trust you to do what you think best a lot, I guess, do n''t they? |
19495 | Think they know where we are?" |
19495 | Think you can do it?" |
19495 | Thirsty?" |
19495 | Vat? |
19495 | Vat?" |
19495 | Very muchly, huh?" |
19495 | Vy you not use it?" |
19495 | We''ll cut through there, hey?" |
19495 | We''re a pair of---- Ca n''t you speak?" |
19495 | What do you say?" |
19495 | What do you want with those old sticks of shingles? |
19495 | What makes you think it''s north?" |
19495 | What should he do? |
19495 | What''s In a Name? |
19495 | What''s the matter with your machine? |
19495 | What''s your name?" |
19495 | When we get past that little arm of the woods just ahead we ought to see the right light then, huh?" |
19495 | When your friend, Thatchy, followed me on that crazy trip of mine he borrowed some money for railroad fare, did n''t he? |
19495 | Where do we go from here?" |
19495 | Where were the others who were to help carry it over? |
19495 | Who but Major von Piffinhoeffer had devised the very scheme of contaminating streams, which Tom and Roscoe had discovered? |
19495 | Who but Major von Piffinhoeffer had first suggested putting cholera germs in rifle bullets, and tuberculosis germs in American cigarettes? |
19495 | Who but Major von Piffinhoeffer had first suggested the use of the poisoned bandage in the treatment of English prisoners''wounds? |
19495 | Who but Major von Piffinhoeffer had invented the famous"circle code"which had so long puzzled and baffled Uncle Sam''s Secret Service agents? |
19495 | Will you try to forget it, old man?" |
19495 | Would they ever,_ ever_, reach the top? |
19495 | You are not so-- vide- avake, huh?" |
19495 | You going to run between here and the coast?" |
19495 | You have kamerads-- vere?" |
19495 | You know what a_ hunch_ is, do n''t you? |
19495 | You old French hobo, you? |
19495 | You see what he was up to? |
19495 | You were picked for this sector-- d''you know that?" |
19495 | You would n''t let me point your rifle for you, would you? |
19495 | You''ve heard of him, have n''t you? |
19495 | _ Now_ will you hurry? |
19495 | _ Now_ will you hurry? |
19495 | _ Tommy''ll_ take care of them all right, wo n''t you,_ Tommy_?" |
19495 | he fairly panted in his excitement;"do you? |
30186 | Are you afraid? |
30186 | Damme, Jack,they shouted,"didst ever take h-- ll in tow before?" |
30186 | How, my father,said they in reply,"are you so bent upon death that you would also sacrifice us? |
30186 | I want to know on what ground the volition of the human species and its opinions rest under the circumstances in which it is placed? |
30186 | I want to know what the course of my life, such as it has been, has made of me? 30186 They nourished up by your indulgence? |
30186 | They protected by your arms? 30186 What is history,"said Napoleon,"but a fiction agreed upon?" |
30186 | What would I not give, except in Silesia? |
30186 | Who run? |
30186 | Will it be safe for the consignees to appear in the meeting? |
30186 | And should I thank thee, who wast sleeping whilst I worked?" |
30186 | And whence should magazines for the spring, uniforms, and recruits be obtained? |
30186 | Are there any other resources of German art and thought which can account for the advent of the great musician? |
30186 | Because a number of creditors had been ruined by the falsity of nominal values, was it a reason to continue the fiction that it might extend the ruin? |
30186 | But are not all ideals of an essentially aristocratic nature? |
30186 | But would Amherst get through to Montreal and down the St. Lawrence in time to be of use before the short season had fled? |
30186 | Cope might be here to- morrow, the day after to- morrow, to- day, who knows? |
30186 | Do you know it was he who made me the mode?" |
30186 | Have you nothing you desire to keep secret?" |
30186 | How shall we attempt to characterize this movement? |
30186 | How were you delivered? |
30186 | Indeed, how should they do otherwise when they have not spared one another? |
30186 | Is it not my heart, burning with a sacred ardor, which alone has accomplished all? |
30186 | No reverence in the boy who would kneel to the picture of the great Frederick? |
30186 | On her side she"distributed compliments in abundance, gold medals also( but more often in bronze? |
30186 | Ought any married person to be there unless husband and wife be there together?" |
30186 | Pontiac, conscious of his power and position, haughtily asked Major Rogers,"What his business was in that country?" |
30186 | Shall I again give the Austrians battle, and drive them out of Silesia? |
30186 | The bad passions of those men to whom I have been most useful( would you believe it?) |
30186 | The following, among others, were the questions asked at every meeting:"What known sin have you committed since our last meeting? |
30186 | The great question was, would Cope come in time? |
30186 | The only allusion he made to the fate of the battle was to softly repeat once or twice to himself,"Who would have thought it?" |
30186 | To what other influence than the Lutheran can we attribute the growth of Bach? |
30186 | To which Colonel Barre replied:"They planted by your care? |
30186 | Was there no light, no touch of nobility at all in that strange chaotic temperament? |
30186 | What have I done? |
30186 | What have you thought, said, or done of which you doubt whether it be sin or not? |
30186 | What is the human species doing? |
30186 | What is the human species? |
30186 | What remains, then, for man? |
30186 | What temptations have you met with? |
30186 | What, in fact, took place? |
30186 | When speaking one day to Kummer- u- din, who was then vizier, he demanded how many ladies he had? |
30186 | Who can prove that with time the same might not have occurred to everybody? |
30186 | Who does not know this temper of the man of the world, that worst enemy of the world? |
30186 | Who shall say that young Bach knew not of these things? |
30186 | With our eight hundred men do you ask us to attack four thousand English? |
30186 | and I want to know what the course of life, such as it has been, has made of the human species? |
30186 | and how he dared enter it without Pontiac''s permission? |
30186 | are they not conceived without trouble or labor? |
30186 | exclaims an eye- witness,"there are plenty of sketches to be seen, but where is the finished picture?" |
30186 | will you suffer your father to depart alone?" |
11379 | And Joe Daviess? |
11379 | And Tommy Dye? |
11379 | And knowing this, she loves him, and the judge and his nephew trust him? |
11379 | And what are the signs of true love? 11379 But about her-- is she fond of him? |
11379 | But how does it happen that you are here, my son? |
11379 | But tell me, dearest, can souls communicate without speech or sign-- if they only love enough? |
11379 | But what does it mean, dear? 11379 But who is the stranger with them, David? |
11379 | But why did the scoundrels run away before finishing their infamous work? 11379 But why-- loving her-- should he wish to marry her against her will?" |
11379 | Can you see any clouds, David? 11379 Can you see the blue jay? |
11379 | Dearest, when a thing like this happens the law has to take certain--"What has the law to do with my uncle Philip''s clothes? 11379 Did David have to go through the big deadening, William?" |
11379 | Did n''t you get the coffee made to suit you, after all that rumpus? 11379 Do n''t you know me? |
11379 | Do you happen to know, William, what these distinguished gentlemen are discussing with such interest and gravity? 11379 Do you know where he is to be found in case I should want to send for him?" |
11379 | Do you mean to tell me that a man of half Alston''s intelligence does n''t know that those men never have a horse that they have n''t stolen? |
11379 | Have you heard anything more about the attorney- general''s offering his services? 11379 He is no relation to her, is he? |
11379 | Hey? 11379 How can any creature in human form be so utterly unnatural-- so wholly a monster? |
11379 | How can the child have known what was going on? 11379 How can those murderous scoundrels have known that the attorney- general would ride to Anvil Rock alone? |
11379 | How can you take me? |
11379 | How could you? 11379 If I had a prayer to make for any great good... it should be that one of your children should be the first American poet?" |
11379 | Is it something that you have written? |
11379 | Is it the end of the world, dear heart? |
11379 | Is n''t he a bold buccaneer? |
11379 | Is this the same thing that has come down the ages? 11379 Let me think-- what kind would be best?" |
11379 | Now, what''s the use of raking all that up again? 11379 Ruth, my dear, what''s all this about some stranger''s bringing you home last night?" |
11379 | The first is this: How may a girl tell what people call''true love''from every other kind of love? 11379 They are a handsome, well- matched young couple, are they not?" |
11379 | Well, what are they? |
11379 | Well, what of it? |
11379 | What are they digging for? 11379 What difference does the saddle make? |
11379 | What foolish thing have I said? 11379 What if it_ is_ General Jackson?" |
11379 | What is Andrew Jackson but a sinner, too? 11379 What is his name?" |
11379 | What is it, David, dear? |
11379 | What is it? |
11379 | What is it? |
11379 | What is your opinion, Father? 11379 What shall we do?" |
11379 | What time to- day did Pressley leave Cedar House? 11379 What was it that those men on horseback brought here? |
11379 | Where are you? 11379 Where is Ruth? |
11379 | Where is she? 11379 Where were you, William? |
11379 | Who are those men, Paul? 11379 Who fetched all these things?" |
11379 | Who is this gentleman, David? |
11379 | Who says Joe Daviess is going away? |
11379 | Who''s afraid of a comet with only one tail? 11379 Why not?" |
11379 | Why should n''t I be lively? |
11379 | Will you go with me, David? 11379 You ca n''t help not knowing anything, can you, poor dear?" |
11379 | You know him? |
11379 | You like them? |
11379 | And Philip Alston, who pretends to love her? |
11379 | And William Pressley is an honest man, is n''t he, even though such a solemn, pompous prig? |
11379 | And do you know any more about birds than you do about love, you poor dear? |
11379 | And even now, who knows whether or not that fearful price need have been paid? |
11379 | And is it true that none of the singing birds were here till the settlers came? |
11379 | And it''s a ticklish business, going over there in the dark, is n''t it, old man?" |
11379 | And may I see them, Sister? |
11379 | And then what was there to tell her or any one? |
11379 | And what are they doing here?" |
11379 | And what are you here for, my son? |
11379 | And what do you really think of it, Father?" |
11379 | And where is the doctor''s horse? |
11379 | And why do birds sing so seldom in the depths of the forest? |
11379 | Are they here? |
11379 | But how are we going to prove it?" |
11379 | But how does anybody know? |
11379 | But how long would it or could it stand against the doubts of the man she loved? |
11379 | By what means can they possibly have learned anything about the plan? |
11379 | Ca n''t you say what a fine fellow William is? |
11379 | Can it be one of the sure signs of true love to feel at the first sight of a face that it is the one you have most wanted to see all your life? |
11379 | Can it be possible that he has sent you-- on business? |
11379 | Can you hear the silvery ripple of their plaints? |
11379 | Can you hear them? |
11379 | Can you hear what I say? |
11379 | Can you hear-- dear heart? |
11379 | Can you realize that it''s true? |
11379 | Could I, dear?" |
11379 | Could this be Ruth speaking like that-- and to himself? |
11379 | Did any bird say so? |
11379 | Did n''t all the wasps and flies go blind and die sooner than common, right in the middle of the hottest weather? |
11379 | Did you know that he once held a high office under Spain? |
11379 | Did you see or hear them, Father?" |
11379 | Do n''t you see he is n''t well? |
11379 | Do n''t you see? |
11379 | Do you hear? |
11379 | Do you know that girl? |
11379 | Do you think so, David? |
11379 | Does it still interest you, Father? |
11379 | Had he come back when you came away? |
11379 | Has anything happened to Ruth? |
11379 | Has anything happened?" |
11379 | Has n''t he always been our best friend?" |
11379 | Have you seen him? |
11379 | Have you the slightest idea how they could have learned anything of our plan?" |
11379 | He is determined to put it in motion before he leaves for Tippecanoe--""Then he is really going?" |
11379 | How can he endure to see her, much less profess fondness for her, knowing what he has done?" |
11379 | How can it be so hot in December? |
11379 | How can she be?" |
11379 | How can she tell? |
11379 | How could we have forgotten?" |
11379 | How did they find out enough to enable them to set this villanous trap? |
11379 | How do the signs of true love look? |
11379 | How do they feel, I wonder? |
11379 | How do you think they found out? |
11379 | How is it with you?" |
11379 | I certainly have not-- have you?" |
11379 | I have n''t seen any reason to change, have you? |
11379 | If I could do my part as well as you do yours, we would n''t fail so often, would we, old man?" |
11379 | If I could only once get my hand on a particle of evidence.--Do you suppose he could have known what we were talking about?" |
11379 | Is anything wrong with Ruth? |
11379 | Is he badly, hurt? |
11379 | Is it decided that he will go?" |
11379 | Is it the same that made a dignified gentleman, like David, dance-- as those fanatics are doing down there-- till he became a laughing- stock? |
11379 | Is it the same that made a sensible man like Saul join his faith to a witch and believe that he saw visions? |
11379 | Is it the same that we find in the Bible-- making great men and wise ones do such wild things? |
11379 | Is it you-- uncle Philip? |
11379 | Is n''t it good?" |
11379 | Is n''t it like a chime of fairy bells, heard in a dream? |
11379 | Is n''t it ready?" |
11379 | Is she your sister? |
11379 | Is there anything in the science of your profession to explain it? |
11379 | It would n''t be possible for you to do that, would it?" |
11379 | Looking upward toward his own reward, even this bitter, black winter''s night became as nothing; but Toby-- what was there for Toby? |
11379 | May I ask, sir, if you can tell me the precise date of the attorney- general''s departure-- for the seat of war, I mean-- for Tippecanoe?" |
11379 | May I read it now? |
11379 | Oh-- why-- don''t you come to me? |
11379 | Ruth must know sooner or later, and, knowing, would she still love him? |
11379 | See-- was there ever anything so lovely?" |
11379 | So that he now plunged in without any address at all:"I say-- who pays for them there youngsters, yonder?" |
11379 | The question is-- How? |
11379 | The very trees, the very leaves on the trees, seemed to be singing together and praising God.... Will you share this divine peace with me? |
11379 | Then flashing round on him in her impetuous way:"Why do n''t you say that you feel his heart beat? |
11379 | There is no reason, is there, to think that she does n''t love the young man? |
11379 | Was he going with the attorney- general to Tippecanoe? |
11379 | We are all proud of him-- hey, judge?" |
11379 | We''ve gone over all that-- and more than once-- haven''t we? |
11379 | What are the robbers or the country to me-- beside him? |
11379 | What are they looking for? |
11379 | What business can he or any other decent man have with the nest of rattlesnakes that we ca n''t drag out from under that bluff?" |
11379 | What can it be? |
11379 | What did you say?" |
11379 | What do I care about what happens to the attorney- general? |
11379 | What do you make of it all? |
11379 | What do you mean by reading anything so tiresome out of that foolish book? |
11379 | What do you mean by speaking so to my uncle Robert? |
11379 | What do you think it could have been? |
11379 | What does it matter, after all-- our knowing nothing about ourselves, who we are, or where we came from? |
11379 | What have you allowed to happen to her? |
11379 | What have you done with the child? |
11379 | What if he has n''t?" |
11379 | What in the world can it mean, David? |
11379 | What is it you want? |
11379 | What is she doing? |
11379 | What is the matter with them? |
11379 | What is there to expect from him? |
11379 | What is there to put round them-- to wrap them in?" |
11379 | What is wrong? |
11379 | What makes you in such an all- fired hurry?" |
11379 | What possible object could Philip Alston have in concealing anything that he might know about you and me? |
11379 | What right had he to choose her husband? |
11379 | What should she do when he was gone? |
11379 | What under heaven could she have been doing there-- in such a place, at such a time? |
11379 | What was Ruth''s relation to Philip Alston? |
11379 | What was his hold upon Judge Knox? |
11379 | What was his influence over William Pressley? |
11379 | What was it?" |
11379 | What was this power that he wielded over the whole family of Cedar House? |
11379 | What''s the matter?" |
11379 | What''s the odds? |
11379 | Where do you think we came from, David? |
11379 | Where is William? |
11379 | Where is he? |
11379 | Where is she? |
11379 | Where is she?" |
11379 | Where were you going?" |
11379 | Which way did they go? |
11379 | Who are they?" |
11379 | Who are you that come here putting your hand on my niece, and ordering the family about? |
11379 | Who could blame the girl? |
11379 | Who ever heard of such a thing before? |
11379 | Who is that?" |
11379 | Who is with him?" |
11379 | Who knows? |
11379 | Who that has known the horse at his best can have failed to observe and recognize and be moved by this fact? |
11379 | Who would tell her? |
11379 | Why are you so slow?" |
11379 | Why did n''t we think to get your rifle? |
11379 | Why did you tell him?" |
11379 | Why do n''t you answer? |
11379 | Why do n''t you speak? |
11379 | Why do the leaves droop like that? |
11379 | Why do they always cross the stream in a slanting direction? |
11379 | Why do they never fly straight across? |
11379 | Will you come back with me to the chapel? |
11379 | Will you come into the other room and see them? |
11379 | Will you come with me this night to the foot of the cross?... |
11379 | Will you give it to me now, sir? |
11379 | Will you never come? |
11379 | Would she never reach it? |
11379 | You are out of place here; as Uncle Philip Alston says--""Then why did he put me here?" |
11379 | You do see, do n''t you?" |
11379 | You remembered, did n''t you, to tell him that the latch- string of Cedar House always hangs on the outside? |
11379 | You will remember-- and tell her?" |
11379 | You wo n''t mind stopping to tell Ruth, doctor? |
11379 | and what were you doing? |
11379 | she cried in wounded reproach,"how can you? |
31887 | _ Who_ dies in vain Upon his country''s war- fields, and within The shadow of her altars? |
31887 | How many of our little band of warm hearts would ever again sit in the sunshine of home? |
31887 | What would our old Revolutionary heroes say, could they but look in upon us? |
31887 | Who shall say that the angels did not welcome him that morning to a Happy New Year, where the sound of battle is never heard? |
31887 | Would that kind mother ever again fold her darling boy to her warm heart? |
23040 | ''Wall, Mr. Hossifer, be them sure''nuff sogers, or is they only make- believe chaps, like I see down to Orleans?'' 23040 And if he cuts it out?" |
23040 | And of what use is it to meet them? 23040 And suppose you should operate?" |
23040 | And then as to the infinite reproduction of the species,adds Science,"_ is_ Nature,"''So careful of the single type?'' |
23040 | And what do I owe you for all you have done for me to- day? |
23040 | And who were the tinkers? |
23040 | Are you aware, madam, that your husband''s voice was heard calling for help, and that a pistol- shot was fired? |
23040 | Bad news? |
23040 | But do n''t you think,said my wife,"that, if the charge of providing the entertainment were less laborious, these gatherings could be more frequent? |
23040 | But you see,said Marianne,"what are we to do? |
23040 | Came on horseback? |
23040 | Coming? |
23040 | Dame Vint, where''s thy daughter? 23040 Did he go away on horseback?" |
23040 | Did not I hear cries outside? |
23040 | Did you hear any voice you knew? |
23040 | Do n''t you see? 23040 Do you mean to say you can cure me?" |
23040 | Dove vai, povera foglia frale? |
23040 | Gentlemen,said Mrs. Gaunt, drawing herself back, haughtily,"did you come here to gratify your curiosity?" |
23040 | God help me, what is all this? |
23040 | He came to stay? |
23040 | Hobert looks a''most like a storekeeper or a schoolmaster, do n''t he, mother? |
23040 | How can I tell thee? 23040 How much?" |
23040 | Is it true there was a quarrel between you and him that evening? |
23040 | Is that the way to carry on at such an a time? |
23040 | May I get out and bring''em to you? |
23040 | May I go and get it? |
23040 | May we ask the subject of that quarrel? |
23040 | Never mind, Fleety,he said, as he led her away to the stable,"we''ll be up betimes to- morrow, and make amends, wo n''t we?" |
23040 | News of_ him_? |
23040 | Now who had thought of that, but my good man? |
23040 | Now, Selphar, which is Miss Sarah''s? |
23040 | O, that is her husband, is it? |
23040 | Pleasant, is n''t it? 23040 Ryder, who is he?" |
23040 | Sel,said Clara,"on your word and honor, are your eyes shut_ perfectly_ tight?" |
23040 | Selphar, what is the matter? |
23040 | Selphar,said my mother, a little suspiciously,"how did you know the robbers were there?" |
23040 | Selphar,said my mother, quickly,"what_ is_ the matter with you?" |
23040 | Tell me all about him,said she:"how comes it that he is a gentleman and thou a pedler?" |
23040 | Tight? |
23040 | Waiting for the master still? 23040 Well, mother?" |
23040 | What are you going to do, mother? |
23040 | What brought him to these parts? |
23040 | What can not I bear? 23040 What d''ye mean to do now? |
23040 | What do you suppose he will charge me to look at this? |
23040 | What have I to do with it? |
23040 | What in the world is going to happen? |
23040 | What is it, Hobert? 23040 What is it, Hobert?" |
23040 | What is the matter, child? |
23040 | What means all this? |
23040 | What suspicion, pray? |
23040 | What trouble? |
23040 | Where am I? |
23040 | Where do you come from, young man? |
23040 | Where is she? |
23040 | Where? |
23040 | Which do you like best, Mary or Bessie? |
23040 | Which way went he? |
23040 | Who is Kate? |
23040 | Why do n''t you open your eyes? |
23040 | Why do n''t you read, mamma? |
23040 | Why plough at all? |
23040 | Why strike,says the gentle sage,"when figures will do your work so much more effectually, and leave you the repose of a compassionate soul? |
23040 | Why, what for? |
23040 | Would you believe that mischief- making knave? 23040 You are not going to leave us this way?" |
23040 | You know my husband? |
23040 | You look wan, my poor lass,said he;"what ails ye?" |
23040 | You will meet me here again, lass? |
23040 | *****"I thought her false; who could think any other? |
23040 | And how came she there? |
23040 | And what becomes of the birds in such a soaking rain as this? |
23040 | And why is she summoned? |
23040 | And why? |
23040 | Anything but a tragic effect was produced by seeing the swarthy Moor turn to the prompter at frequent intervals, and inquire,"What?" |
23040 | Bail by all means: but is the lady so sure of her innocence as to lend me her assistance to find the_ corpus delicti_?" |
23040 | Because of their disappointment? |
23040 | Because of their passion for music? |
23040 | Belike you are a kinsman of his?" |
23040 | But how could I? |
23040 | But how the plague did the little gypsy know this? |
23040 | But how was this to be reached? |
23040 | But in all the world shall anybody read one of these books? |
23040 | But indeed how should she?" |
23040 | But what is the matter?" |
23040 | But what of that? |
23040 | But who will believe me? |
23040 | But why did thy namesake start so at sight of thy picture?" |
23040 | But_ is_ it good temper, or only wanton carelessness, which cares nothing for waste? |
23040 | By the by, was there ever any rain in Paradise? |
23040 | Can you tell me anything about him? |
23040 | D''ye understand?" |
23040 | Did you?" |
23040 | Do you not know that but one book in a thousand survives the year of its publication?" |
23040 | HOW SHALL WE ENTERTAIN OUR COMPANY? |
23040 | He is thy half- brother; is he not?" |
23040 | He returned their civilities briefly; and then his first word was,"Hath Thomas Leicester been here?" |
23040 | He said, sulkily,"What sort of a reception was that you gave me?" |
23040 | He turned as pale as ashes, and stammered piteously,"What? |
23040 | Hobert began to waver, nor is it strange; for what will not a man give for his life? |
23040 | Houseman?" |
23040 | How could it be otherwise? |
23040 | How have I repaid it? |
23040 | How know you I went thither?" |
23040 | How? |
23040 | How_ can_ she see, seven hundred miles away, a dead woman who has been an angel all these years? |
23040 | I am not so ill a man as I seem; but who will believe that? |
23040 | In Heaven''s name, what is this? |
23040 | Is hope and an instinctive faith so mixed up with their nature, that they can be cheered by the thought that the sunshine will return? |
23040 | Is it strange that, in speaking of the beaver dam, he should sometimes transpose the words? |
23040 | Is n''t he, my poppet?" |
23040 | Is n''t it, my lamb?" |
23040 | Killmany?" |
23040 | Mercy, for pity''s sake, when was that Thomas Leicester here?" |
23040 | No? |
23040 | People often wonder,''How do you catch So- and- so? |
23040 | Ryder?" |
23040 | Shall I fly with thee and thy child across the seas? |
23040 | Shall I go back to her? |
23040 | Shall any one challenge the wanderers in their flight, and seek to stay them? |
23040 | She was his favorite, the pride of his farm,--for had she not, years before, brought Jenny on her faithful shoulder to the new, happy home? |
23040 | The consequence of all this was, that he made a will very favorable to his absent and injured(?) |
23040 | The earth, they murmur, is the tomb That vainly sought his life to prison; Why grovel longer in its gloom? |
23040 | The fashions had changed a little, to be sure, but what of that? |
23040 | The female servants huddled together, and quaked; for who could doubt that a bloody deed had been done? |
23040 | The question now arises, How were these vast deposits formed? |
23040 | The tale? |
23040 | Then, looking Mrs. Gaunt in the face, she said, quietly,"Where were you when you heard the cries?" |
23040 | There was no smile on the face of the man, no sweetness in his voice as he said, looking at Hobert from under scowling brows,"What brings_ you_, sir? |
23040 | WHAT DID SHE SEE WITH? |
23040 | Was there a quarrel?" |
23040 | Were they modelled from life, or from characters resembling them? |
23040 | What else can they do? |
23040 | What has he told you?" |
23040 | What have I not borne? |
23040 | What have we first? |
23040 | What shall I do? |
23040 | What shall I do? |
23040 | What should you say to that, my boy?" |
23040 | What will you, my sanest friend, not give for a book that belonged to the author of the"Decline and Fall"? |
23040 | What would the physicians do if parties were abolished? |
23040 | What, then, are these worth as a collection? |
23040 | What, what shall I do? |
23040 | What? |
23040 | When shall we be able to walk again to the far hills, and plunge into the deep woods, and gather more cardinals along the river''s margin? |
23040 | When, where, and how was this spider discovered? |
23040 | Who and what are you?" |
23040 | Who?" |
23040 | Why are the busts of Socrates and Solon what they should be, according to this theory of Gall and Spurzheim? |
23040 | Why did you marry me, if you could not forget her? |
23040 | Why did you stay so long away? |
23040 | Why, do n''t you see?" |
23040 | Will you come in and see them, ladies and gentlemen? |
23040 | Will you come?" |
23040 | Wilt do me a favor?" |
23040 | With her bonnet off, and neat cap, her beautiful complexion and dark hair and eyes, how happened it that she was really modest and well- behaved? |
23040 | Yet if we once begin to give the party, we must have everything that is given at the other parties, or wherefore do we live? |
23040 | You think she might have lost the train? |
23040 | and is not their bite poisonous, nay, at times, deadly even to man?" |
23040 | and why is it that we have never heard of it before? |
23040 | and you think I am the woman to endure this? |
23040 | gone out a- walking be- like?" |
23040 | jealous of the dead?" |
23040 | or do they think, as I almost do, that there is to be no sunshine any more? |
23040 | says one;"whoever saw A grove, like this, of_ my_ possessing? |
23040 | she cried,"are they so sure he is dead,--murdered?" |
23040 | whar''s dat? |
23040 | what d''ye mean? |
23040 | what hath happened?" |
23040 | what is it?" |
23040 | what shall I do?" |
23040 | what? |
32172 | Was there no way in which the memory of these feathered friends might be kept fresh and beautiful? |
27363 | Ai n''t de little man gwine leetle too fur jes''dar? |
27363 | Ai n''t you lettin''on? |
27363 | An''s''posin''ef he would n''t; what den? |
27363 | An''she said you might come, did she? |
27363 | An''what did you do to de painter, Bushie? 27363 An''would my little man like fur us to take de young Injun home wid us?" |
27363 | And are rattlesnakes ever black? |
27363 | Burl, did you ever see Colonel Daniel Boone? |
27363 | Burlman Rennuls, whar you gwine? |
27363 | Burlman Rennuls, whar you gwine? |
27363 | Burlman Rennuls,ses I to myself, down dar in de bottom uf de riber,"whar ar''you come to? |
27363 | Burlman Rennuls,ses I to myself,"whar you gwine? |
27363 | But why do they make so much noise? |
27363 | Den, why did n''t you mind yo''modder? |
27363 | Dey has der freedom, kin do what dey please, kin go whar dey please, an''what do dey do? 27363 Did de young Injun shoot de eagle down yesterday whar you got dem fedders?" |
27363 | Did she say you mus''n''t come? |
27363 | Do n''t you wish you had Betsy Grumbo out here, Burl? 27363 Do painters always scream like a skeered woman or a burnt baby, when they go a- jumping from one tree to another? |
27363 | Do rattlesnakes always rattle with their tails when they poke out their heads to bite a man? |
27363 | Does Cap''n Kenton take scalps? |
27363 | Does he take de skin uf a bar when he traps it? 27363 Had n''t my little man better rein up his horses now?" |
27363 | Has he tuck de wings uf a duck an''flew away? |
27363 | Is he the greatest man in the world, Burl? 27363 Now, Bushie, ai n''t you lettin''on?" |
27363 | Now, Bushie, lettin''on agin, ai n''t you? 27363 Then, where is Kumshakah,"inquired Reynolds,"since our deliverer be not he whom we loved as a brother?" |
27363 | W''y, Bushie, if Betsy is always belchin''gunpowder, do n''t you know her breaf mus''smell uf gunpowder? |
27363 | Well, Burl, what is it? |
27363 | Well, ef I let dis young Injun up, will you eber do de like ag''in-- run away wid de red varmints an''make yo''r pore mudder mizzible? |
27363 | What did de big Injun do to you, Bushie? |
27363 | What''s Colonel Danel Boone got to do wid de good ol''''Lishy an''de bad town- boys? 27363 What''s dat you say, Mars''er Bushie?" |
27363 | What''s the matter with Betsy''s breath? |
27363 | Which one uf de varmints was it, Bushie, dat gobbled you up frum de corn- fiel''fence, back yander? |
27363 | Why would n''t they? |
27363 | Wusn''t it a black- snake, big as your leg? |
27363 | --giving a broad stare at the open sky, then, with a disappointed shake of the head, added:"N- o- h. Has he tuck de claws uf a coon an''clum a tree?" |
27363 | A whole cabin to myse''f, an''Saturday ev''nin''s to go a- huntin''an''a- fishin''ef I likes? |
27363 | Against such desperate odds how could he hold out longer, reduced as he was to an empty gun, one leg, and no dog? |
27363 | Ai n''t he singing for his little man to come? |
27363 | All a pore nigger could fur white folks in dat way, an''would n''t neber stop a- doin''it? |
27363 | An''fur why? |
27363 | An''s''posin''ef I was ter leabe''em now, what would dey do? |
27363 | And do they always keep a- swinging their long, limber tails?" |
27363 | And that only last fall he trapped and killed that terrible one- eyed wolf in the black hollow just beyond the field?" |
27363 | And that only last winter he knocked a bear in the head with his ax, at the big sink- hole spring in the middle of the field? |
27363 | And why do you hold the door so fast?" |
27363 | And why? |
27363 | And, Bushie, my boy, have you forgotten that only this spring Burl shot a panther in the woods between here and the field? |
27363 | As I is, turn me out free an''whar''s my place? |
27363 | As he had not killed the Indian, how could he without gross violation of the rules of civilized warfare take his scalp? |
27363 | Burl looked quickly round, saying with a tone of surprise:"Why, Miss Jemimy, has n''t Bushie come home?" |
27363 | But Bushie-- where was poor little Bushie all this time? |
27363 | But Bushie-- where was poor little Bushie all this time? |
27363 | But how? |
27363 | But who was Kumshakah? |
27363 | But who''d a thought it was in de red rubbish to do de like?" |
27363 | But why do you ask? |
27363 | Den s''posin'',''ses I,''s''posin''ef my good missus an''sweet little marster might be took''way fus'', an''der ol''nigger lef''behin'', what den? |
27363 | Den says I,''Mars Dan-- no, I do n''t say dat-- Colonel Boone,''says I,''what you gwine to do wid de skelps?'' |
27363 | Did I eber see a bar? |
27363 | Did I eber see a buck? |
27363 | Did I eber see a buffalo? |
27363 | Did you?" |
27363 | Do n''t you know Betsy Grumbo alwus bites in de heart, an''bars never play''possum?'' |
27363 | Do you give me your promise?" |
27363 | Do you hear?" |
27363 | Does he take de tail- feathers uf a eagle when he shoots it? |
27363 | Ef I''d turned back den would I be here now to tell you uf it? |
27363 | Ef it wusn''t as I tell you, would de young Injun be dar in my doo''now, smokin''his pipe? |
27363 | Hain''t I got a gun an''a dog? |
27363 | Hain''t I got de bes''mistus in de worl''an''de finest little marster? |
27363 | Have I been as kind to you?" |
27363 | Heh, did n''t I?" |
27363 | Here the Tempter crept up close to him and whispered in his ear:"Do n''t you hear him Bushie? |
27363 | How could you, Bushie, how could you leave yo''pore mudder so onsituwated? |
27363 | How''d people know he had kilt de red varmints ef he did n''t hab de top- nots to show fur it? |
27363 | If he had owed vengeance for the first, did he not now owe gratitude for the last? |
27363 | If such, then, be his story, why should more than this be known of Kumshakah? |
27363 | If, up to this moment, he had been swift to meet the claims of vengeance, should he not now be as ready to meet the claims of gratitude? |
27363 | Now, ai n''t you?" |
27363 | Plenty to eat an''plenty to w''ar? |
27363 | Shall the sachem of the Shawnees tremble? |
27363 | Shall they say he hated the foe of his race and feared him? |
27363 | So, without any suspicion of danger, he went on singing at his work as before:"Wher''now is our Hebrew childern? |
27363 | Then, with a look of grateful interest, the chief inquired:"But tell me, is the mother of Shekee- thepatee still alive? |
27363 | To be sure your mother will switch you well for running away, but who minds that? |
27363 | Whar do dey go? |
27363 | What den would I be? |
27363 | What shall our answer be-- will the brother of Kumshakah tell us?" |
27363 | What, then, was to be done? |
27363 | Wher''now is our Hebrew childern? |
27363 | Wher''now is our Hebrew childern? |
27363 | Wher''now is our good ol''Jonah? |
27363 | Wher''now is our good ol''Jonah? |
27363 | Where should the weary little feet find rest in the night now coming on? |
27363 | Where was Grumbo-- his trusty, his courageous Grumbo? |
27363 | Who should it be but Kumshakah, the savior of the boy Shekee- thepatee, the friend of the Big Black Brave, Mish- mugwa?" |
27363 | Who stops fur painters in a pinch like dat, or any thing else? |
27363 | Who''s my comp''ny? |
27363 | Will the boy never move? |
27363 | Would n''t you be sorry den?" |
27363 | Would n''t you be sorry den?" |
27363 | Would the boy never move? |
27363 | Wusn''t it our yaller Tom dare at de fort, gwine out to see his kinfolks''mong de wilecats''way off yander?" |
27363 | You''s awake, is you?" |
27363 | You''s awake, now, is you-- wide awake?" |
27363 | [ Here the speaker was interrupted by a voice from the audience:"Cap''n Rennuls, see yer now; ai n''t you lettin''on?"] |
27363 | ["Cap''n Rennuls,"said a voice in the audience,"ef de varmint wus a dead one, how could he do all dat like a live one?"] |
27363 | or have the swift years borne her to the dwelling of Wahcoudah?" |
27363 | what''s this?" |
27363 | why was he not there to succor his master in that hour of peril? |
19966 | ''Ah, my friend,''he said mysteriously,''you know what it is, do you not? 19966 ''And you will join them?'' |
19966 | ''But how about the police, the Federal and State troops, supposed to be in instant readiness?'' 19966 ''By the way,''said he, blinking at me through his thick glasses,''there is just a bit of nervousness in your make- up, is n''t there? |
19966 | ''Can Ah Moy walk home with pletty lady?'' 19966 ''Do you see that hussy in the ruff over there? |
19966 | ''He kissed me again and again... How can I go on?... 19966 ''Hoi Sing?'' |
19966 | ''How dare you say such a thing to me? 19966 ''How do you know that we are from the Hill?'' |
19966 | ''How much?'' 19966 ''How''re you? |
19966 | ''Hush,''I whispered,''do n''t you hear it? 19966 ''In New York, eh? |
19966 | ''Know him? 19966 ''Marse Edwin, Marse Edwin, do n''t yer know yer ole black mammy? |
19966 | ''Marse Livingstone,''he asked huskily,''whar has you been wif de horses?'' 19966 ''Now, Colonel,''said I, in my most persuasive tones,''ca n''t you make up your mind to join us in this thing? |
19966 | ''Oh, are n''t these excursions perfectly lovely, Ruby?'' 19966 ''Oh, what''s the use of your going on like that? |
19966 | ''Oo- Chow?'' 19966 ''Pardon me, friend,''whined my companion, stepping out in front of him,''but ca n''t you give a fellow a lift? |
19966 | ''Plomise?'' 19966 ''Really?'' |
19966 | ''Regularly buncoed, eh?'' 19966 ''So what more could I say? |
19966 | ''The Thirteenth Commandment''? 19966 ''The what?'' |
19966 | ''This is quite enough for me, or any other good American; but, Senor, tell me about your father and the Senorita, your sister; are they well? 19966 ''We have all had a tedious two weeks of it, have n''t we? |
19966 | ''What did he say?'' 19966 ''What do you think of it?'' |
19966 | ''What would the faculty of Jay think of their Seymour, could they but gaze upon him now? 19966 ''What''s the matter with the money?'' |
19966 | ''What''s the matter, Uncle Ashby?'' 19966 ''What''s the name of your place?'' |
19966 | ''What?'' 19966 ''When did you come down? |
19966 | ''Which one first?'' 19966 ''Who the devil is Abner McNamee?'' |
19966 | ''Why so?'' 19966 ''Why?'' |
19966 | ''You sweet thing,''chirped Ruby,''it knew how thirsty we were, did n''t it? 19966 A little off your feed,"as Regina says; liver out of shape-- something of that sort, eh?'' |
19966 | And another of the boys limping by, foot- sore and weary, was accosted by this same angry dame,''You ran, did you? 19966 Did you notice his small hands and rather classic profile? |
19966 | Do I? 19966 How so?" |
19966 | How''s that? |
19966 | Miss de Dear? 19966 So you have had a taste of Union prisons, eh?" |
19966 | Well, Colonel, how do you feel now? |
19966 | Well? |
19966 | What have you here? 19966 When was it? |
19966 | Who are you, I say, and what are you doing on this strictly private outfit? |
19966 | Who was dealing? |
19966 | Why, at Bull Run; do n''t you remember Bull Run? |
19966 | ''Ai n''t this dust awful? |
19966 | ''Ai n''t you afraid you''ll get into trouble? |
19966 | ''Am I dreaming again? |
19966 | ''That''s real funny, ai n''t it? |
19966 | ''Twath only the other night he thaid----What will I have? |
19966 | ''Whar- izz- yer?'' |
19966 | ''What on earth are you so excited about?'' |
19966 | ''What would these great social forces say?'' |
19966 | ''What''s the game-- this McNamee business? |
19966 | ''Where could she have gone? |
19966 | *****"Later, when we had made our report to the police, and I was guiding the Judge home, I asked:"Who is this de Dear? |
19966 | --or something like that-- all very childish and grandiloquent, but we kept our word, did n''t we? |
19966 | A college man, too, no doubt; but what does that signify? |
19966 | Again I ask, am I dreaming? |
19966 | Ai n''t he the ugly one? |
19966 | Ai n''t it a shame? |
19966 | Ai n''t it simply grand, Mag? |
19966 | All my innate modesty began to assert itself; and is not this the surest protection of the innocent? |
19966 | Am I dreaming? |
19966 | Am I on the boards again? |
19966 | And how long have you been in Washington? |
19966 | And the Parsee? |
19966 | And then-- then?'' |
19966 | And what can I say to you, friend of friends? |
19966 | And what could I do to save him? |
19966 | And you air a bride?'' |
19966 | And you know what that means, do n''t you, Pearl?'' |
19966 | And you will, dearest?" |
19966 | Are we quite safe here? |
19966 | Are you crazy? |
19966 | Besides,''she added thoughtfully, reverting to his unlucky remark,''have n''t you a wife in China?'' |
19966 | Born in Newark, New Jersey, deah boy, I assure you-- right back of the gas- house; what? |
19966 | But what cared they, crack- brained as they were? |
19966 | But what next, what next?'' |
19966 | But what''s the use of hot- airing like this? |
19966 | But, boys, need I remind you that these resolutions were adopted unanimously? |
19966 | Ca n''t you give us a touch of New York in yours?" |
19966 | Ca n''t you see our position in the matter?'' |
19966 | Can it be only stage mon----? |
19966 | Can it be real? |
19966 | Can you beat it? |
19966 | Did I look as old as that? |
19966 | Did not Muggsy Walker-- across the street-- salute his sweetheart in the same manner? |
19966 | Did they ever move the Darragh woman''s picture out of the room?" |
19966 | Do n''t you hear it?'' |
19966 | Do n''t you know that the finger of scorn will be pointed at you all the rest of your life?'' |
19966 | Do n''t you think I can keep a secret? |
19966 | Do you hear? |
19966 | Do you hear? |
19966 | Do you hear? |
19966 | Do you suppose that mere walls of steel and granite could withstand the fury of such a mob as this great city now holds, straining at its leash? |
19966 | Do you think I am a fool?'' |
19966 | Do you think her father is keeping her? |
19966 | Got on your nerves, eh? |
19966 | Had he not frequently observed big Policeman Ryan kiss the red- haired widow who kept the lodging- house around on Missouri Avenue? |
19966 | Have n''t you often heard that sound, Senator? |
19966 | Have you forgotten your promise to the Cuban girl? |
19966 | He was certainly not''born to blush unseen, nor waste his sweetness on the desert air,''eh?" |
19966 | Hobson''s choice, eh? |
19966 | How could I forget it? |
19966 | How dare you speak to me anyway? |
19966 | How is my old friend Alejandro Menendez?'' |
19966 | How long will you be down, Patsy?'' |
19966 | How''re you?'' |
19966 | Humbug, eh?'' |
19966 | I distinctly heard the Parsee say,''Who are the blaggards ye''ve brought here wid ye?'' |
19966 | I rather think you will do us no harm, eh?'' |
19966 | I reckon you have something up your sleeve that will surprise us, eh?" |
19966 | I say, what time is it?'' |
19966 | I''ve been up against him, and so has Bull; ai n''t you, Nathan?" |
19966 | Is n''t it Hoi Kee?'' |
19966 | Is n''t it because you want to be a better man, and to lead a good and useful life? |
19966 | Is n''t this a monumental rake- off for a non- profesh? |
19966 | It is a long journey, and a hard; and who can say when I will return? |
19966 | It is n''t justice, and it is n''t law; but, boys, we''ve got to save that fellow''s life-- now, have n''t we?'' |
19966 | It''s a goodish bit from here to the Hill, ai n''t it?'' |
19966 | Let the old man alone, wo n''t you?" |
19966 | Look here; is n''t this a windfall? |
19966 | Money do n''t cut no ice this trip, though it_ is_ a mighty handy thing to have a jinglin''in your jeans-- ain''t it? |
19966 | My poor Marse Edwin,''she wailed,''why did yer do it? |
19966 | N''est''ce pas?'' |
19966 | Not so bad for a moment''s effort before breakfast, eh? |
19966 | Not so bad for a moment''s effort before breakfast, eh?'' |
19966 | Now what do you think of_ that_?'' |
19966 | Now would n''t that jar you? |
19966 | Now you''ll let us put you up, wo n''t you? |
19966 | Oh, I remember now; it happened twice-- three times-- or was it three times? |
19966 | Oh, if he were only here now, would n''t he get me out of this?'' |
19966 | Perhaps you will dine with us? |
19966 | Providence''s ways is certainly beyond us-- ain''t they? |
19966 | Robson a filibuster? |
19966 | Robson? |
19966 | Sale?'' |
19966 | Senator, may I trouble you to depress the business end of that syphon? |
19966 | Senator, what is the best poker hand you ever held?" |
19966 | Shall the Pearl of the Antilles fall to Germany, France, or England?'' |
19966 | Shall we not be loyal to- day? |
19966 | Sleep in New York? |
19966 | So you have realized your ambition? |
19966 | Some poor devil hears it once_ too_ often, every now and then, does n''t he? |
19966 | Strange, is it not? |
19966 | That''s my story, and it ai n''t a very startling one after all, is it?" |
19966 | That''s perfectly reasonable, is it not? |
19966 | The Senate? |
19966 | The White House? |
19966 | The World, the great World at large, the Press, the Pulpit?'' |
19966 | The air was full of them-- making a noise like''Whar- izz- yer?'' |
19966 | The letter began abruptly, and ran as follows:"''Ah, senor, have you forgotten Saratoga, and the little Mercedes? |
19966 | These togs o''mine were handed out to me by an old pal-- a cockney valet-- and the accent goes with''em, do n''t ye know?'' |
19966 | This last scrape was the worst of all; was it not? |
19966 | To_ him_ I told nothing, for he was proud of me, and should I have killed him? |
19966 | Understand?'' |
19966 | Was it not somewhat in the nature of a surprise?" |
19966 | What do you come to the school for? |
19966 | What good does it do to fuss over things we ca n''t help?'' |
19966 | What is there left for us to do but carry out the law? |
19966 | What next? |
19966 | What say you, Sammy boy?" |
19966 | What would my pupils say? |
19966 | What''ll you have to eat? |
19966 | What''s the trouble? |
19966 | What''s the use of waiting for a fellow to die before immortalizing him in marble or bronze? |
19966 | Where did you get him? |
19966 | Where did you know her?" |
19966 | Where did you learn such words? |
19966 | Where is your gratitude?" |
19966 | Who are you, sir?" |
19966 | Who do you want to marry? |
19966 | Who is he? |
19966 | Who is she? |
19966 | Who knows?'' |
19966 | Who on earth is it then?'' |
19966 | Who''d''a''thought it?'' |
19966 | Why did yer do it? |
19966 | Why did yer kill him? |
19966 | Why did you run?'' |
19966 | Why do I hate her? |
19966 | Why do n''t you fellows vary your song and dance-- just for luck? |
19966 | Why have you thus deserted the lifelong friend of your father?'' |
19966 | Why, he is the biggest man in the House-- a great swell-- money to throw at the birds; and he''s been a throwin''it, hey?'' |
19966 | Will there never be any let up? |
19966 | Worse by far than the affairs with the little Italian, or the fat Princess, eh, Bobby, my boy? |
19966 | Would I have kissed you else? |
19966 | Would n''t that everlastingly unsettle you? |
19966 | Yes? |
19966 | You are not afraid to speak out, eh?'' |
19966 | You could turn me over to the first cop that heaves in sight, and there''s one over there now-- why do n''t you do it? |
19966 | You get a little dippy toward morning, do n''t you? |
19966 | You hear me? |
19966 | You know we are living in New York this winter?'' |
19966 | You remember Archie-- and the day he was drowned? |
19966 | You shiver and shake----""For drinks?" |
19966 | You''ve all heard of him-- haven''t yer? |
19966 | You''ve twenty- three cents, hey? |
19966 | Youth, my dear, is a great thing; what is there to compare with it? |
19966 | and still higher? |
19966 | he pointed upward,''higher yet? |
14524 | ''Trouble''? 14524 And Captain Sam built it?" |
14524 | And are you tired? |
14524 | Are you glad to have me back, signora duchessa? 14524 Are you not well?" |
14524 | Are you tired of wandering? |
14524 | But can you do it? |
14524 | But do you not like it? 14524 But does n''t it vex them very much to get such letters? |
14524 | But has the Mees any rich friends? |
14524 | But if he loves you? |
14524 | But what then? |
14524 | But what, Ellen? 14524 But why should you be''laid on the shelf''? |
14524 | But you are quite sure of swimming? |
14524 | But you think it very necessary for you to go? |
14524 | But, Edward, you surely do not wish-- would not permit Little John to go to sea? |
14524 | But, my dear fellow, of what are you accusing yourself? 14524 Did you not say that your post- bag containing the night''s mail would be sent over this morning?" |
14524 | Did you see him? |
14524 | Do n''t you hate having to wear goggles and cages and things? 14524 Do you know who is in Venice, who sent me a note while you were at church, and who will dine with us this evening?" |
14524 | Do you know, I have been watching you ever since I have known you,she said,"to see if it was true? |
14524 | Do you mean Withlacootchie or the hotel? |
14524 | Do you? |
14524 | Does your father know it? |
14524 | Ellen,he asked abruptly,"how would you like to adopt a child?" |
14524 | English breakfast? |
14524 | Frank,she repeated,"shall we go home?" |
14524 | Has he sold you that tumble- down claim on a burnt prairie, miles from any wood or water? 14524 Have some beans, wo n''t ye?" |
14524 | Have you no family? |
14524 | He? 14524 Home or the hotel, dear?" |
14524 | How does it happen that his relatives are willing to part with him? |
14524 | How much a lesson? 14524 How much a lesson?" |
14524 | How will you have it going down? 14524 I am nicely protected, am I not?" |
14524 | I asked her,''Did you never hear of Jacob Steiner, the violin- maker?'' 14524 Is he_ raving crazy_, Mabel? |
14524 | It''s a curious thing, naow, for the captain and mate of a coaster to be in furrin parts a- whalin''; but we find it pays,--eh, Sam? |
14524 | Jest lay holt of the line, will ye? |
14524 | Kin yaou go whalin''? |
14524 | Last summer, the Tyrol; last winter, Italy; this summer, Switzerland; now,--where? 14524 Madama Teresa mia,"said Aurora,"whom are you scolding? |
14524 | My dear,she would say,"do you not eat entirely too many sweets, bon- bons, and what not, and then go without proper food at the regular meals?" |
14524 | Naow, ye do n''t tell me that ye ai n''t acquainted with Captain Sol, and ye''re from aour way, too? 14524 No?" |
14524 | Not? |
14524 | Odd that I ca n''t get it, is n''t it? |
14524 | Oh, you mean at her expense? 14524 Ought we to permit him to become so infatuated?" |
14524 | Sam, set aout my pennyroyal, will ye? 14524 Sam? |
14524 | Shall I say Mees Varing? |
14524 | Suppose,said Fräulein Vogel,"that he is seeking for you now?" |
14524 | Were none of those from England? |
14524 | What do you mean? 14524 What do you youngsters say?" |
14524 | What does it say? |
14524 | What is the price? |
14524 | What is there to shock her? 14524 What other coming could be so joyful to us? |
14524 | What should he be unhappy about? |
14524 | Where shall I go now? |
14524 | Where to? |
14524 | Where were you last night so late? |
14524 | Why are n''t you gambolling like the playful antelope, Heathcote? |
14524 | Why did you decide to be a painter? |
14524 | Why do you ask? |
14524 | Why do you talk of''an elegant breeze''? |
14524 | Why have we never thought of that before? |
14524 | Why not? |
14524 | Why should I? 14524 Why, do n''t you see?--don''t you object to me bein''thrown so much with Miss Brown, under the circumstances?" |
14524 | Why, they do n''t flirt after they are_ married_, do they? |
14524 | Why, what can we do? |
14524 | Why, what''s the matter? 14524 Why, you would n''t have me call_ you_ a lovely fellow, would you?" |
14524 | Would we go up the rapids? |
14524 | Would you like to be a missionary, little spring? |
14524 | Yaou might hear him speak of their son John? 14524 You are very happy here, are n''t you? |
14524 | Your brother, or uncle? |
14524 | Your guest is a very entertaining man,he said to Mr. Ketchum, who accompanied him to the hat- rack,"but is he quite-- quite-- you understand?" |
14524 | ''Are ye in distress?'' |
14524 | ''Blast ye,''says he,''why did n''t ye die when ye had a cap?''" |
14524 | ''Flounderin''?'' |
14524 | ''Where did you get this?'' |
14524 | And if Miss Price was so perfectly delightful, why did she send Mr. Ramsay home always as gloomy and morose as any young man very well could be? |
14524 | And if you do n''t at all care for them, why do it at all?" |
14524 | And that head in crayons that you did at school was pleasantly executed: why not study from life constantly?" |
14524 | And you will wear the same dress at dinner, will you not? |
14524 | Angry? |
14524 | Are they crazy?" |
14524 | Are you happy, my red rose?" |
14524 | Are you ready, Ethel? |
14524 | Are you ready?" |
14524 | At last she straightened up, and said sternly,"But where is the picture, Mees-- Kitty?" |
14524 | Been lookin''at the bot?" |
14524 | Bread she understood; but what was bread galore? |
14524 | Brown?" |
14524 | But could he and ought he to leave Ellen now? |
14524 | But if it was? |
14524 | But what could be done? |
14524 | But you had rather go West, among the mines? |
14524 | Did n''t she give them to you?" |
14524 | Did you ever know anything so idle as those Brown women? |
14524 | Did you not see Febiano present the note? |
14524 | Do change your mind and stay, wo n''t you?" |
14524 | Do n''t ye know him? |
14524 | Do they fancy that I care for her? |
14524 | Do you district- visit, botanize, sketch, learn a language? |
14524 | Do you imagine that he is going to mourn forever for a woman whom he never really loved, and who disgraced and tormented him? |
14524 | Do you know, she was vexed by the inquiry? |
14524 | Do you mean to say that you do n''t even discharge them for it?" |
14524 | Do you suppose I go about inventin''lies to take away other people''s characters?" |
14524 | Do you wonder I am ashamed to write to him? |
14524 | Do you wonder I dare not ask his pardon?" |
14524 | Ellen was mute, and Edward felt constrained to say something: so he asked,"Did you know the mother?" |
14524 | Going away? |
14524 | How could you believe such ridiculous nonsense?" |
14524 | How did it end?" |
14524 | How do you happen to be a painter?" |
14524 | How is it that you are here without her? |
14524 | How many times have you taken people down?" |
14524 | How you would relish them to- night, would you not?" |
14524 | I sigh not that the summer fields have lost One flying flower: who counts the butterflies? |
14524 | I wonder if I could sing? |
14524 | In that event, how am I to know who is the honest man and who the villain? |
14524 | Is it love, money, or indigestion, old fellow?" |
14524 | Is it not annoying? |
14524 | Is it not charming?" |
14524 | Is it not delightful? |
14524 | Is it possible?" |
14524 | Is n''t that a nice new- laid egg for me?" |
14524 | Is n''t this rather sudden?" |
14524 | It looks like a town in Dickens''s''American Notes''illustrated by Dor? |
14524 | It would not stop; it brought them neither mail nor summer boarder: why should they care just to see it pass? |
14524 | Just you hook it out of this, will you, and let us get on with this? |
14524 | Kin ye spare a pot?'' |
14524 | Let me make it for you?" |
14524 | No, Bijou had no such wish; but what was the use of learning or doing anything now as a girl? |
14524 | Now, I really speak German well, do n''t I? |
14524 | One and two and a kick, you say, Miss Brown? |
14524 | Or it would be,"How do you occupy yourself, as a rule, dear child? |
14524 | Or perhaps you do care for water, and would not like hugging the shore? |
14524 | Or you had planned to see Lake George this year? |
14524 | Or you were thinking of the Thousand Isles? |
14524 | Other entertainments followed closely upon the dinner, of which Mrs. Sykes complained to Miss Noel, saying,"Why will they ask me out? |
14524 | Rough?" |
14524 | Shall I believe you, or shall I believe him, in the absence of documentary evidence and disinterested statement? |
14524 | She demanded, in a quiet, fearless voice,"Who is there?" |
14524 | Sir Robert was afflicted by a deaf man, who shrieked,"Ha- ow?" |
14524 | Sooner or later he is sure to return to England; and what would she do here? |
14524 | Splendid one, is n''t it? |
14524 | Suppose in our next war we try the effect upon our enemies of letting each of our soldiers carry a white- robed baby? |
14524 | Take some of the Dentist''s Friend, wo n''t you?" |
14524 | Talking of Catholics and what Washington calls the''Peskypalians,''who is going to church to- day?" |
14524 | That is-- what would you call that?" |
14524 | That would sound well, would it not?" |
14524 | They do n''t live about here, do they?" |
14524 | Was it from the encampment of some Indian hunter, or the cabin of a white man who had settled there since the visit of Boone, five years before? |
14524 | We were not to be betrayed into any exhibition of timidity after that first hesitating question,"Do you know the rapids well? |
14524 | We will take the others into Kalsing, eh, husband?" |
14524 | What did Archdeacon Grantby look like, or who shall venture to describe the immortal Mrs. Proudie? |
14524 | What did I sing? |
14524 | What did I write? |
14524 | What did you do about it?" |
14524 | What did you do about your husband''s letters? |
14524 | What do you do? |
14524 | What had lured people there? |
14524 | What has that got to do with your visits here?" |
14524 | What if they made little excursions to Zons or to Xanten? |
14524 | What if they sat on a beach under a linden- tree and played cat''s- cradle like children? |
14524 | What if they should find it out? |
14524 | What kept them alive? |
14524 | What made it so impressive? |
14524 | What may not have happened in a year? |
14524 | What on earth has he got on? |
14524 | What put such a foolish idea in your head?" |
14524 | What strange ironic word shall here be read? |
14524 | What was the color of Grace Crawley''s hair, or of Lily Dale''s eyes? |
14524 | What would she be like, this"zenith city of the unsalted seas,"with such a stately avenue of approach? |
14524 | When the wagon was driven to his door, loaded with the purchase, the housekeeper exclaimed,"What ever is to be done with all this truck?" |
14524 | Who cared what they did? |
14524 | Who cared? |
14524 | Who has not been struck with the slighting manner in which Sir Walter describes his heroines''charms? |
14524 | Why ca n''t they leave me alone? |
14524 | Why can not he be friendly and nothing more?" |
14524 | Why could she not come down and spend a few weeks at Waco? |
14524 | Why do they do it, I wonder? |
14524 | Why not ask Bertha Terry? |
14524 | Why not?" |
14524 | Why should you object to meeting them?" |
14524 | Will you assure me on your honor that there is no motive, no family feud, at the bottom of this? |
14524 | Would you kindly ring and send for them?" |
14524 | Yet what meant the shrinking which accompanied that pleasant anticipation? |
14524 | You are coming back to dinner, ai n''t you, to help us out with the fatted calf?" |
14524 | You do n''t care for water? |
14524 | You need n''t go around blushing for David and Thomas? Kempis any longer, my son. |
14524 | You surely do n''t wish to be a doll, a plaything, self- indulgent, helpless, leading a life of mere luxurious indulgence and artificiality?" |
14524 | You want to make some money? |
14524 | You wanted him to marry some one else,--some one with a fortune, did n''t you?" |
14524 | You would n''t like to leave it and go away to India, or Egypt, or-- or-- England, or anywhere?" |
14524 | You would rather have an orphan, I suppose?" |
14524 | and"What say?" |
14524 | asked Brown_ p?_, all unsuspicious of what was to come. |
14524 | said he, after directing a keen glance at Mr. Ramsay''s face,"what is the matter? |
14524 | she said,"but whither shall we wander?" |
14524 | was n''t I right?" |
14524 | you know that she reads your letters?" |
18954 | A souveneerr? |
18954 | Ah,she said slyly;"you wish not that her mother should be there? |
18954 | And how can we hear from Armand, my dear, when the Prussians do not even let us know what America''s president said? 18954 And look at this,"said Archer, hauling out a blouse such as the hanging German wore;"what d''ye say if I wearr it, hey? |
18954 | And we do n''t say anything eitherr, is that it? |
18954 | And you come to Zhermany, how? |
18954 | And you escaped? |
18954 | Anyway, it''s a_ barren_ island,said Archer;"are you hungry?" |
18954 | Are we going up to the house? |
18954 | Are we pinched? |
18954 | Are you carvin''a souvenir? |
18954 | Are you game to swim it? |
18954 | Are zey all like you-- ze Americans? |
18954 | Ca n''t you say_ nurse_? |
18954 | D''you think maybe she''ll come even now-- if we waited? |
18954 | Depends on which way I was running.--Let''s have a look at these paperrs before it gets too darrk, hey? |
18954 | Did n''t I say there must be a big river over that way? |
18954 | Did n''t I tell you so? |
18954 | Did we swim across the lake or did n''t we? |
18954 | Did you everr hearr of them? |
18954 | Do you ever get tired talking? |
18954 | Do you have to wear rubber gloves in Switzerland? |
18954 | Do you know what I think? |
18954 | Do you know what this is? |
18954 | Do you know wherre I think yourr sworrds and things arre? 18954 Do you notice,"he said, looking down through the glass,"that house that looks as if it was whitewashed? |
18954 | Do you s''pose it means they''re going to conquer the sky and all the starrs and everything? |
18954 | Do you see? |
18954 | Do you think maybe they had a hunch we werren''t Gerrman soldierrs at all? |
18954 | Do you think that Florette and her mother are both there? |
18954 | Eef you talk you ca n''t escape, what? 18954 From Armand? |
18954 | Gee, we''ll be the firrst to get therre, hey? 18954 Have you got your button all right?" |
18954 | His footprints? |
18954 | Hold some of that damp straw to it.--How many matches did she give you? |
18954 | How do you know? |
18954 | How do you s''pose it happened? |
18954 | How you come here? |
18954 | I guess that''s the trouble,Tom began;"my head aches----""Can you swim now?" |
18954 | I neverr thought about''em till just now? |
18954 | I see now I was crazy to think about finding her-- anyway----"You have n''t forrgot how she treated us, have you? |
18954 | I wonder how the wagons got across? |
18954 | I wonder----"Sh- h. D''you hearr that? |
18954 | I''d like to be in one, would n''t you? |
18954 | I''d like to get a sooveneerr from that cow, hey? 18954 I''m Tom Slade-- don''t you remember? |
18954 | I''m going to turn back,he said;"come on-- are you all right?" |
18954 | If we could make a raft we could sail right down, hey? |
18954 | Is-- is it a sound? |
18954 | It ought to drink buttermilk, hey? |
18954 | Leteur? |
18954 | Maybe it''s_ ourr_ boys, hey? |
18954 | Maybe the iron hasp fell into the padlock when I put it down, huh? |
18954 | Maybe they grow in furious what- d''you- call-''ems? |
18954 | Me? 18954 No, but he''s got a little compass around his neck; shall I take it?" |
18954 | North--_north_? |
18954 | Not even this dial- faced thing? |
18954 | Oh, zat iss what he say? |
18954 | S''pose somebody should see us-- when we''rre going through a village? 18954 S''pose we should meet some one?" |
18954 | See those little lights over to the east? |
18954 | Sh- h. How many barbs has it? |
18954 | Shall we take a chance? |
18954 | Strike anything? |
18954 | Suppose they should be Gerrmans living therre? |
18954 | That must be_ Yankees_, see? 18954 That''s the treaty, is it?" |
18954 | The_ what_? |
18954 | Then we shall never hear of him till the war is over? |
18954 | Therre ought to be lots of good ones herre, hey? |
18954 | They''rre superrmen-- that''s what they arre.--Maybe it''s some kind of strategy, hey? 18954 Think I did n''t know that?" |
18954 | Twist the top of it and turn the edges over, see? |
18954 | Two years we work togezzer at Pas_sake_--you know? 18954 Vell, vat you do here, huh?" |
18954 | We got through one night anyway, hey? |
18954 | We''re not going to keep on hiking it tonight, are we? |
18954 | Well, I did n''t say he did n''t, did I? |
18954 | Well-- what-- do you-- know about that? |
18954 | Well-- what-- do-- you-- know-- about-- that? |
18954 | What d''you know about that? |
18954 | What d''you s''pose I dived forr that glass forr? |
18954 | What d''you s''pose happened? |
18954 | What d''you think it means? |
18954 | What did neighbor Le Farge say, mamma? |
18954 | What do you s''pose it was? |
18954 | What do you s''pose that shot was? |
18954 | What do you say? |
18954 | What do you suppose that sound was? |
18954 | What do you wish here? |
18954 | What else can we do? |
18954 | What good are those? |
18954 | What have I done? |
18954 | What have you got? |
18954 | What is it? |
18954 | What is it? |
18954 | What is it? |
18954 | What is this place? |
18954 | What was it? |
18954 | What''d you do that for? 18954 What''s on the east of Alsace, anyway?" |
18954 | What''s the idea? |
18954 | What''s the matterr? |
18954 | What? |
18954 | Where are you? |
18954 | Where would they send you? |
18954 | Wherre arre ourr coats? |
18954 | Wherre do you suppose it is? |
18954 | Who''s talking about souvenirs? 18954 Why did n''t they take us, too?" |
18954 | Why did n''t you bring the whole of it? |
18954 | Wish I had a knife.--Have you got that piece of wire yet? |
18954 | Wo ist sie? |
18954 | Yes, it was busted; did you want that, too? |
18954 | You German-- no? |
18954 | You German? 18954 You are American?" |
18954 | You are not German? |
18954 | You are not afraid of zem? |
18954 | You do n''t mean they''ll take you like they took the people from Belgium, do you? |
18954 | You do n''t s''pose we could have swum across in ourr sleep, do you? |
18954 | You haff a peekneek here, huh? |
18954 | You know Alsace-- no? 18954 You know Jeb Rushmore at Temple Camp? |
18954 | You know ze cave vere ze Scotch man live? 18954 You laughed at me for always gettin''sooveneerrs; now you see---- What you want it for?" |
18954 | You see? 18954 You see?" |
18954 | You want to make a treaty, huh? 18954 You will drink zhust a leetle-- yess?" |
18954 | Ze Americans? |
18954 | Zey are all like you? |
18954 | Ziss is ze cave-- you see? |
18954 | _ Now_ what have you got to say, huh? 18954 _ What_?" |
18954 | ''Cause they_ think_ that way, see? |
18954 | Am I right? |
18954 | Am I right?" |
18954 | And if it did, what hope was there of reaching her, or of rescuing her? |
18954 | And the cap, too? |
18954 | And the mother-- where was she? |
18954 | Answer low-- Is your mother here?" |
18954 | At last the one who seemed to be the spokesman said,"Ve make a treaty, huh?" |
18954 | CHAPTER VI PRISONERS AGAIN"Do you hear footsteps?" |
18954 | CHAPTER XIV A RISKY DECISION"Did you notice that Victrola?" |
18954 | CHAPTER XVIII IN THE RHINE"What do you say?" |
18954 | CHAPTER XXII BREAKFAST WITHOUT FOOD CARDS"Do you know what I think?" |
18954 | CHAPTER XXIV MILITARY ETIQUETTE"What did you mean by the_ what- d''-you call it?_"Tom asked, as they rowed through the darkness for the Baden shore. |
18954 | Ca n''t you see therre''s a German flag on a flagpole?" |
18954 | Can we not be a little patient now?" |
18954 | Could he have heard aright? |
18954 | Could it be that this furnished a clew to the whereabouts of Florette Leteur? |
18954 | Could there be another Swiss toymaker, and another cottage and another squawking cuckoo, exactly like the others? |
18954 | Did n''t I give old Marshal What''s- his- name an elastic band to put around his paperrs?" |
18954 | Did n''t we just put one overr on''em?" |
18954 | Did n''t you hearr me call to you it was lost and I was goin''down f''rr''t?" |
18954 | Did n''t you say you wanted it so''s you could see that fellerr Blondel''s house from the mountains? |
18954 | Do you mean a scrap o''paperr?" |
18954 | Do you think I''d take a chance staying there? |
18954 | For a moment Tom did not speak, then looking straight at Archer, he said,--"You do n''t forget how she helped us, do you?" |
18954 | French?" |
18954 | From prison you escape, huh?" |
18954 | Got some matches?" |
18954 | Had they, in this remote wilderness, stumbled upon some obscure pass which the all- seeing eye of German militarism had not forgotten? |
18954 | How can she send letters to Germany, her enemy?" |
18954 | How can she send us letters from Armand, my dear? |
18954 | How do we know who''s wandering round? |
18954 | How do you like being a botch, anyway?" |
18954 | How you came with ziss button-- yess? |
18954 | I knew you were French on account of the fleur- de- lis on the end of your flagpole----""And ze button-- yess?" |
18954 | I s''pose that''s where we belong-- most of all----""Is that what you think?" |
18954 | I sang ze_ Marseillaise_--you know?" |
18954 | I''m a smarrt lad, huh? |
18954 | If two American boys could melt the wires and walk out, what would happen next? |
18954 | If you''rre under sixteen what part of the arrmy do they put you in? |
18954 | Is it not so?" |
18954 | Is not this enough? |
18954 | Is your mother here?" |
18954 | Iss he not a bad boy? |
18954 | Iss it so? |
18954 | It is like-- it is like ze stepfather-- you see?" |
18954 | It might be Berrlin, hey?" |
18954 | It''s a big one, huh?" |
18954 | It''s good you happened to think about looking for footprints, hey?" |
18954 | Look at my hand, will you?" |
18954 | Maybe you''rre a generral, hey? |
18954 | See this? |
18954 | See?" |
18954 | So it ai n''t a question of what_ we''rre_ goin''to do; it''s a question of: Are_ you_ with me? |
18954 | Some are sent back with-- what you say? |
18954 | Some grim Prussian sentinel? |
18954 | South it goes-- you see?" |
18954 | There is n''t any harm in that, is there?" |
18954 | They hit''em four times instead of two-- do you know why?" |
18954 | They''ve got theirr firrst taste of a_ Yankee_ treaty, hey? |
18954 | Think I want to run plunk into the Prussian soldier that walked over our heads? |
18954 | This is the only thing about Gerrmany that''s on the level, hey?" |
18954 | To bring back so many prisoners-- wounded? |
18954 | Vy shall you talk, huh?" |
18954 | Was there, after all, any hope of escape from these demons of efficiency? |
18954 | We win either way, see? |
18954 | We''ll tell him we''rre herre to back the Kaiser, hey?" |
18954 | Were they all alike, the lonesome denizens of this spooky place, like the wooden inhabitants of a Noah''s ark? |
18954 | What d''ye say?" |
18954 | What did it matter? |
18954 | What did it mean? |
18954 | What did that shot mean, and where was it? |
18954 | What had happened? |
18954 | What would he ever have done if the girl who spoke English in such a hesitating, pretty way had taken it into_ her_ head to kiss him? |
18954 | What you say in Amerique-- make two and two together-- yess? |
18954 | What''s that shining over there? |
18954 | Who had walked across the plank roof of that musty prison? |
18954 | Who have sent you?" |
18954 | Who was it, standing there? |
18954 | Why did Florette not come? |
18954 | Why is zere needed a road to ze river? |
18954 | Why is zere needed ze new road above Basel? |
18954 | Would n''t it seem funny not daring to speak to an officerr therre? |
18954 | Yess?" |
18954 | Yess?" |
18954 | Yess?" |
18954 | You do n''t think I''m a- scarred of_ you_, do you? |
18954 | You escape-- ach, vat iss dis?" |
18954 | You know heem?" |
18954 | You know what our great Napoleon say? |
18954 | You know what ziss shall be? |
18954 | You know?" |
18954 | You see? |
18954 | You see? |
18954 | You see? |
18954 | You see? |
18954 | You see? |
18954 | You see?" |
18954 | You see?" |
18954 | Zey do not follow you-- you are what you say-- too clevaire? |
18954 | Ziss is ze way-- yess? |
18954 | _ By ze blue flag with one black spot!_ Yess? |
18954 | _ You_ need n''t talk; if it had n''t been for that wire, where''d we be now? |
18954 | he added conciliatingly,"as long as we''ve got the glass?" |
18954 | he asked, looking from one to the other;"the name-- Leteur? |
18954 | he laughed with a kind of irritating hilarity;"why should zey make ziss road? |
14004 | Are you sincere in what you say? |
14004 | Did n''t you? |
14004 | Do you really think,said Lincoln,"that announcement was the occasion of my nomination?" |
14004 | Dr. Bateman, will you measure us? |
14004 | Is dat''rithmetic? |
14004 | Oh, does he? |
14004 | What do you mean? |
14004 | Who knew how many wives he had? |
14004 | Who wrote the play? |
14004 | Why not? 14004 Why not? |
14004 | ''A school of events?'' |
14004 | ''And did you expect to meet a savage?'' |
14004 | ''Are you sure?'' |
14004 | ''Can you build this bridge?'' |
14004 | ''Did Lincoln authorize you to sign it?'' |
14004 | ''Did Lincoln give you an order of that kind?'' |
14004 | ''Did Mr. Lincoln ever read this book?'' |
14004 | ''Did Stanton say I was a d----d fool?'' |
14004 | ''Did you submit fully under the first loss?'' |
14004 | ''Do you mean to say the President is a d----d fool?'' |
14004 | ''Do you think we shall elect a Free- soil President in 1860?'' |
14004 | ''Have you ever heard about Sykes''s yellow dog?'' |
14004 | ''Hello,''said he,''what is it?'' |
14004 | ''How is that brought about?'' |
14004 | ''How is that?'' |
14004 | ''How much?'' |
14004 | ''If I sign this list as a whole, will you be responsible for the future good behavior of these men?'' |
14004 | ''That is so,''one of them says; I wonder if he is a Kentuckian? |
14004 | ''Well,''said Mr. Lincoln, after Mr. Winslow had finished,''well, Commodore Smith, what do you think of it?'' |
14004 | ''What for?'' |
14004 | ''What is it?'' |
14004 | ''What is it?'' |
14004 | ''What is it?'' |
14004 | ''What luck had you?'' |
14004 | ''Where is Lincoln?'' |
14004 | ''Where is it?'' |
14004 | ''Where is your room?'' |
14004 | ''Who?'' |
14004 | ''Why do n''t you get rid of him, then?'' |
14004 | ''Why not let_ us_ make them a little more conventional, and file them to a classical pattern?'' |
14004 | ''Why,''said the President,''have you not read those papers? |
14004 | ''Will you act as clerk of the election to- day?'' |
14004 | ''Will you take us and our trunks to the steamer?'' |
14004 | ''Would you have a Judge with no preconceived notions of law?'' |
14004 | ''Would you_ pack_ the Supreme Court?'' |
14004 | ''You, then, take the responsibility of your acts, do you?'' |
14004 | ''_] If not, then why shall we not, as heretofore, be recognized and acknowledged as brethren again, living in peace and harmony, one with another? |
14004 | A little past midnight the question came again from Lincoln,"Brough, what is your majority by this time?" |
14004 | After having expressed his thanks to Anderson for his conduct in South Carolina, Lincoln said,"Major, do you remember ever meeting me before?" |
14004 | And did he stop and speak to you?" |
14004 | And what if all should fail? |
14004 | And who that thinks with me will not fearlessly adopt the oath I take? |
14004 | Anything busted?" |
14004 | Are all the common ones so grand, And all the titled ones so mean? |
14004 | Are you going to split the Ohio down through, and push your half off a piece? |
14004 | Are you not over- cautious when you assume that you can not do what the enemy is constantly doing? |
14004 | As he read it his face became like lead, and I said,''What shall be done?'' |
14004 | As soon as I had assisted him in checking his steed, the President said to me:''He came pretty near getting away with me, did n''t he? |
14004 | As soon as the inquiry had been made, Lincoln''s face began lighting up, and he said:"What has become of our old friend Bob Lewis, of DeWitt County? |
14004 | At the close he asked,"Has the Friend finished?" |
14004 | At what point shall we expect the approach of danger? |
14004 | At what point, then, is the approach of danger to be expected? |
14004 | Brough was at hand, and directly the electric voice inquired,"Brough, about what is your majority now?" |
14004 | Browning asked,"And did you once see Shelley plain? |
14004 | But how if she votes herself a slave State unfairly-- that is, by the very means for which you would hang men? |
14004 | But is it entirely politic to read or speak it as it is written?" |
14004 | Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can make law? |
14004 | Can it be that there are opposing opinions in the North as to the necessity of putting down this rebellion? |
14004 | Can not this last bloody battle be avoided?'' |
14004 | Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens than laws can among friends? |
14004 | Can you not help me a little in this matter in your end of the vineyard? |
14004 | Can you there, any more than here, raise corn and wheat and oats without work? |
14004 | Change positions with the enemy, and think you not he would break your communication with Richmond within the next twenty- four hours? |
14004 | Chase?'' |
14004 | Do n''t you know that we are in the midst of war? |
14004 | Do n''t you see it?" |
14004 | Do n''t you wish so too?" |
14004 | Do you remember a story that Bob used to tell us about his going to Missouri to look up some Mormon lands that belonged to his father? |
14004 | Do you suppose that I will condescend to break a lance with your low and obscure colleague?'' |
14004 | Do you take the President of the United States to be a commission broker? |
14004 | Does your plan involve a greatly larger expenditure of_ time_ and_ money_ than mine? |
14004 | Free them all, and keep them among us as underlings? |
14004 | Free them, and make them politically and socially our equals? |
14004 | Had he been called of God to the throne of power at such a time as this, to be the leader and deliverer of the people? |
14004 | Had she wronged both men? |
14004 | Has anything ever threatened the existence of this Union save and except this very institution of slavery? |
14004 | He had done, he contemplated doing, no wrong, no injustice to any citizen of the United States; why then should there be a desire to strike him down? |
14004 | He laughed and said,''Ca n''t the party raise better material than that?'' |
14004 | He passed the sheet, on which he had written the verses, to me, saying,''Have you ever read them?'' |
14004 | He said to a gentleman who called upon Mrs. Lincoln,"Do you think, sir, that my father has gone to heaven?" |
14004 | He then remarked to me,''Hannah, what did I tell you? |
14004 | Hearts are mourning in the North, While the sister rivers seek the main, Red with our life- blood flowing forth-- Who shall gather it up again? |
14004 | Here a dispute arose, when Jim said,"Now, you''spose three pigeons sit on that fence, and somebody shoot one of dem; do t''other two stay dar? |
14004 | His response was,''Where did you find it?'' |
14004 | How am I to know that you did not lose it by a trap after getting into somebody''s orchard?'' |
14004 | How can anyone who abhors the oppression of the negroes be in favor of degrading classes of white people? |
14004 | How can men hesitate a moment as to the duty of the Government to restore its authority in every part of the country? |
14004 | How could I be? |
14004 | How would you look taking an oath to support what you declare is an ungodly Constitution, and asking God to help you?'' |
14004 | How, then, shall we perform it? |
14004 | I am a plain, common man, like the rest of you; and why should not I have as good a right to speak my sentiments as the rest of you? |
14004 | I said:''For whom are you going to ring?'' |
14004 | If not recruited and rested then, when could they ever be? |
14004 | If this had been said among Marion''s men, Southerners though they were, what would have become of the man who said it? |
14004 | If this is true, how do you propose to improve the condition of things by enlarging slavery?--by spreading it out and making it bigger? |
14004 | If you ca n''t now live with the land, how will you then live without it? |
14004 | In case of a disaster, would not a retreat be more difficult by your plan than mine? |
14004 | In fact, would it not be_ less_ valuable in this, that it would break no great line of the enemy''s communication, while mine would? |
14004 | Is it quite certain that this betters their condition? |
14004 | Is slavery wrong? |
14004 | Is the land any richer? |
14004 | Is there never one in all the land, One on whose might the Cause may lean? |
14004 | Is there no hour or spot when or where I may escape these constant calls? |
14004 | It forces us to ask,''Is there, in all Republics, this inherent and fatal weakness? |
14004 | Jim answered,"No; what is''rithmetic?" |
14004 | Lincoln calmly retorted,"Senator, that is just about the distance from here to the Capitol, is it not?" |
14004 | Lincoln, how often have you sworn to support the Constitution? |
14004 | Lincoln?" |
14004 | Lincoln?'' |
14004 | Lincoln?'' |
14004 | Listening to the despatch, he asked,''What does Stanton say?'' |
14004 | Looking at the different boats, they singled out mine and asked,''Who owns this?'' |
14004 | More than once he exclaimed,''Must more blood be shed? |
14004 | Mr. Chase, wo n''t you make a draft of what you think ought to be inserted?" |
14004 | Mr. Lincoln, imitating the bird, said:''_ Tweet, tweet, tweet_; is n''t he singing sweetly?'' |
14004 | Mr. Lincoln, who was still standing, said,''Threatened to_ shoot you_?'' |
14004 | Must a Government, of necessity, be too strong for the liberties of its own people, or too weak to maintain its own existence?''" |
14004 | Must she still be admitted, or the Union dissolved? |
14004 | Nasby?'' |
14004 | Now, what would they think of their_ honest_ Abe if he should make such an appointment as the one proposed?" |
14004 | Of his poor mother lying beneath the tangled underbrush in a distant forest? |
14004 | Of that other grave in the quiet Concord cemetery? |
14004 | Of the mighty changes which had lifted him from the lowest to the highest estate on earth? |
14004 | Of the weary road which had brought him to this lofty summit? |
14004 | Oh, what will the country say_?'' |
14004 | Or are you going to keep it right alongside of us outrageous fellows? |
14004 | Said he,''Young man, do you see that gun?'' |
14004 | Says I,''Abe, what are you studying?'' |
14004 | Says he,''Smoot, did you vote for me?'' |
14004 | Shall we befriend her?" |
14004 | Shall we expect some transatlantic military giant to step the ocean and crush us at a blow? |
14004 | Should you not claim to be at least his equal in prowess, and act upon the claim? |
14004 | Slowly and distinctly he read the first paragraph, and then turned to Herndon with,"What do you think of that?" |
14004 | Speaking of this incident next day, he said,"Did you notice that sunburst? |
14004 | That suffering and death press upon all of us? |
14004 | That there is no room left for them? |
14004 | That works of humanity and affection, which we would cheerfully perform in days of peace, are all trampled upon and outlawed by war? |
14004 | The President regarded the old man for an instant with dry eyes, and said,''_ What will the country say? |
14004 | The President said:"Seward, you never heard, did you, how I earned my first dollar?" |
14004 | The father''s face frightened her and she cried,''What is wrong, husband?'' |
14004 | The question recurs, How shall we fortify against it? |
14004 | They got so far in half an hour that Lincoln could say, in his hearty way:"Colonel, how tall are you?" |
14004 | They lingered bashfully near the door, and Lincoln, noticing their embarrassment, rose and said good- naturedly,"How do you do, my good fellows? |
14004 | To the question, When is the war to end? |
14004 | Two young contrabands, as we have learned to call them, were seated together, when one said to the other,"Jim, do you know''rithmetic?" |
14004 | Was it possible to lose the nation and yet preserve the Constitution? |
14004 | Was there presaged to him a vision of that grander review of our victorious armies at the close of the war, which he was not to see?" |
14004 | Well, then, I want to know what you are going to do with your half of it? |
14004 | What can I do for you? |
14004 | What can you do in Missouri better than here? |
14004 | What did he think of? |
14004 | What do you suppose he wants?" |
14004 | What do you want?'' |
14004 | What has ever threatened our liberty and prosperity, save and except this institution of slavery? |
14004 | What have I done, or omitted to do, which has provoked the hostility of the''Tribune''?" |
14004 | What if he should love her still, and should return and find her wedded to another? |
14004 | What if the resources of the Government should prove inadequate, and its enemies too powerful to be subdued by force? |
14004 | What is it that we hold most dear among us? |
14004 | What is yours?'' |
14004 | What next? |
14004 | What ruler ever won it like this President of ours? |
14004 | What shall I do?'' |
14004 | What tells you the thing must be rooted out?'' |
14004 | What then? |
14004 | What would not that man achieve for mankind who should free America from slavery? |
14004 | What''s the matter?'' |
14004 | What''s the matter?'' |
14004 | What''s this? |
14004 | When General Burnside was about to leave, the President inquired,''Is there anything, my dear General, that I can do for you?'' |
14004 | When he came back I said,''Doctor, what have you to say now?'' |
14004 | When shall I come, and how long will you need me each time?'' |
14004 | When the President turned to me, I asked whether we might not look to him as the coming deliverer of the nation from its one great evil? |
14004 | When they were about to part, the minister said:"Mr. Lincoln, may I say one thing to you before we separate?" |
14004 | When they were done, Mr. Lincoln said,''Gentlemen, why do you bring this matter to me? |
14004 | When they were fairly on the platform, and a short distance from the car, I stepped forward and accosted the President:''How are you, Lincoln?'' |
14004 | Wherein is a victory more certain by your plan than mine? |
14004 | Wherein is a victory_ more valuable_ by your plan than mine? |
14004 | While he was so engaged, several old friends, who had learned of his arrival, rushed in to see him, some of them shouting,''How are you, Old Abe?'' |
14004 | Why can you not reach there before him, unless you admit that he is more than your equal on the march? |
14004 | Why do you come here to appeal to my humanity? |
14004 | Why do you follow me here with such business as this? |
14004 | Why do you not go to the War- office, where they have charge of all this matter of papers and transportation?" |
14004 | Why is it? |
14004 | Why is it?'' |
14004 | Why not take it to the Department having these things in charge?'' |
14004 | Why not?" |
14004 | Why not?" |
14004 | Why should he, with so many burdens upon him, and with such necessity for solace in his home and his affections, be brought into so tender a trial? |
14004 | Will any body there, any more than here, do your work for you? |
14004 | Will you let my name stay on the old sign till I come back from Washington?" |
14004 | Will you make war upon us and kill us all? |
14004 | Will you pardon me for asking what the horses of your army have done since the battle of Antietam that fatigues anything?" |
14004 | Will you sit down?" |
14004 | Would you have gone out of the House-- skulked the vote? |
14004 | Would you have voted what you felt and knew to be a lie? |
14004 | said Mr. Lincoln,''how are they getting along down there?'' |
14004 | said the boy,''do n''t you see he is gnawing his rope off? |
13942 | Ah, gentlemen, what you say? 13942 And in what regiment?" |
13942 | And you have bees, too-- don''t they sting the children, and give you a great deal of trouble? 13942 And, hast thou forgotten, friend John, the ear of Indian corn which my father begged of thee for me? |
13942 | But,you say,"how can I find out whether a book is good or bad, without reading it?" |
13942 | Did you compose it? |
13942 | Do they not know that even truth is not to be spoken at all times? 13942 Has a son with him then?" |
13942 | He''ll drop at last,said the corporal,"and what will become of his boy?" |
13942 | How dead? 13942 How?" |
13942 | Is he in the army, then? |
13942 | Is it possible? |
13942 | Is n''t she the best mother in the world? |
13942 | Is something forgotten? |
13942 | Methinks I hear some of you say,''Must a man afford himself no leisure?'' 13942 O is not love a marvel Which one can not unravel? |
13942 | Sha n''t we be lonesome next winter? |
13942 | So what signifies wishing and hoping for better times? 13942 Then what is to become of his poor boy?" |
13942 | They say I do not trust Englishmen; do I mistrust Gordon Pasha? 13942 To what end,"says the former,"have I studied hard, and widened my resources? |
13942 | WHO IS THIS FELLOW? |
13942 | Well, what have you come for, Samuel? |
13942 | What are you reading? |
13942 | What deposit? |
13942 | What, sir,said one of the royal princes to La Fayette,"do you really demand the assembling of a general congress of France?" |
13942 | Where did you get it? |
13942 | Who did you say was waiting for me? |
13942 | Who has honor? 13942 Why from thy defenseless father,"He cried,"dost thou turn in flight? |
13942 | Why, general,asked the young man,"what do you want with such a place of torment as hell?" |
13942 | Why, how can people be so heedless? |
13942 | ''Do you so?'' |
13942 | ***** Conclusion, True worker with the Lord, He labors not for hire; Co- partner in the sure reward, What can he more desire? |
13942 | ***** Now and Here O not to- morrow or afar, Thy work is now and here; Thy bosom holds the fairest star-- Dost see it shining clear? |
13942 | ***** With His Foes The king of beasts was dead-- By an old hero slain; Did dreams of honey for his bread Dance through the hero''s brain? |
13942 | A man must have a backbone, or how is he to hold his head up? |
13942 | After all, the difficulty to be got over is this-- how is mankind to be taught to take a just estimate of things? |
13942 | All men, almost, agreed with all men that slavery was wrong; but what can we do? |
13942 | An old tree is picturesque, an old castle venerable, an old cathedral inspires awe-- why should man be worse than his works? |
13942 | And a great voice above him ask,"Dost thou thy brethren own?" |
13942 | And after all, of what use is this pride of appearance, for which so much is risked, so much is suffered? |
13942 | And ask not, What doth God require At the Eternal Day? |
13942 | And is it not, therefore, even independently of myths and mysteries, entitled to be called the divine art?" |
13942 | And shall we forfeit hope Because the fountains Are up the mighty slope Of yonder mountains? |
13942 | And the words? |
13942 | And thou, O human will, As wondrous as the light, Cans''t thou thy little trust fulfill Save through Another''s might? |
13942 | And vanished the Star forever, When they turned from the Child away? |
13942 | And want to get it back?" |
13942 | And we must not be indefinite: begin what? |
13942 | And what excuse is there, after all, for running the terrible risk? |
13942 | And what shall I utter to comfort The heart that is dearest of all? |
13942 | And what was Wordsworth''s conduct under this unequaled experience of bad faith and bad feeling? |
13942 | And who can calculate the money- value to commerce in the production of instruments used in the application of electricity to medicine? |
13942 | And will ye now despond Amid consuming toil, When there is hope and joy beyond Which death can not despoil? |
13942 | And, lastly, what are our thoughts and struggles, vain ideas, and wishes? |
13942 | Are there not some few among you with courage to lead where multitudes would follow-- some to whom a kind Providence has given liberty of action? |
13942 | Are they weak, puny men, or men of physique? |
13942 | Are you then your own master? |
13942 | Art thou a mourner here? |
13942 | Art thou my friend, blue, sparkling sea? |
13942 | Art thou of both possessed? |
13942 | Beneath their grievous task Did not his kindred groan? |
13942 | But do not the purest and most beautiful conceptions of man partake of a divine character? |
13942 | But how will the bundles mix? |
13942 | But in how much obscurity are these difficult problems involved? |
13942 | But what shall I say to the prostitution of this art to purposes of iniquity? |
13942 | But when Winter came, and the gleaming snow spread its unbroken silence over hill and plain, was it not dreary then? |
13942 | But who doth remember the gloom and the night, When the sky is aglow with the beautiful light? |
13942 | Can he who owns her rule supreme From her caresses turn? |
13942 | Can not you get somebody else to speak? |
13942 | Canst show a finer touch, A grain of purer lore--"I could not love thee, dear, so much, Loved I not honor more?" |
13942 | Could he believe that the grand lady, all blazing with jewels, and whom every body seemed to worship, would really sing his little song? |
13942 | Could n''t she help her boys, for whom she was ready to die? |
13942 | Do you say that you can find no work worth the doing? |
13942 | Does old age need its apologies and its defenders? |
13942 | Dost see how calm they are? |
13942 | Dost thou truly love? |
13942 | Dost wait for perfect good In man or womanhood? |
13942 | Enough, this beginning? |
13942 | Evil In the great wilderness Through which I hold my way, Is there no refuge from distress, Where foes are kept at bay? |
13942 | For the bud it never unfolded, The light it flickered away, And whose is the power to utter The grief of that bitterest day? |
13942 | For who is able to judge this thy so great a people?'' |
13942 | Friendly Readers: Last time I made a book I trod on some people''s corns and bunions, and they wrote me angry letters, asking,"Did you mean me?" |
13942 | Has he a crook in the back? |
13942 | Hast eyes to read the poem? |
13942 | Hast music in thy heart, O toiler day by day, Along life''s rugged way? |
13942 | Hast thou no thought or care? |
13942 | Have you been told this before? |
13942 | He fires up at once:"Twelve, did you say, sir? |
13942 | He heard the psalm of peace, He sought again the plow; O civic toil, canst thou increase The laurels for his brow? |
13942 | His faults are many-- Hast thou not any? |
13942 | His form is yet before me, With the fair and lofty brow, And the day since last we kissed it-- Is it long since then and now? |
13942 | How could their lives flow on evenly together? |
13942 | How did he recompense all this exertion and endurance oh his behalf? |
13942 | How is thy heart protected? |
13942 | How much of addition to human comfort that one sentence includes, who can estimate? |
13942 | How shall we ever be able to pay them? |
13942 | I have made one mistake? |
13942 | I hear their voice--"Come, play, rejoice; Come, be as happy as are we; Why should you not thus happy be?" |
13942 | I want to ask them if they suppose our eyesight is not so sharp as theirs? |
13942 | I wish mother could help; but, then I guess mother''s--""Help how?" |
13942 | If God be for us, who can be against us? |
13942 | If the world brings not fruition, Must we in darkness grope? |
13942 | If thou hast no light on the subject, wilt thou gather into the stillness and reverently listen to thy own inward revealings? |
13942 | If you were a servant, would you not be ashamed that a good master should catch you idle? |
13942 | If your children were threatened with typhoid fever would you have time to go for the doctor? |
13942 | In gazing into heaven In idle ecstacy, What progress make ye to the haven Where ye at length would be? |
13942 | In less than a thousand years we shall all be bald and poor too, and who knows what he may come to before that? |
13942 | Is he beginning to stoop? |
13942 | Is he getting round- shouldered? |
13942 | Is it a benefit or a calamity? |
13942 | Is it possible to put old heads upon young shoulders? |
13942 | Is it so blessed and happy and flourishing as it seems to us? |
13942 | Is it so dreadful to grow old? |
13942 | Is not every thing better and brighter far then than in middle life? |
13942 | Is not the art of music generally acknowledged to be one of these? |
13942 | Is not youth a perpetual state of intoxication? |
13942 | Is the country delivered, since General La Fayette is in Paris?" |
13942 | Is the earth the limit To bright and beautiful hope? |
13942 | Is this-- is_ this_ thine album? |
13942 | Muscular strength, organic instincts, are all gone; but what then? |
13942 | Never? |
13942 | No Heaven in Truth and Love? |
13942 | Now, in such circumstances, what would a mean, calculating young man have done? |
13942 | O wouldst thou know The rarity Of Charity? |
13942 | O, what are peace and beauty That stop this side of God, Though infinite the distance Remaining to be trod?" |
13942 | O, what are peace and beauty, Except they stir the soul And make the man a hero, To gain some happier goal? |
13942 | One more extract:"Why should I, at every mile, be stared at by the grinning skulls of those who are at rest? |
13942 | One who knew how deeply the empire was indebted to him, wrote,"Can China tell how much she is indebted to Colonel Gordon? |
13942 | Or did he chafe at this: That pain is everywhere? |
13942 | People, he writes, should be taught by my example; they can not go beyond me--"What can he do that comes after the king?" |
13942 | Practically unknown when the sun went down one day, when it rose next morning all Boston was saying,"Who is this fellow? |
13942 | Put it into his money- box? |
13942 | Shall I pour your honor out a glass of sack to your pipe?" |
13942 | Shall our minds be the receptacle of every thing that an author has a mind to write? |
13942 | Shall there be no distinction between the tree of life and the tree of death? |
13942 | Shall we mire in impurity, and chase fantastic will- o''-the- wisps across the swamps, when we might walk in the blooming gardens of God? |
13942 | Shall we stoop down and drink out of the trough which the wickedness of men has filled with pollution and shame? |
13942 | Shone it not then in their bosoms, The light of Eternal Day? |
13942 | Something for nothing? |
13942 | Standing, as we do, chin- deep in fictitious literature, the first question that many of the young people are asking me is,"Shall we read novels?" |
13942 | THE TIMES WHEN HE APPEARED--"WHO IS THIS FELLOW?" |
13942 | The battle is set, The field to be won; What foes have you met, What work have you done? |
13942 | The girl you fall in love with may be silly and ill- favored; but what of that? |
13942 | The minstrel''s heart in sadness Was wrestling with his fate;"Am I the sport of madness,"He sighed,"and born too late?" |
13942 | The question commonly asked by visitors to that corner of Grasmere churchyard was: Where would_ she_ be laid when the time came? |
13942 | The reporters were here; when were they ever not? |
13942 | Then he whispered to me, saying:"Why do you remove that chair? |
13942 | This Album comes a- tapping At many a friendly door; Yea, gently, gently rapping--"Hast aught for me in store? |
13942 | This hard, calculating, mercenary youth, did he seize the chance of shaking off a most troublesome and injurious traveling companion? |
13942 | Thou that slavest, And self all spends; Thou that savest, And usest never; Thou that cravest, With no endeav- or, Thou that gavest, And hast forever? |
13942 | Too young for the losses and crosses, Too young for the rise and the fall? |
13942 | Troost?" |
13942 | WENDELL PHILLIPS.--THE TIMES WHEN HE APPEARED--"WHO IS THIS FELLOW?" |
13942 | Was she only"mother,"who prepared their meals and took care of their clothes? |
13942 | Was she too old to begin? |
13942 | We do not eat and drink for them: why should we lend them our ears and not our mouths? |
13942 | We touch at last the mysterious door-- are we to be pitied or to be envied? |
13942 | Well does Coventry Patmore sing:"Who is the happy husband? |
13942 | What accumulated objections arise when we wish to examine them with mathematical rigor? |
13942 | What are examples and citations to them? |
13942 | What are ninety- two years compared with the years that open the first page of the future? |
13942 | What books and newspapers shall we read? |
13942 | What can I wish thee better Than that through all thy days,_ The spirit, not the letter_, Invite thy blame or praise? |
13942 | What cared he for money now? |
13942 | What could be the matter with me, an''please your honor?" |
13942 | What death?" |
13942 | What did the calculating wretch do with the money? |
13942 | What does the reader, who has his own work to do, care for a great multitude of details which are not needed for the setting of the picture? |
13942 | What had he done at that age to command more than ordinary respect and admiration? |
13942 | What is a Vanity Fair, a mob, a hubbub and babel of noises, to be avoided, shunned, hated? |
13942 | What is a monument of Aberdeen granite beside a monument of intellect and souls? |
13942 | What is altogether deceitful upon the scales? |
13942 | What is an epitaph of a few words cut by a sculptor''s chisel beside the epitaph of coming generations and hundreds writing his praise? |
13942 | What is the use of reading or hearing for other people? |
13942 | What mean the strange, hard words,"through tribulation?" |
13942 | What now shall fill these widowed arms? |
13942 | What shall we read? |
13942 | What then are toil and trouble, With strength to meet them, double? |
13942 | What though Spring is in the air, And the world is bright and fair? |
13942 | What though the triumph of thy fond forecasting Lingers till earth is fading from thy sight? |
13942 | What will friends be good for When the witness is needless they stood for? |
13942 | What would you advise us to do?" |
13942 | What''s in a name? |
13942 | When they had gone, the good mother quietly said,"Elizabeth, why did''st thou invite strangers, instead of thy schoolmates?" |
13942 | Whence honor, wealth, or fame, Which God delights to see? |
13942 | Where can a cow live and not get milked? |
13942 | Where is he now? |
13942 | Where will the ass go that he will not have to work? |
13942 | Where will you find land without stones, or meat without bones? |
13942 | Which stuck to you? |
13942 | Who are the leaders in the Churches? |
13942 | Who are the men prominent in the pulpit? |
13942 | Who is bravest Of my four friends? |
13942 | Who is there that, in logical words, can express the effect music has on us? |
13942 | Who is this Phillips?" |
13942 | Who is this eager stranger Dismounted so soon at the door? |
13942 | Who mourns the loss of liberty, With all things else secure? |
13942 | Who shall say how much inspiration the noble band of ministering women in our civil war derived from the heroine of the Crimea? |
13942 | Why are fifty per cent of the criminals in the jails and penitentiaries of the United States to- day under twenty- one years of age? |
13942 | Why are they created? |
13942 | Why do n''t they stop it? |
13942 | Why should it be odious and ridiculous? |
13942 | Why should we forget the dear sounds now she is our wife? |
13942 | Why will you go sounding your way amidst the reefs and warning buoys, when there is such a vast ocean in which you may voyage, all sail set? |
13942 | Why, at home you are at home, and what more do you want? |
13942 | Will not those heavy taxes quite ruin the country? |
13942 | With such a mother to counsel him, one is led to ask, how could John Quincy Adams_ help_ becoming a noble- minded and great man? |
13942 | Would 20,000,000 taels repay the actual service he has rendered to the empire?" |
13942 | Would you have time for the funeral? |
13942 | Would you have time to watch the progress of the disease? |
13942 | Would you like to come to my concert?" |
13942 | Wouldst have another gem In Friendship''s diadem? |
13942 | X. Dost give away thy heart, With all its sweet perfume? |
13942 | Yet, what is altogether lighter than vanity? |
13942 | You suddenly go in and say:"What are you doing?". |
13942 | and if I, in astonishment, echo,"Sick? |
13942 | continue what? |
13942 | cries out poor, melancholy, morbid Hamlet, striking on a vein of thought,"what''s Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba?" |
13942 | did I cry out?" |
13942 | in sadness I cried, Where is thy trust in the Crucified? |
13942 | said little Johnnie, who had taken no part in the talk; until now;"wo n''t mother be afraid? |
13942 | said she,"at what price can you buy it? |
13942 | who, who shall doubt Thy Master''s will was done? |
11881 | ''Tis true, but how do you know Van Zoon? |
11881 | And Joseph? |
11881 | And Madam Johnson, and everybody at your home? 11881 And how on it, wise but cryptic young sir?" |
11881 | And it feels damper to the face? |
11881 | And so Colden is coming up? 11881 And so you''re an orator, are you?" |
11881 | And that is the final answer? 11881 And the Onondaga?" |
11881 | And the great rain and flood, how did you meet that obstacle? |
11881 | And the lands, Benjamin? |
11881 | And we have more long waiting in the dark to do? |
11881 | And what happened? |
11881 | And who is Black Rifle? |
11881 | And why should I change, you two young rascals? 11881 And you do n''t think it''s people of ours?" |
11881 | And you still find much of interest to see? |
11881 | And you think the French and Indians have gone away now? |
11881 | Are the French here too, Black Rifle? |
11881 | Are the great deeds of the Greeks and Romans still in your mind? |
11881 | Are you quite mad? 11881 Are you ready?" |
11881 | Are you speaking of my friend, Tayoga, of the Clan of the Bear, of the nation Onondaga, of the great League of the Hodenosaunee? 11881 Are you sure you''re no ghost?" |
11881 | As I know now, Dave, you''ve been in Paris, ca n''t you tell us something about the city? |
11881 | At least they''re likely to be brave men,said Willet,"and now what do you think will be our best manner of approaching''em?" |
11881 | Boy? 11881 But why are you not in the tent with the others, you who know so much more about conditions on the border than any man who is in there?" |
11881 | But you know the coast well, of course, captain? |
11881 | Can it be some trouble among the Ganeagaono? |
11881 | Dave,he said to the hunter,"have you any plans for us in New York?" |
11881 | Did I not tell you that he was a friend, a most excellent friend of ours? |
11881 | Did I say they were lost? 11881 Did not our teacher in Albany tell us it was proof of a lazy nature to sleep while the sun was rising? |
11881 | Did we really see him? |
11881 | Did you see any name on the wrecked schooner? |
11881 | Did you see it, Will? 11881 Did you see signs of any white men, Dave?" |
11881 | Did you see, Dave? 11881 Do n''t you think the wind is rising a bit, Tayoga?" |
11881 | Do you believe that Tayoga has anything to do with it? |
11881 | Do you expect early service, Lieutenant Grosvenor? |
11881 | Do you feel quite sure that we''re still besieged? |
11881 | Do you find my words so amusing? |
11881 | Do you have a tavern in mind? |
11881 | Do you know the general''s plans for tomorrow? |
11881 | Do you know, Dave, old friend,said Hardy,"that our good Jonathan is really the most wicked of us all? |
11881 | Do you mean, then, that Tayoga is gone? |
11881 | Do you remember, Tayoga, how wild you wass when you came here to learn the good ways und bad ways uf the white people? |
11881 | Do you think Black Rifle hit his mark? |
11881 | Do you think St. Luc will venture to New York? |
11881 | Do you think they''ll go away and concentrate in front? |
11881 | Do you think they''ll try to rush us? |
11881 | Even if the Indians move up and besiege us in regular form? |
11881 | Friend,said Robert,"how far is it to New York?" |
11881 | Get through safely? |
11881 | Hark, Dagaeoga, did you hear the cry of a night bird? |
11881 | Have we our full crew on board, Miguel? |
11881 | Have you heard anything from Fort Refuge, and Colden and Wilton and the others? |
11881 | Have you heard the names of any of these Frenchmen? |
11881 | Have you seen many plays, Lennox? |
11881 | How are you feeling, Peter? |
11881 | How do you happen to know so much about me? |
11881 | How do you know that I will not proclaim at once who you are? |
11881 | How does it happen that you, a Quaker, are second in command here? |
11881 | How does it happen, Willet? |
11881 | How far is Fort Duquesne? |
11881 | How? |
11881 | I''m not seeking to be intrusive, but is it just business rivalry? |
11881 | Is Master Benjamin within, Jonathan? |
11881 | Is any play being given here? |
11881 | Is it Mr. Lennox or his ghost? |
11881 | Is it in very truth you, Master Willet? |
11881 | Is it true,asked Mynheer Van Zoon,"that David Willet in a duel with swords slew a famous bravo?" |
11881 | Is this wizardry? |
11881 | It was the same warlike fury that caused you to come here, build your fire and set no watch, expecting the woods to be as peaceful as Philadelphia? |
11881 | Must I tell you for the twentieth time that you do n''t know Tayoga as I know him? |
11881 | No, we''ll never be enemies, but why is it against nature? |
11881 | Nor I, but you saw the figure, did you not? |
11881 | Nor did you hear the captain called by name, either? |
11881 | So, you intend to leave the schooner? |
11881 | Tayoga,said Robert,"what do you think of it all?" |
11881 | That is I march tandem with my two natures, so to speak? |
11881 | The one that will march against Fort Duquesne? |
11881 | The warriors turn Tayoga back, Will? |
11881 | Then what coast is it? |
11881 | Then what, in Heaven''s name, is it? |
11881 | Then who is it? |
11881 | Then why does n''t he come in? |
11881 | Then you mean,he said,"that we are to burn the camp of the French and their allies?" |
11881 | To join the war, I surmise, and to get yourselves killed? |
11881 | Truly, and you take the mount on Cressy? |
11881 | Um- m. Is that so? 11881 We''ll find no French warships in the Hudson,"retorted Robert,"and as for sluggards, how long have you been on deck yourself, Tayoga?" |
11881 | Well, how''s our sailorman? |
11881 | Well, then, wherein am I wrong, Sir Robert the Omniscient? |
11881 | What can Adrian Van Zoon and I have in common? |
11881 | What can they want to say to us? |
11881 | What could have brought him here at such a time? |
11881 | What did the Frenchman want? |
11881 | What do they say? |
11881 | What do you find to laugh at in the loss of a good ship and a fine cargo? |
11881 | What do you like best about it, Lennox? |
11881 | What do you mean by that? |
11881 | What do you mean to do? |
11881 | What do you mean, Tayoga? |
11881 | What do you mean? |
11881 | What do you propose, Dave? |
11881 | What do you think, Tayoga? |
11881 | What does it mean? |
11881 | What duty, other than that of a spy, can have brought you to New York? |
11881 | What has happened, Dave? |
11881 | What help could he bring? |
11881 | What is it, Benjamin, that amuses you so vastly? |
11881 | What is it, Oagowa? |
11881 | What is it, Tayoga? |
11881 | What is it, Tayoga? |
11881 | What is it? |
11881 | What news, Black Rifle? |
11881 | What''s the news from Britain, Dave? 11881 Where are we going, chevalier?" |
11881 | Where did you find them? |
11881 | Where is Tayoga? |
11881 | Where shall we stop, Dave? |
11881 | Which way did you think of going in these warlike operations? |
11881 | Who are you? |
11881 | Who are you? |
11881 | Who are you? |
11881 | Who is he? |
11881 | Who is it who demands to be led to me? |
11881 | Who would have thought it? |
11881 | Who''s the great talker now? 11881 Why do you do that?" |
11881 | Why make it a duty? 11881 Why not?" |
11881 | Why should Tayoga leave us? |
11881 | Why was I not allowed to go with them? |
11881 | Why? |
11881 | Will it keep their huts and lodges from burning? |
11881 | Will you go forward and meet the Frenchman? 11881 Will you stay with me, Mr. Willet, and you also, Mr. Lennox, while I talk to them?" |
11881 | Would you und Tayoga like to haf your old room on the second floor? |
11881 | Yes, but why did you think it was he? |
11881 | You have been to our new city library? 11881 You knew him in his youth, Mynheer Van Zoon?" |
11881 | You liked it? |
11881 | You really mean that the French and Indians are here, that they''re planning to attack us tonight? |
11881 | You''re sure those cries were made by our enemies? |
11881 | Young Thayendanegea? 11881 A right good friend of ours, is n''t he, Tayoga? |
11881 | Ah, who is this?" |
11881 | Am I not goot enough as I am? |
11881 | And New York is so near? |
11881 | And as for Joseph, the lad there who so gallantly keeps step with the Onondaga, where will you find a white boy who can excel him? |
11881 | And do you not know him?" |
11881 | And if the Frenchman did happen to be right, what did he have to fear in New York, surrounded by friends? |
11881 | And if we beat St. Luc without the aid of a strong fort, why should n''t we beat you with it, Colonel de Courcelles?" |
11881 | And what did the talk at night between Willet and Hardy mean? |
11881 | And you, Tayoga, are you willing to go with us?" |
11881 | Are they well?" |
11881 | Are you satisfied now?" |
11881 | But again I ask you, why should I fear Adrian Van Zoon?" |
11881 | But have you no fears, David, that you will get him killed in the wars?" |
11881 | But how did you know it? |
11881 | But iss it Mynheer Willet beyond you? |
11881 | But it seems a world away from Philadelphia, does n''t it, Will? |
11881 | But the sentinel had caught a glimpse of the dusky figure, and he cried:"Who was he? |
11881 | By the way, what became of Miguel, with whom I worked so often?" |
11881 | Can it be possible, Wilton, that you are referring to him, when you talk of such humiliating subterfuges?" |
11881 | Can you not join this company of mine at my house for supper, and then we''ll all go together to the play? |
11881 | Can you tell us which is now the best inn in Albany?" |
11881 | Come now, is Master Benjamin within?" |
11881 | Did I not warn you in New York to beware of Mynheer Adrian Van Zoon?" |
11881 | Did he not know his red comrade? |
11881 | Did you see it?" |
11881 | Did you see?" |
11881 | Did you speak with him?" |
11881 | Do n''t you know that I must give warning of your presence?" |
11881 | Do n''t you know that your life is in danger every instant?" |
11881 | Do you find anything wrong with my reasoning, Hugh?" |
11881 | Do you hear me, Master Jonathan? |
11881 | Do you remain much longer in New York?" |
11881 | Do you remember him, Lennox?" |
11881 | Do you see anything in that tall tree to the east of the palisade?" |
11881 | Do you think these men will run away without a fight?" |
11881 | Do you think, Lennox, that he''ll get through safely?" |
11881 | Do you wonder that I felt like climbing out of a window at night, and escaping into the woods?" |
11881 | Eh, Will, my lad?" |
11881 | Feel better now?" |
11881 | For what reason had St. Luc spared him in the heat and fury of a desperate and losing battle? |
11881 | Had Robert seen a sign, a sign that had escaped all others? |
11881 | Haf I not in the past given the punishment to both uf you und am I not able to do it again, tall and strong as the two uf you haf grown? |
11881 | Hardy?" |
11881 | Have I done well with him?" |
11881 | Having come so far and at such uncommon risks, you will not content yourself with a single performance?" |
11881 | He could not doubt that St. Luc''s warning was earnest and important, but why should he have incurred such great risks to give it? |
11881 | He is well grown and he appears intelligent, does he not?" |
11881 | He shook hands with them both and the Onondaga gravely asked:"What news of my people, Waraiyageh?" |
11881 | How did you deceive the sharp eyes of Tandakora?" |
11881 | How long are we out from New York?" |
11881 | How many times must I tell you, Will, that Tayoga will come at the time appointed?" |
11881 | How many warriors has Daganoweda?" |
11881 | In what trade are they engaged, mostly?" |
11881 | Is Mr. Hardy here?" |
11881 | Iss not the house uf Jacobus Huysman good enough for you?" |
11881 | Jonathan, here, will be of our company, too, will he not?" |
11881 | Lennox?" |
11881 | Luc?" |
11881 | Luc?" |
11881 | Now which, think you, will prevail, the soldiers or the merchants?" |
11881 | Now, do n''t you?" |
11881 | Or was it because St. Luc was now spying upon the Anglo- American preparations? |
11881 | Robert''s said:"Why are you here? |
11881 | Robert, whom do you esteem the greatest of the Greek dramatic poets?" |
11881 | See you the big brick house with high stone steps? |
11881 | Shall I speak of this to Mr. Willet? |
11881 | The Onondaga was a peerless runner, he had been gone long now, and what would he find at the base of the smoke? |
11881 | There''s no stiffness, I hope?" |
11881 | Think you, I''d have taken such a risk to prepare you for a danger, if it were not real?" |
11881 | Was he following him? |
11881 | Was it because of some tie between them? |
11881 | What could a man born and bred in France, and only in recent years an inhabitant of Canada, know of Adrian Van Zoon of New York? |
11881 | What could a man want at such a place on such a night? |
11881 | What country is that? |
11881 | What did you mean when you said Captain Colden''s delay was due to the solution of a vexing problem?" |
11881 | What do you know of him?" |
11881 | What do you mean?" |
11881 | What do you see, Joseph?" |
11881 | What is it, Piet?" |
11881 | What is it?" |
11881 | What on earth can he want?" |
11881 | What say you to tomorrow morning at ten, James?" |
11881 | What say you, Tayoga?" |
11881 | What say you, Tayoga?" |
11881 | What was he to Adrian Van Zoon? |
11881 | What was the date of the battle of Hastings?" |
11881 | What was the date of the battle of Zama?" |
11881 | What, above all, could he know that would cause him to warn Robert against him? |
11881 | When would England help hers? |
11881 | Where have you been?" |
11881 | Where is that Indian? |
11881 | Where is the play of Richard III to be given, Benjamin?" |
11881 | Where shall I deliver my message?" |
11881 | Where was the motive? |
11881 | Who along the whole border had not heard of Captain Jack, known also as the Black Hunter, the Black Rifle and by many other names? |
11881 | Who are at the fire, Daganoweda?" |
11881 | Why do you incur such danger? |
11881 | Why not? |
11881 | Why should one inured as he was to the forest and winter, armed, provisioned and equipped with the greatcoat, be troubled? |
11881 | Why should the captain threaten him with a belaying pin if he did not stay in the cook''s galley for two days? |
11881 | Why should we exchange our warm house for your cold forest?" |
11881 | Why? |
11881 | Will you call your comrades, Mr. Willet? |
11881 | Will you help us too, Black Rifle?" |
11881 | Willet?" |
11881 | Willet?" |
11881 | Willet?" |
11881 | Wilton might not believe Tayoga could succeed, but how could this young Quaker know Tayoga as he knew him? |
11881 | You agree with me, do n''t you, Tayoga?" |
11881 | You carried the private letters from the Governor of New York to the Marquis Duquesne, Governor General of Canada?" |
11881 | You do n''t mean to say he''s gone?" |
11881 | You know, do n''t you, Lennox, that my colt, Cressy, has all Virginia beaten in speed?" |
11881 | You ride Blenheim yourself, of course?" |
11881 | You will let these lads see New Amsterdam, will you not? |
11881 | You''re quite sure you do n''t wish to consult your superior officer, Captain Colden?" |
11881 | and what was Adrian Van Zoon to him? |
11881 | asked Black Rifle,"that we meet here in the forest at such a time?" |
11881 | he roared in his queer mixture of English, Dutch and German accent"Iss it that your head hass been struck by lightning und you haf gone crazy? |
11881 | where, Tayoga?" |
18943 | A what? |
18943 | All right, old man,said the other;"spring it-- you''re through with me for good?" |
18943 | And how is it you''re not to bunk up there_ this_ year, since you like it so much? |
18943 | And now you know, you wo n''t tell? 18943 And would you call a girl a wild animal?" |
18943 | And you do know this fellow named Barnard, do n''t you? |
18943 | And you''ll come to meeting next Friday night? |
18943 | And you''re still in the bush, hey? 18943 And_ you_ will live in the pavilion in all your glory, wo n''t you?" |
18943 | Are there only three cabins up there? |
18943 | Are we going to carry the tent or send it up by the camp wagon? |
18943 | Are we going to hike to- morrow or are we going to the city? |
18943 | Are you going home soon? |
18943 | Are you going to play that geography game? |
18943 | Be kinder lonesome back home in Bridgebory, huh? 18943 But_ you_ wo n''t have to take tent space, will you?" |
18943 | Can you eat seven pieces? |
18943 | Can you name five animals that come from the North Pole? |
18943 | Case of look before you leap, hey? 18943 Did it hurt you?" |
18943 | Did n''t you as much as say you did n''t know anything about who made that application-- didn''t you? |
18943 | Did that job all by yourself, did n''t you? |
18943 | Did you? |
18943 | Do n''t you suppose I know where you stand? 18943 Do we go to the city?" |
18943 | Do you have to ask me that? |
18943 | Do you know Chocolate Drop? 18943 Do you know where Columbus is?" |
18943 | Do you know where it''s taking you_ this_ time? 18943 Do you like mince- pie?" |
18943 | Do you think I can do it in six weeks? |
18943 | Do you think Margaret could? |
18943 | En so yer ai n''t fer stayin'', Tommy? 18943 En yer ai n''t a goin''ter change yer mind en stay, Tommy?" |
18943 | Far? |
18943 | Fer why do n''t ye go up ter Blakeley''s? |
18943 | First season at camp? |
18943 | Getting back in line, all right? 18943 Goin''ter go out in it all alone?" |
18943 | H''lo, Slady,he said with a fine show of unconcern;"out for the early worm?" |
18943 | He ai n''t gone home, has he? |
18943 | He''s dead,Roy said;"do you fellows come from anywhere near Dayton?" |
18943 | Health? |
18943 | How about that, Tommy? |
18943 | How about the difficulties? |
18943 | How about the motor- boat-- and the girl? |
18943 | How about you, Tom? |
18943 | How are ye these days? |
18943 | I fell for you, hey Slady? 18943 I got a right to say he''s my visitor, have n''t I?" |
18943 | I suppose that''s how he happened to assign you the cabins,Connie Bennett observed;"old time''s sake, hey?" |
18943 | If ye''ll dance ye''ll pay the fiddler, hey? |
18943 | Is Dansburg on the map? |
18943 | Is it? 18943 Is that all right?" |
18943 | Is that what they think? |
18943 | Is your headache all gone? |
18943 | It''s a spot where they cut ice,said Roy;"shut up, will you?" |
18943 | Kind of a comic, hey? |
18943 | May n''t change yer mind, huh? |
18943 | No? 18943 Only the_ good_ things about me, hey, Tommy boy?" |
18943 | Phwat are ye standin''there for? |
18943 | Phwill ye evver fergit how you soaked me with the tomater? |
18943 | Red Cross nurse and wounded doughboy, hey? |
18943 | Shall I build a camp- fire? |
18943 | Slady----listen, Slady; as sure as I sit here... Are you listening, Slady? 18943 So that''s what you''ve been up to, hey?" |
18943 | So you boys used to be up on the hill, eh? |
18943 | So you''re all alone in camp, hey? 18943 Some jaunt, eh?" |
18943 | Sure, eh? |
18943 | That chap is a sketch, ai n''t he? |
18943 | Then will twenty- three dollars be enough to get back to that place where you live? |
18943 | Was it just an even hundred that you took, when you forgot about what you were doing, sort of? |
18943 | We''re losing_ you_, are n''t we? 18943 Well, how are things coming on?" |
18943 | Well, that makes two,said Roy mercilessly;"do you mean to tell me you do n''t know what''s- his- name-- Barnard? |
18943 | What are those fellows you were speaking about? 18943 What are you goin''home for?" |
18943 | What difference does it make what I mean? |
18943 | What do you call this? |
18943 | What do you mean, assigned them? |
18943 | What is them shell- holes? |
18943 | What part of Ohio do you fellows come from? |
18943 | What train yer thinkin''uv goin''daon on? |
18943 | What''s an isolated spot? |
18943 | What''s the matter with your hand? |
18943 | What? |
18943 | What? |
18943 | What? |
18943 | When did you say they come? |
18943 | Where''s the other fellow? |
18943 | Which are we going to do? |
18943 | Which three? |
18943 | Which three? |
18943 | Who would I tell? |
18943 | Who''s coming? |
18943 | Who''s excited? |
18943 | Who''s going to boss the meeting to- night? |
18943 | Who''s going to boss this meeting? 18943 Who''s writin''yer from out in Ohio? |
18943 | Why did n''t you hit into the main road and go down through Catskill? 18943 Why?" |
18943 | Will you keep them for me? |
18943 | Yer ai n''t cal''latin''on trimming yer timbers much are yer? |
18943 | Yer ai n''t thinkin''uv stayin''on, then? |
18943 | Yer be''nt in no hurry ter get back, huh? 18943 Yer got catched into one, huh?" |
18943 | Yer reckon to finish by August first? |
18943 | Yes? |
18943 | Yes? |
18943 | You can hear them plain up here,Tom said;"are your scouts fond of boating?" |
18943 | You do n''t call_ that_ lucky, do you? |
18943 | You do n''t mean you gave our three cabins on the hill to another troop? |
18943 | You got a letter? 18943 You got one too? |
18943 | You got to tell me who you are? |
18943 | You thought I''d never find out, did n''t you? 18943 You want to go to the North Pole now?" |
18943 | You''re going to bunk in the three cabins on the hill, are n''t you? 18943 You''re not?" |
18943 | You''ve put it all over me, you old hickory- nut, and I''ve told you the whole business, and you''ve got me in your power, see? |
18943 | ''Tain''t them kids from out Dayton way, I hope?" |
18943 | Ai n''t goin''ter think better of it, huh?" |
18943 | Am I right, Lucky Luke? |
18943 | Am I right? |
18943 | An apple out of a grocery store, or something like that? |
18943 | And how was that? |
18943 | And if I straighten things out that way nobody''ll get left, see? |
18943 | And making your headquarters up here? |
18943 | Anything doing?" |
18943 | Are you scared of girls?" |
18943 | Are you there all alone? |
18943 | Barnard?" |
18943 | Barnard?" |
18943 | Because you know how kids cross their fingers when they''re playing tag, so no one can tag them? |
18943 | Bridges, they may be nothing but shadows, hey? |
18943 | Buried alive; you remember that? |
18943 | Business before pleasure, hey? |
18943 | But did he forget about Tom, and miss him at the meetings? |
18943 | But one thing you may be sure of; he is still a Scout of the Scouts, and if you think he is too old to be a Scout, then how about Buffalo Bill? |
18943 | Ca n''t I see plain enough that you have your pioneer scout badge on? |
18943 | Ca n''t you see we are? |
18943 | Can I bunk up here with you? |
18943 | Can you beat that? |
18943 | Can you get up?" |
18943 | Can you guess the rest? |
18943 | Can you move your arms? |
18943 | Can you stay until they come?" |
18943 | Comrades to the death?" |
18943 | Did n''t I-- didn''t I ride my motorcycle all the way from Paris to the coast-- through the floods-- didn''t I? |
18943 | Did n''t you? |
18943 | Do n''t you?" |
18943 | Do you call me a quitter? |
18943 | Do you deny that you did? |
18943 | Do you get that?" |
18943 | Do you know what I am?" |
18943 | Do you know what I did?" |
18943 | Do you know what I''m thinking of doing? |
18943 | Do you remember showing me the Gold Cross and saying that you had won it while a scout in America? |
18943 | Do you remember that woodchuck skin you gave Roy? |
18943 | Do you think it''s going to be hard to make everything right? |
18943 | Do you think she will?" |
18943 | Do you think that a Scout is a quitter? |
18943 | Do you think_ you_ can tell me what to do?" |
18943 | Does your back hurt?" |
18943 | En your troop''s coming later, hain''t they? |
18943 | Ever hear of it? |
18943 | For a moment no one spoke, then Dorry Benton said,"Do you mean that?" |
18943 | Get me?" |
18943 | Going down, hey? |
18943 | Guess they wo n''t bother you up here much, hey? |
18943 | Had he not the power to straighten out his own mistake in the best possible way-- the scout way? |
18943 | Hain''t never seed each other, hey?" |
18943 | Have they got many merit badges?" |
18943 | Have you?" |
18943 | He seemed on the point of saying something in this connection, but all he did say was,"You find pleasure and relaxation in the work, Tom?" |
18943 | Hear what Lucky Luke says? |
18943 | Hey, Tommy boy? |
18943 | His companion seemed a bit uncomfortable but he only laughed and said,"Actions speak louder than words, do n''t they, Tommy? |
18943 | How about it, Tomasso?" |
18943 | How about that, old Doctor Slade?" |
18943 | How about the secret?" |
18943 | How could this be? |
18943 | How would that strike you? |
18943 | I am wondering whether you can be the same Tom Slade who was in the Motorcycle Corps in France? |
18943 | I guess people do n''t influence you much, hey?" |
18943 | I guess you''ll get home to- morrow night maybe, hey? |
18943 | I heard that fellow say,''Are you all right?'' |
18943 | I wo n''t run away-- don''t you believe me? |
18943 | I wonder if it''s that way with friendships, huh?" |
18943 | I''m here to finish that job with you-- what do you say? |
18943 | I''m learning, hey? |
18943 | If I was a quitter, do you suppose I''d have stuck up here?" |
18943 | If you wanted to give him our cabins, him and his troop, why did n''t you come and say so? |
18943 | If your troop comes on the afternoon train, maybe both troops will come up through the woods together, hey? |
18943 | It may be an easy trail or a hard trail, but the question is, where does it go to? |
18943 | It seems funny, kind of, does n''t it?" |
18943 | It''s you that win, old man-- can''t you see? |
18943 | Mr. Burton scrutinized him shrewdly and pursed up his lips and said,"Do n''t feel first rate, eh?" |
18943 | Nice and cosy, hey? |
18943 | Nothing important, huh?" |
18943 | One second, two seconds, three, four-- Would the pedestrian never appear? |
18943 | Pen and ink sleuths?" |
18943 | Quits?" |
18943 | Remote and secluded, eh? |
18943 | Right? |
18943 | Robbing Peter to pay Paul? |
18943 | Runs right up to the peak of the hill-- see?" |
18943 | Say to him,"You stole money; go ahead and escape; I''m with you?" |
18943 | See? |
18943 | Shall I dic-- shall I say what I want to tell them?" |
18943 | Shall we haul up the flagpole?" |
18943 | So now Uncle Jeb removed his pipe from his mouth, and said,"Reckoned you''d make a trip up, hey?" |
18943 | So_ now_ what have you got to say?" |
18943 | The Germans could make it look like a bridge where there was n''t any bridge-- don''t you remember?" |
18943 | The last time we met was in a hole in the ground, hey? |
18943 | Then he bethought him, and out of his simple, generous nature, he thought,"Did n''t he say actions speak louder than words? |
18943 | Then, when it came to a show down, what did he do? |
18943 | To be falsely accused, what was that, provided these boys lost nothing? |
18943 | Tom was older now, not only in years but in experience, and was it any wonder that his interest in"the kids"should be less keen? |
18943 | We''ve_ lived_ it, and that''s better, huh?" |
18943 | Well, here I am, as large as life, larger in fact, and now that I''m here, what are you going to do with me? |
18943 | What are you doing up there before the season opens, anyway? |
18943 | What are you doing, building a city? |
18943 | What did it mean? |
18943 | What did it mean? |
18943 | What did_ you_ ever steal? |
18943 | What difference did it make if they thought he had lied and deceived them, so long as_ he_ knew that he had not? |
18943 | What do you say? |
18943 | What in the world else could Tom Slade do? |
18943 | What is it? |
18943 | What mattered it who bunked in the cabins, so long as he knew what he knew now? |
18943 | What''s that; a light?" |
18943 | What''s the difference? |
18943 | What''s the trouble?" |
18943 | Who discovered America? |
18943 | Who shall say? |
18943 | Why ca n''t I lie low there till I can plan what to do next? |
18943 | Why ca n''t_ I_ go up to that lonely camp in the mountains and be Billy Barnard for a while? |
18943 | Why doan''t you put up four and let that Peewee kid hev one all by hisself?" |
18943 | Why should anybody make a hero of a young fellow just because he is not quite sure of himself in crossing the street, and because his mouth twitches? |
18943 | Will you stand there and say you do n''t know him?" |
18943 | With all the boys up here?" |
18943 | Wo n''t they have a perfectly_ scrumptious_ vacation together, talking about old times?" |
18943 | Would he ever forget that chance companion in peril, who had nursed him and cheered him all through that endless night? |
18943 | Would he ever forget the long night spent in that dank, dark shell- hole? |
18943 | Would n''t a place like that be better than New York? |
18943 | You all alone? |
18943 | You do n''t suppose I really meant that I thought you knew anybody in that troop out in Ohio, do you? |
18943 | You mean to tell me you did n''t know those three cabins were ours, after we''ve had them every summer since the camp started? |
18943 | You see these cabins, do n''t you? |
18943 | You see? |
18943 | You wo n''t tell that I''ve gone to New York?" |
18943 | You''ll have Roy and Peewee and those other gladiators sitting on your neck, are n''t you afraid?" |
18943 | You''re not going to pull any of that stuff on me, are you? |
18943 | You''re the one to manage, what''s- his- name, Peewee? |
18943 | You-- you ca n''t get away with it, you ca n''t Tom-- because I wo n''t let you-- see? |
1162 | A real blacksmith''s biceps, eh, Warden? 1162 Am I greater than the gods that I may thwart the will of the gods? |
1162 | An''what in the name of Sam Hill are they hard- riding for if it ai n''t for us? |
1162 | And if he do n''t come back? |
1162 | And if they wo n''t? |
1162 | And the hill? |
1162 | And then what happens? |
1162 | And then? |
1162 | And what harm in that? |
1162 | And you believe this wonder, Lodbrog? |
1162 | And your heaven? |
1162 | Anything more? |
1162 | Are there others? |
1162 | Are you afraid of the damned Mormons? |
1162 | Are you going to stop knuckle- talk? |
1162 | Are you going to stop your knuckle- talking? |
1162 | But are you certain? |
1162 | But did you see them sore?--before the healing? |
1162 | But the news, master? 1162 But they do n''t come near them?" |
1162 | But what if they intend treachery? |
1162 | But what will we do with the desert coming? |
1162 | But, man,I reasoned with him,"what do I know of myself about this Cho- Sen? |
1162 | Ca n''t they make up their minds what they''re goin''to do, an''then do it? |
1162 | Can you tell us the name of the hill? |
1162 | Did n''t Ed invent the knuckle- talk? 1162 Did n''t you know that? |
1162 | Did you ever forget a man''s name you used to know as well as your own brother''s? 1162 Did you hear it boil?" |
1162 | Did you read that grocery sign? |
1162 | Do n''t like the Mormons, eh, son? |
1162 | Do you remember all you read? |
1162 | Do you think you can win to her? |
1162 | Dunham, can your boy go along with Jesse? |
1162 | Eating?--drinking?--fighting? |
1162 | Enough of what? |
1162 | For look you, who cares for flowers where flowers always are? 1162 Getting religion, eh?" |
1162 | Has he not been waiting two hours as it is? |
1162 | Have I not wine- guzzled a- plenty and passed strange nights in all the provinces? 1162 Have they got the fisherman yet?" |
1162 | Have you any complaint to make, Standing? |
1162 | Have you got faith in it? 1162 He''s the stuff, ai n''t he, Ed?" |
1162 | How am I goin''to get a wink of sleep? |
1162 | How goes it with the Professor? |
1162 | How like you her? |
1162 | How long have you been in? |
1162 | How many sick tramps are there, my boy? |
1162 | How much longer are they going to keep you in? |
1162 | How''s the heart? |
1162 | How''s tricks? |
1162 | Is he God? |
1162 | Is it not said that this event was prophesied of old time? |
1162 | Is it not strange, so simple a man, a fisherman? |
1162 | Is there anything you want to complain about? |
1162 | Jesse,he asked,"are you afraid of the Indians?" |
1162 | Jesus did not steal? |
1162 | Just what, pray? |
1162 | Late news? |
1162 | Mayhap from the English Court? |
1162 | Me? |
1162 | Now, my boy, where is that? |
1162 | Now, professor, how do I know all this stuff about_ kimchi_? 1162 Oh, ho, you''re threatening me, are you? |
1162 | Or how could I have known it? |
1162 | Quick and brilliant is it? |
1162 | Say, Laban, supposin''you got killed here--"Who?--me? |
1162 | Since you are in haste,Henry Bohemond proposed to me,"and since there are three of them and three of us, why not settle it at the one time?" |
1162 | Since you are so sure of it, why do n''t you accept my proposition? |
1162 | Some man raised from the dead to put such strange light in your eyes? |
1162 | Some you forget? |
1162 | Surely you do n''t think I''m holding out because I enjoy it? |
1162 | That''s correct, and why not you? 1162 Then he can go on standing it?" |
1162 | Then what is its name, my boy? |
1162 | Then who am I,I asked,"to make liars of the prophets? |
1162 | Then why do you fear to talk about it? |
1162 | Then why worry? |
1162 | They will not sell? |
1162 | Think it is curtains? |
1162 | Think so? |
1162 | This Caiaphas, I have heard of him as high priest, then who is this Hanan? |
1162 | Warden,I said,"do you see the way I am smiling? |
1162 | Was he seditious? |
1162 | We must have our women in heaven, else what is heaven for? |
1162 | Well, then, Jesse,he said,"will you go with Jed to the spring for water?" |
1162 | Well, what is it? |
1162 | What about this dynamite? |
1162 | What are his plans? |
1162 | What are they? |
1162 | What are you going to do about it? |
1162 | What did I tell you? |
1162 | What did it matter? |
1162 | What do you think our chances are? |
1162 | What do you think, Doc? |
1162 | What is it? |
1162 | What is it? |
1162 | What is the other count? |
1162 | What manner of man can he be to possess such power? 1162 What next? |
1162 | What''s the matter with the ornery cusses? |
1162 | What''s to prevent your inventing it right here in solitary? |
1162 | Where is it now? |
1162 | Which is? |
1162 | Which is? |
1162 | Which was? |
1162 | Who ever heard of a man smiling after ten days of it? |
1162 | Who had squealed? |
1162 | Who is this he? |
1162 | Who knows anything about dynamite? |
1162 | Who was this John? |
1162 | Who, for instance? |
1162 | Whom did they crucify there, young scholar? 1162 Why burden my mind with thoughts about certainties?" |
1162 | Why did n''t you call me? |
1162 | Why did you not tell me before? |
1162 | Why do n''t they come in to us? |
1162 | Why not? 1162 Why not?" |
1162 | Why not? |
1162 | Why such haste? 1162 Why such haste?" |
1162 | Will he stand it? |
1162 | Will you give me your scalps? |
1162 | Yes? |
1162 | You believe that in the flash of an eye the festering sores departed from the lepers? |
1162 | You can cinch me as tight as you please, but if I smile ten days from now will you give the Bull Durham to Morrell and Oppenheimer? |
1162 | You mean mine is an iron- lined stomach? |
1162 | You mean that is n''t its name? |
1162 | You seen that smooth- faced old cuss? |
1162 | You think he''ll stand ten days of it, Doc.? |
1162 | A hunger strike, eh?" |
1162 | Ai n''t that right, Jake?" |
1162 | Am I any the less for these mutilations, for these subtractions of the flesh? |
1162 | Am I correct in assuming that you have read an account in some diary published later by this Daniel Foss? |
1162 | And I stayed my foot, and held my hand, for who was I to thwart the will and way of so greatly serene and sweetly sure a man as this? |
1162 | And again, how? |
1162 | And ai n''t you and me improving on it right along? |
1162 | And always it was dynamite, dynamite,"Where is the dynamite?" |
1162 | And at the end, de Villehardouin?" |
1162 | And ever the eternal question was propounded to me: Where was the dynamite? |
1162 | And ever, as we rode, Vandervoot brought up the rear, wondering,"God in heaven, what now?" |
1162 | And in such noble company how could I be less noble? |
1162 | And that very night did not Arius die in the street? |
1162 | And what I witnessed set me bawling,"What now, Vandervoot?" |
1162 | And what can even the Warden of a great prison do in reprisal on a prisoner upon whom the ultimate reprisal has already been wreaked? |
1162 | And when I had you decently in the bed, did you not call me to you and command, if the devil called, to tell him my lady slept? |
1162 | And while I bowed to the wife and gave greeting, I thought I saw Pilate give Miriam a significant glance, as if to say,"Is he not all I promised?" |
1162 | And you next, de Goncourt? |
1162 | And-- er-- excuse me for asking a personal question-- what are you going to do about it?" |
1162 | Another clue: when was Hideyoshi the Shogun of Japan? |
1162 | Anyway, what have you got to be afraid of?" |
1162 | As Confucius said long ago:"When we are so ignorant of life, can we know death?" |
1162 | Both experiences were equally real-- or else how did I remember them? |
1162 | But how describe emotion in words? |
1162 | But how? |
1162 | But the spirit of you, that which can not die, where will it go when your body is dead?" |
1162 | But what bearing has the Constitution on constitutional lawyers when they want to put the notorious Professor Darrell Standing out of the way? |
1162 | But what did I reek? |
1162 | But what was one to do? |
1162 | But-- and here was the problem, and Morrell had not warned me: should I also will my head to be dead? |
1162 | Canst tell me where red wine is sold? |
1162 | Corn? |
1162 | Could this particular content of his boy brain be utterly eliminated? |
1162 | D''ye get it? |
1162 | Dear cotton- woolly citizen, do you know what that means? |
1162 | Did I say young? |
1162 | Did he believe my fabled birth? |
1162 | Did you hear, Timothy?" |
1162 | Do n''t you know everybody has to bury their dead as they traipse along? |
1162 | Do n''t you see, Jake? |
1162 | Do n''t you see? |
1162 | Do n''t you see? |
1162 | Do you hear? |
1162 | Do you understand? |
1162 | For instance, how possibly, out of my present life''s experience, could I know anything about_ kimchi_? |
1162 | For was not I equally a part of God''s plan, along with this heap of rocks upjutting in the solitude of ocean? |
1162 | Gently I added:"But why all this fuss and fury for a mere man''s life? |
1162 | Get my drive? |
1162 | Had we not shared it for forty years? |
1162 | Have I not said that I was a gay- hearted, golden, bearded giant of an irresponsible boy that had never grown up? |
1162 | Have you a wish?" |
1162 | Have you ever seen a colt or a calf throw up its heels and dash madly about the pasture from sheer excess of vitality and spirits? |
1162 | Have you ever seen canvas tarpaulins or rubber blankets with brass eyelets set in along the edges? |
1162 | Have you not heard? |
1162 | He smiled that thin- lipped smile of his, and queried:"How like you the Lady Om?" |
1162 | How did these things come to me? |
1162 | I, too, bow to the gods, to all gods, for I do believe in all gods, else how came all gods to be?" |
1162 | If I did so, no matter what befell the spirit of Darrell Standing, would not the body of Darrell Standing be for ever dead? |
1162 | If a boy had had these memories, were they irretrievably lost when he had grown to manhood? |
1162 | In the end, did I say? |
1162 | Inefficient? |
1162 | Inefficient? |
1162 | Is that right?" |
1162 | It was a simple message, namely:"Standing, are you there?" |
1162 | It was farewell, I knew; for what chance had creatures so feeble as we to win alive over those surf- battered rocks to the higher rocks beyond? |
1162 | It was offensive, true, but what could poor sea- cunies do? |
1162 | Kim? |
1162 | Mind? |
1162 | My arms with which to work, my back with which to bend and lift, my hands cunning to clutch and hold-- were not these parts too in God''s plan? |
1162 | Nay, just beyond yon peach- tree? |
1162 | News? |
1162 | Now how do I know that? |
1162 | Now is that chess like our kind of chess?" |
1162 | Now what do I know? |
1162 | Now, what''s he followin''us up for through this God- forsaken country?" |
1162 | Of what use is this thing? |
1162 | Other lives? |
1162 | Other worlds? |
1162 | Pinched? |
1162 | Quick? |
1162 | Savages? |
1162 | Silly, is n''t it? |
1162 | Supposin''I am killed?" |
1162 | The Emperor swallowed and his lips twitched ere he asked:"How explain you this?" |
1162 | The poor man-- why should I deny him that solace? |
1162 | The work surely was going on, but with what results? |
1162 | Then whence? |
1162 | Then who put it into your mind?" |
1162 | Then why could not these other- world memories of the boy resurrect? |
1162 | There? |
1162 | Was anybody else going on with it, I wondered; and if so, with what success? |
1162 | Was it vacation or sickness? |
1162 | Was this island situated in the far South Pacific or the far South Atlantic? |
1162 | What cared Pilate for a man''s life?--for many men''s lives? |
1162 | What could I do? |
1162 | What could old Johannes Maartens do, with a bevy of laughing girls about him, tweaking his nose, pinching his arms, tickling his ribs till he pranced? |
1162 | What could the dolt do but grudgingly accept the amends I so freely proffered him? |
1162 | What did the philosophers whisper about so long ago?" |
1162 | What if they did unite, afterward, in averring that the break had been planned by Winwood? |
1162 | What image of a bishop, for instance, could possibly form in his mind when I rapped our code- sign for_ bishop_? |
1162 | What is it like-- your immortality?" |
1162 | What made Pie- face Jones lay off a week? |
1162 | What shall I be when I live again? |
1162 | What was Captain Jamie to do? |
1162 | What''s the man doing in the front of the other crowd you said was walking along?" |
1162 | Whence came in me, Darrell Standing, the red pulse of wrath that has wrecked my life and put me in the condemned cells? |
1162 | Where did Smith get that black eye? |
1162 | Where is the dynamite?" |
1162 | Where, now, are the crumbling rock- cliffs of old Egypt where once I laired me like a wild beast while I dreamed of the City of God? |
1162 | Who else knows corn? |
1162 | Why do they put the black cap over the head and the face of the victim ere they drop him through the trap? |
1162 | Why not me?" |
1162 | Why should I and mine not be fat from the rice in the same way? |
1162 | Why should it not? |
1162 | Why was Wilson, on the night shift for only ten days, transferred elsewhere? |
1162 | Wo n''t you believe me when I tell you I did n''t invent it?" |
1162 | Yet, if they were dreams, dreamed then, whence the substance of them? |
1162 | and what could a poor sea- cuny do? |
1162 | to make of the Messiah a false Messiah? |
32554 | So these are the Derby horses? |
32554 | And Alard Scheck, the favorite? |
32554 | And it might be appropriately asked, what was the attraction that drew all this concourse of people to the same spot? |
32554 | Can not he lift his mount just an inch or two to the front? |
32554 | For when was there such a field as that in the forty- first running of this turf fixture? |
32554 | Has he been able to stand the pace? |
32554 | On spins the chestnut well in advance of Eternal and Kelly; wo n''t he ever come back? |
32554 | The query is,"Will Huron quit?" |
32554 | What is that boy Garner going to do? |
32554 | What next? |
32554 | What was it that made them endure for five hours all the discomfitures that surrounded them? |
32554 | Will Azra hold his own or will he cry for quarter? |
32554 | Will he hold his own? |
32554 | Will he quit? |
19522 | A thing that''s bad ca n''t be good, can it? |
19522 | A una_ what_? |
19522 | A what? 19522 A word to the guys, hey? |
19522 | And what about Mr. Stanton''s son? |
19522 | And_ you_ think I''m a coward? |
19522 | Any of my own patrol here? |
19522 | Anybody here''sides you youngsters? |
19522 | Are we pinched? |
19522 | Are you-- are you_ sure_ you did n''t see a-- a crouching shadow when you went out and got that gasoline can last night? |
19522 | Built a fire in a can? |
19522 | But wo n''t you let my father give you each-- something? 19522 Ca n''t you see I''m spilling the gasoline? |
19522 | Can we get back to Nyack by that other road? |
19522 | Can what? |
19522 | Cold feet, eh? 19522 Could you dally with a rice cake, kiddo?" |
19522 | Diamonds-- they might have a diamond cross, hey? |
19522 | Did n''t I tell you to get gasoline in Newburgh? |
19522 | Did n''t I tell you we might have to get our feet wet? 19522 Did n''t you know about him?" |
19522 | Did n''t you see him drowning there? |
19522 | Did the skiff belong with her? |
19522 | Do we, kid? |
19522 | Do you mean in the boat? |
19522 | Do you suppose we''ll have any adventures? |
19522 | Do you take two lumps of sugar in your coffee? |
19522 | Do you think he''ll get it? |
19522 | Do you think the gold cross is good enough? |
19522 | Does_ everybody_ call him''Old Man''Stanton? |
19522 | Drowned? |
19522 | Gee, it''s big and wild and lonely, is n''t it? |
19522 | Got any grub? |
19522 | Got any more? |
19522 | Guess it is n''t used, is it? |
19522 | Haouw? |
19522 | Haouw? |
19522 | Have you got a garden hose? |
19522 | Have you got him? |
19522 | Have you got the signaling badge? |
19522 | He swore he would n''t go near a railroad-- remember? |
19522 | He''s one of your own patrol, is n''t he? |
19522 | He-- he''s all right, is n''t he? |
19522 | Here''s a fountain pen,said Pee- wee;"will that do?" |
19522 | Hey, Blakeley,he shouted to Roy,"did you see the Bridgeboro Botch?" |
19522 | How about our cabin? |
19522 | How did Harry Stanton die? |
19522 | How did they think it happened? |
19522 | How did you guess? |
19522 | How do we get to Black Lake? |
19522 | How do you suppose it got here? |
19522 | How''s the kid? |
19522 | How''s tracking? |
19522 | How? |
19522 | Hurt? 19522 I am ready to sac----""Well, go ahead and_ sac_, why do n''t you?" |
19522 | I might push you over this precipice and then jump down after you, hey? |
19522 | I''ll have it wrapped up for you,said Roy;"Take it, or have it sent?" |
19522 | I-- I was thinking-- do you smell smoke, Roy? 19522 If yer open yer head or call out or make a noise wid yer feet or poun''de side o''de car or start a- bawlin''I''ll brain ye, ye hear? |
19522 | If yer open yer head when we''re bein''took up, I''ll brain yer, hear that? |
19522 | Is Roy Blakeley going to come in for three or four helpings at mess because he ran the campaign? |
19522 | Is anyone there? |
19522 | Is he for troop first or camp first? |
19522 | Is he tame? |
19522 | Is n''t it something new,he added,"running into the jaws of death? |
19522 | Is that Temple Camp over there? 19522 Is that tree solid? |
19522 | Is the camp saved? |
19522 | Is the kid all right? |
19522 | Looks pretty, do n''t it? |
19522 | Not getting homesick, are you, kiddo? |
19522 | Now F-- two shorts, a long and a short-- is it? |
19522 | Now, if yer go ter cuttin''up a rumpus I''ll jest hev ter brain ye, see? |
19522 | Now, three dots for S? |
19522 | Oh, Sing Sing? |
19522 | Oh, can you catch him? 19522 Oh, crinkums, I''m crazy to see Jeb Rushmore, are n''t you?" |
19522 | Oh-- and what brings you here? |
19522 | Pretty brisk out on the water this morning? |
19522 | Put your hand down the chimney and open the front door, hey? |
19522 | Quite an adventure, was n''t it, Greenie? |
19522 | Remind you of home? |
19522 | Roy,said Tom, still hesitating in the doorway of his own patrol cabin,"can I speak to you a minute?" |
19522 | See that board you fixed the oil stove on? 19522 See? |
19522 | Shall we haul it down? |
19522 | Sure it would, because it would have a sacrifice in it, do n''t you see? |
19522 | Tell him we scorn his-- er-- what d''you call it? |
19522 | The little fellow that coughs? |
19522 | The old gent didn''tell ye, hey? |
19522 | There''s nothing better than gold, is there? |
19522 | Thet? 19522 Think you''d like it?" |
19522 | Tom Slade? 19522 Tom-- whar''s Tom?" |
19522 | Up yonder? |
19522 | Wall, ye''ve got all the comforts uv home, ai n''t ye? |
19522 | Was your brother-- fond of traveling? |
19522 | We are poor but honest, and we spurn-- don''t we, Pee- wee? |
19522 | We got your message-- we were out canoeing last night; you use the International code, do n''t you? |
19522 | We might have stayed longer,said Roy, coldly,"only-- is that all you want to say to me?" |
19522 | Well, you were glad enough to vote for him with the rest, were n''t you? |
19522 | What are you going to do, kiddo? |
19522 | What are you talking about? |
19522 | What did he do? |
19522 | What did you say to her? |
19522 | What do you know about that? |
19522 | What do you say to some eats? |
19522 | What do you say, kiddo, shall we hit it up for Nyack to- night or camp along the river? |
19522 | What do you suppose has got into him? |
19522 | What for? |
19522 | What is it? |
19522 | What is it? |
19522 | What kind of a bird is it? |
19522 | What will you do if they do n''t take up the car for a week? |
19522 | What''s he doing-- posing for the movies? |
19522 | What''s that he''s got on? |
19522 | What''s that? |
19522 | What''s the matter? |
19522 | What''s the matter? |
19522 | What''s the matter? |
19522 | What- do- you- know- about- that? |
19522 | What? |
19522 | What? |
19522 | What? |
19522 | Whatcher doin''here, anyway? |
19522 | Whatcher goin''to do? |
19522 | Where do you suppose that freight stopped? 19522 Where does Old Man Stanton live?" |
19522 | Where is our young hero, anyway? |
19522 | Where''d you think you were? 19522 Where''s your patrol this morning?" |
19522 | Who are you boys? |
19522 | Who does the_ Good Turn_ belong to? |
19522 | Who-- told-- you to deliver it-- Tom? |
19522 | Why do n''t you laugh? 19522 Wo n''t you come in?" |
19522 | Wot''s in that bag? |
19522 | Would you like to stay longer? |
19522 | Ye ai n''t goin''to walk it, be ye? |
19522 | You do n''t mean murdered? |
19522 | You do n''t mean you''re going to hike it from here, Tom, do you? |
19522 | You do n''t suppose all that fuss can have anything to do with Pee- wee, do you? |
19522 | You do n''t suppose anyone lives there, do you? |
19522 | You do n''t suppose he put the idea in her head, do you? |
19522 | You going home? |
19522 | You must promise to be careful-- can you all swim? |
19522 | You some o''the Bridgeboro boys? |
19522 | You''re not getting ready to go? |
19522 | You''re strangers, hey? |
19522 | You''re the only original Boy Scout; how did you get next to that stunt? 19522 You-- were you at Temple''s?" |
19522 | You--_you_ do n''t think I''m a coward, do you? |
19522 | _ What?_said Roy. |
19522 | ''Spose he did it on purpose or got locked in?" |
19522 | An''if anybody comes in here''cause o''you makin''a noise and cryin''fer help, yer''ll be the fust to git croaked-- see?" |
19522 | And what''s he going to do when he gets there?" |
19522 | Be great if we could find him to- night, hey?" |
19522 | But all I want to know is,_ you_ do n''t think I''m a coward, do you?" |
19522 | But how are we going to take him along on this hike? |
19522 | But you ought not to expect me to pay the two cents----""Did n''t I put a stamp on it?" |
19522 | By the way, could n''t_ you_ give us a spiel?" |
19522 | Can you catch him?" |
19522 | Come on, get your wits to work now, and we''ll send him the invitation in the form of a verse, what d''you say?" |
19522 | Could n''t you get bitten by a rattlesnake on one of your tracking stunts? |
19522 | Could you say you did me a good turn by hitting me with a brick because that way I got to be a scout? |
19522 | Did n''t I say so? |
19522 | Did you ever try tracking a freight train? |
19522 | Did you get any water on you?" |
19522 | Did you jump-- both of you?" |
19522 | Do n''t you see? |
19522 | Do you get that?" |
19522 | Do you know what logic is?" |
19522 | Do you know why?" |
19522 | Do you think you were correct in your deductions?" |
19522 | Get away from here as soon''s ye can,--hear? |
19522 | Get out your magnifying glass, Tom; what''s that, a village, up there?" |
19522 | Gol, how happy that kid was-- you remember, Bill? |
19522 | Good turn, turn down the gas, hey? |
19522 | Got a stretcher?" |
19522 | Great kid, is n''t he?" |
19522 | Have n''t we had the time of our young lives? |
19522 | He''s an all- around scout, is n''t he?" |
19522 | Here?" |
19522 | How can we fix this up for three_ now_? |
19522 | How did it get here? |
19522 | How did_ he_ get here?" |
19522 | I said-- you remember how I said I wanted to be alone with you-- you remember? |
19522 | I suppose the gold cross is the highest award they''ll ever have, hey?" |
19522 | I''d be satisfied with that, would n''t you?" |
19522 | I''m going to report it to J. R.""They on the camp land?" |
19522 | I''m going to----""Have another sandwich?" |
19522 | I''ve made a study of girls, kind of---- And you''re more apt to succeed if there''s a girl watching you-- did you ever notice that?" |
19522 | If Roy and Tom were to ask you to go with them on their long hike, would that be a good turn?" |
19522 | If it had n''t been raining this week, we''d never known about a freight car being stalled here, hey? |
19522 | If you do a good turn it''s sure to make you feel good-- that you did it-- see? |
19522 | Is he going to favor the Elks or is he going to be neutral?" |
19522 | It serves me right for----""What''s the use of thinking about that_ now_?" |
19522 | It''s fresh rust-- see? |
19522 | It''s no good turn to him, dragging him up and down mountains till he''s so dog- tired he falls all over himself-- is it?" |
19522 | It''s the three weeks that counted-- see?" |
19522 | Just the same as you made me a scout a year ago, you remember? |
19522 | Look at the blisters on my hand, will you? |
19522 | Might n''t a girl do a good turn?" |
19522 | One had said,"Are you making believe to telegraph that way? |
19522 | One, two, three, four-- same on the other side, see? |
19522 | Remember when we trucked her up from the freight station and dumped her in three year ago? |
19522 | Rushmore?" |
19522 | See that footprint-- it''s only half a one-- the front half-- see? |
19522 | See that tree up there?" |
19522 | See those little rusty places on the track? |
19522 | See? |
19522 | She looks mighty nat''ral, do n''t she, Bill? |
19522 | So you did hit the railroad after all, did n''t you? |
19522 | Stanton?" |
19522 | Strangers here?" |
19522 | That ought to pull the silver cross, hey? |
19522 | That''s where he climbed into the car-- see?" |
19522 | Then why should he bring this board back with him unless it was to help him keep afloat?" |
19522 | There''s where the wheels were-- see? |
19522 | These fellows are taking me with them; that''s a good turn, but if somebody paid''em to do it, it would n''t be a good turn, would it? |
19522 | Tom-- whar''s Tom? |
19522 | Well, then, would it be bad to play false with an escaped felon-- to double- cross him? |
19522 | What are we up against, anyway?" |
19522 | What d''you say, Tom?" |
19522 | What do you say we tie up in Kingston and have a soda?" |
19522 | What do you think of him, Tom?" |
19522 | What do you think we''re going to do, start a manicure parlor? |
19522 | What''d''you say?" |
19522 | When you''re roaming, you have to do as the Romans do, hey? |
19522 | Who''s going to take the responsibility? |
19522 | Why ca n''t he wait and come up with the rest? |
19522 | Why did n''t you bring your knitting?" |
19522 | Why, who was it but Mary that told John Temple there must be ten thousand wooden plates and goodness knows how many sanitary drinking cups? |
19522 | Wot d''yer say yer wuz?" |
19522 | Wotever become o''that skiff, Bill?" |
19522 | Ye come oft''n that outer road, ye say? |
19522 | Ye did n''t see no men around here last night now, did ye?" |
19522 | Yer ai n''t goin''ter peach wot I tell ye, now? |
19522 | Yer ai n''t, are ye?" |
19522 | You can move''er by pullin''one finger now, hey? |
19522 | You do n''t believe all this about Roy''s making a_ noble sacrifice_, do you?" |
19522 | You do n''t suppose it would run on witch hazel, do you?" |
19522 | You have n''t forgotten about the searchlight, have you, Roy? |
19522 | You know who it is that''s always doing something for someone and never getting any credit for it, do n''t you? |
19522 | You remember how you told me about the scout''s arm having a long reach? |
19522 | You remember, Roy? |
19522 | You were just going to dive, were n''t you?" |
19522 | You''re a lucky kid; you stay till the last gun is fired, do n''t you?" |
19522 | You''re with us because we want you with us, not because Mary Temple wanted it, but because_ I_ want you and Tom wants you; do you hear? |
19522 | [ missing:"?] |
19522 | said Roy,"are they all the same length?" |
19522 | said Tom,"a merit badge?" |
16960 | Are we rebels? |
16960 | Do you think it right,asked Grenville,"that America should be protected by this country and pay no part of the expenses?" |
16960 | Does Mr. Wiberd preach against oppression? |
16960 | Is not America already independent? |
16960 | Must I shoot a simple- minded soldier boy who deserts, while I must not touch a hair of the wily agitator who induces him to desert? |
16960 | Why not then declare it? |
16960 | ( 2) Shall the government be founded on states equal in power as under the Articles or on the broader and deeper foundation of population? |
16960 | ( 3) What direct share shall the people have in the election of national officers? |
16960 | ( 4) What shall be the qualifications for the suffrage? |
16960 | ( 5) How shall the conflicting interests of the commercial and the planting states be balanced so as to safeguard the essential rights of each? |
16960 | ( 6) What shall be the form of the new government? |
16960 | ( 7) What powers shall be conferred on it? |
16960 | ( 8) How shall the state legislatures be restrained from their attacks on property rights such as the issuance of paper money? |
16960 | ( 9) Shall the approval of all the states be necessary, as under the Articles, for the adoption and amendment of the Constitution? |
16960 | 5. Who were some of the leading men in the convention? |
16960 | 5. Who were the early settlers in the West? |
16960 | 8. Who were among the early friends of Western development? |
16960 | = How the War Was Won.=--Then how did the American army win the war? |
16960 | = Questions= 1. Who were some of the critics of abuses in American life? |
16960 | = Questions= 1. Who were the leaders in the first administration under the Constitution? |
16960 | A sarcastic writer, while sneering at the idea of an American union, once remarked of colonial trade:"What sort of dish will you make? |
16960 | Aided by funds from Northern friends, he gathered a small band of his followers around him, saying to them:"If God be for us, who can be against us?" |
16960 | Amid what circumstances was the Monroe Doctrine applied in Cleveland''s administration? |
16960 | Are any things owned and used in common in your community? |
16960 | Are the people in cities more or less independent than the farmers? |
16960 | Are they not to be violated but with His wrath? |
16960 | Attacked? |
16960 | By what body was it adopted? |
16960 | By what devices was democracy limited in the first days of our Republic? |
16960 | Can there be a policy of isolation for America? |
16960 | Can you give any illustrations of the way that war promotes nationalism? |
16960 | Could it succeed or was it destined to break down and be supplanted by a monarchy? |
16960 | Did the West rapidly become like the older sections of the country? |
16960 | Did the farmers need credit? |
16960 | Did the traffic slacken because the food shipped was not of the best quality? |
16960 | Did they compare in importance with British towns of the same period? |
16960 | Do politicians sow dissensions in the army and among civilians? |
16960 | Do you know of any other societies to compare with the Ku Klux Klan? |
16960 | Do you think the English legislation was beneficial or injurious to the colonies? |
16960 | Does Seward, the Secretary of State, propose harsh and caustic measures likely to draw England''s sword into the scale? |
16960 | Does a New York newspaper call him an ignorant Western boor? |
16960 | Has it changed in recent times? |
16960 | Have we not witnessed it on this floor, sir? |
16960 | How did Elihu Root define"invisible government"? |
16960 | How did Germany finally drive the United States into war? |
16960 | How did Mexico at first encourage American immigration? |
16960 | How did diversity of opinion work for toleration? |
16960 | How did he finally destroy it? |
16960 | How did industrial conditions increase unrest? |
16960 | How did it come into contact with the American Federation? |
16960 | How did it happen that the farmers led in regulating railway rates? |
16960 | How did reform movements draw women into public affairs and what were the chief results? |
16960 | How did the Dred Scott decision become a political issue? |
16960 | How did the West come to play a rôle in the Revolution? |
16960 | How did the World War affect the presidential campaign of 1916? |
16960 | How did the World War break out in Europe? |
16960 | How did the colonial assemblies help to create an independent American spirit, in spite of a restricted suffrage? |
16960 | How did the development of the West affect the East? |
16960 | How did the federal government aid in western agriculture? |
16960 | How did the powers conferred upon the federal government help cure the defects of the Articles of Confederation? |
16960 | How did the state of English finances affect English policy? |
16960 | How did the"Reign of Terror"change American opinion? |
16960 | How did they come? |
16960 | How did they travel? |
16960 | How do you account for the rise and growth of the trusts? |
16960 | How do you account for the triumph of Harrison in 1840? |
16960 | How does modern reform involve government action? |
16960 | How does money capital contribute to prosperity? |
16960 | How does organized labor become involved with outside forces? |
16960 | How far back in our history does the labor movement extend? |
16960 | How far had settlement been carried? |
16960 | How far had the western frontier advanced by 1776? |
16960 | How has it fared in recent years? |
16960 | How is the fluctuating state of public opinion reflected in the elections from 1880 to 1896? |
16960 | How may leisure be secured? |
16960 | How shall it be amended in the future? |
16960 | How shall the Constitution be ratified? |
16960 | How was interstate commerce mainly carried on? |
16960 | How was settlement promoted after 1865? |
16960 | How was the Confederacy financed? |
16960 | How was the Oregon boundary dispute finally settled? |
16960 | How was the Revolution financed? |
16960 | How was the Spanish War viewed in England? |
16960 | How were the terms of peace formulated? |
16960 | How were the"Force bills"overcome? |
16960 | How would you define"nationalism"? |
16960 | How, therefore, could the Confederacy hope to sustain itself against such a combination of men, money, and materials as the North could marshal? |
16960 | I ask whether as a people we can stand forth in the sight of God, in the sight of nations, and adopt this atrocious policy? |
16960 | I now ask whether as a people we are prepared to seize on a neighboring territory for the end of extending slavery? |
16960 | If I am not an American who ever was?... |
16960 | In the Caribbean? |
16960 | In the dark hour of the Revolution,"what held the patriot forces together?" |
16960 | In the four quarters of the globe who reads an American book? |
16960 | In what manner was the rest of the western region governed? |
16960 | In what respects were the planting and commercial states opposed? |
16960 | In what sections did industry flourish before the Civil War? |
16960 | In what way did the North derive advantages from slavery? |
16960 | In what way did the provisions for ratifying and amending the Constitution depart from the old system? |
16960 | In what way was the South economically dependent upon the North? |
16960 | In what ways did Southern agriculture tend to become like that of the North? |
16960 | Is a mother begging for the life of a son sentenced to be shot as a deserter? |
16960 | Is it a complaint from a citizen, deprived, as he believes, of his civil liberties unjustly or in violation of the Constitution? |
16960 | Is it a matter of compromise with the South, so often proposed by men on both sides sick of carnage? |
16960 | Is it a question of securing votes to ratify the thirteenth amendment abolishing slavery? |
16960 | Is it high strategy of war, a question of the general best fitted to win Gettysburg-- Hooker, Sedgwick, or Meade? |
16960 | Is it in the field of diplomacy? |
16960 | Is it or is it not a result of democracy? |
16960 | Is land in your community parceled out into small farms? |
16960 | On national union? |
16960 | On the Continent? |
16960 | On what foundations did Southern hopes rest? |
16960 | On what grounds did Calhoun defend slavery? |
16960 | On what grounds were the limitations defended? |
16960 | On what theory is it justified? |
16960 | Or goes to an American play? |
16960 | Or looks at an American picture or statue?" |
16960 | Ship building? |
16960 | Speaking of his native state, New York, he said:"What is the government of this state? |
16960 | The South? |
16960 | The government of the Constitution? |
16960 | The only remaining question of importance, to use the popular phrase,--"Does the Constitution follow the flag?" |
16960 | The outcome for the United States? |
16960 | These general principles left undetermined two important matters:"What is an effective blockade?" |
16960 | To national politics? |
16960 | To place the vicious vagrant, the wandering Arabs, the Tartar hordes of our large cities on the level with the virtuous and good man?" |
16960 | To the public? |
16960 | Toward labor? |
16960 | Was it not declared that governments derive their just power from the consent of the governed? |
16960 | Was it not said that all men are created equal? |
16960 | Was the output of food for his freight cars limited by bad drainage on the farms? |
16960 | Was there a unified American opinion on American expansion? |
16960 | Was this expansion a departure from our traditions? |
16960 | Were farmers hampered in hauling their goods to his trains by bad roads? |
16960 | Were the Jeffersonians able to apply their theories? |
16960 | What American rights were assailed in the submarine campaign? |
16960 | What action by President Polk precipitated war? |
16960 | What agencies made colonization possible? |
16960 | What are the elements of direct government? |
16960 | What are the striking features of the new economic age? |
16960 | What colonial industry was mainly developed by women? |
16960 | What compromises were reached? |
16960 | What courses were open to freedmen in 1865? |
16960 | What determines the topics that appear in written history? |
16960 | What did they mean? |
16960 | What economic peculiarities did it retain or develop? |
16960 | What events led to foreign intervention in China? |
16960 | What forces favored the heavy importation of slaves? |
16960 | What had been the career of Andrew Jackson before 1829? |
16960 | What had been their previous training? |
16960 | What has it been during the forty years of my acquaintance with it? |
16960 | What illustrations can you give showing the influence of war in American political campaigns? |
16960 | What international complications were involved in the Panama Canal problem? |
16960 | What is Cuba''s relation to the United States? |
16960 | What is history? |
16960 | What is meant by the question:"Does the Constitution follow the flag?" |
16960 | What is meant by the sea power? |
16960 | What is meant by the"joint occupation"of Oregon? |
16960 | What is meant by the"melting pot"? |
16960 | What is the explanation of the extraordinary industrial progress of America? |
16960 | What is the strategic importance of the Caribbean to the United States? |
16960 | What measures were taken to restrain criticism of the government? |
16960 | What nationalities were represented among the early colonists? |
16960 | What number of states shall be necessary to put it into effect? |
16960 | What part did Lincoln play in all phases of the war? |
16960 | What part did women play in the intellectual movement that preceded the American Revolution? |
16960 | What particular criticisms were advanced? |
16960 | What party had used the title before? |
16960 | What political and economic reforms did labor demand? |
16960 | What preparations were necessary to settlement? |
16960 | What principles do you think should govern the granting of amnesty? |
16960 | What problems arise in connection with the assimilation of the alien to American life? |
16960 | What produced the revolution in Texas? |
16960 | What proof have we that the political parties were not clearly divided over issues between 1865 and 1896? |
16960 | What relation did the opening of the great grain areas of the West bear to the growth of America''s commercial and financial power? |
16960 | What rights did Congress attempt to confer upon the former slaves? |
16960 | What routes did they take? |
16960 | What sections of the country have been industrialized? |
16960 | What signs pointed to a complete Democratic triumph in 1852? |
16960 | What solution did Burke offer? |
16960 | What special conditions favored a fall in silver between 1870 and 1896? |
16960 | What step was taken to appease the opposition? |
16960 | What steps were taken in colonial policies? |
16960 | What topics are considered under"military affairs"? |
16960 | What was Jefferson''s view? |
16960 | What was Roosevelt''s progressive program? |
16960 | What was Roosevelt''s theory of our Constitution? |
16960 | What was its immediate effect? |
16960 | What was the Burke- Paine controversy? |
16960 | What was the United States to do? |
16960 | What was the Wilson policy toward trusts? |
16960 | What was the condition of the planters as compared with that of the Northern manufacturers? |
16960 | What was the effect of abolition agitation? |
16960 | What was the effect of the Revolution on colonial governments? |
16960 | What was the leading feature of Jefferson''s political theory? |
16960 | What was the nature of the conflict over ratification? |
16960 | What was the nature of the opposition in England to the war? |
16960 | What was the non- importation agreement? |
16960 | What was the outcome as far as Cuba was concerned? |
16960 | What was the outcome of the Alien and Sedition Acts? |
16960 | What was the outcome of the final clash with the French? |
16960 | What was the outcome? |
16960 | What was the relation of the Federation to the extreme radicals? |
16960 | What was the situation before 1860? |
16960 | What was the theory of the relation of government to business in this period? |
16960 | What were American policies with regard to each of those countries? |
16960 | What were some of the early writings about women? |
16960 | What were some of the points brought out in the Lincoln- Douglas debates? |
16960 | What were the centers for iron working? |
16960 | What were the important results of the"peaceful"French Revolution( 1789- 92)? |
16960 | What were the leading measures adopted by the Republicans after their victory in 1896? |
16960 | What were the leading towns? |
16960 | What were the main planks in the Republican platform? |
16960 | What were the peculiar features of the Confederate constitution? |
16960 | What were the social results? |
16960 | What were the startling events between 1850 and 1860? |
16960 | What were the striking physical features of the West? |
16960 | Who ever knew the tariff men to divide on any question affecting their confederated interests?... |
16960 | Who led in it? |
16960 | Who were some of the European writers on American affairs? |
16960 | Why are labor and immigration closely related? |
16960 | Why did anti- slavery sentiment practically disappear in the South? |
16960 | Why did common tillage fail in colonial times? |
16960 | Why did efforts at conciliation fail? |
16960 | Why did efforts at reform by the Congress come to naught? |
16960 | Why did the East and the South seek closer ties with the West? |
16960 | Why did the United States become involved with England rather than with France? |
16960 | Why did they come? |
16960 | Why do n''t you vote a homestead for yourself? |
16960 | Why is a fall in prices a loss to farmers and a gain to holders of fixed investments? |
16960 | Why is a"free press"such an important thing to American democracy? |
16960 | Why is diplomacy important in war? |
16960 | Why is leisure necessary for the production of art and literature? |
16960 | Why is the Declaration of Independence an"immortal"document? |
16960 | Why is the public service of increasing importance? |
16960 | Why is the year 1848 an important year in the woman movement? |
16960 | Why was Europe especially interested in America at this period? |
16960 | Why was Jackson opposed to the bank? |
16960 | Why was admission to the union so eagerly sought? |
16960 | Why was it difficult, if not impossible, to keep gold and silver at a parity? |
16960 | Why was it impossible to establish and maintain a uniform policy in dealing with the Indians? |
16960 | Why was it impossible to keep the slavery issue out of national politics? |
16960 | Why was it rejected? |
16960 | Why was it revolutionary in character? |
16960 | Why was it very important both to the Americans and to the English? |
16960 | Why was there a struggle for educational opportunities? |
16960 | Why were capital and leadership so very important in early colonization? |
16960 | Why were conservative men disturbed in the early nineties? |
16960 | Why were individuals unable to go alone to America in the beginning? |
16960 | Why were the Republicans especially strong immediately after the Civil War? |
16960 | Why were women involved in the reform movements of the new century? |
16960 | Why? |
16960 | Why? |
16960 | With what measures did Great Britain retaliate? |
16960 | _ Americans in California._--Why stop at Santa Fé? |
16960 | and"What is contraband of war?" |
2982 | Ah,said Clemens, as he mopped his face,"do you know that little devil waded all the way across?" |
2982 | Are you Horace Bigsby''s cub? |
2982 | But do you realize, ma''am, how tired and hungry we are? 2982 Can he do it again?" |
2982 | Did it knock him down? |
2982 | Did you do that? |
2982 | Did you ever do any steering? |
2982 | Did you follow it up? 2982 Did you pound him much-- that is, severely?" |
2982 | Do n''t I deserve one yet? |
2982 | Do you chew? |
2982 | Do you drink? |
2982 | Do you gamble? |
2982 | Do you know the Bowen boys? |
2982 | Do you swear? |
2982 | Do you use terbacker? |
2982 | Does it? |
2982 | Hard? |
2982 | Here, where are you heading for now? |
2982 | Here, why did n''t you tell me we had got to land at that plantation? |
2982 | Here,he would shout,"where are you going now? |
2982 | How big was it, Uncle Ned? |
2982 | How do you follow a hall at home in the dark? 2982 How far off was it?" |
2982 | How much do you think it ought to be, Mark? |
2982 | How on earth am I ever going to learn it, then? |
2982 | How would you like a young man to learn the river? |
2982 | Is n''t that a guitar over there? |
2982 | Nobody could have done it better; and did you see how those cats got out of there? 2982 Pounded him?" |
2982 | Sam said,''Dan, did you know, when you invited me to make that speech, that those fellows were going to give me a bogus pipe?'' 2982 Steve, what is that d-- d noise?" |
2982 | Tell us, Mark, why are you like the Pacific Ocean? |
2982 | Very well, I''ll try it; but, after I have learned it, can I depend on it? 2982 Well,"he sand,"why am I like the Pacific Ocean?" |
2982 | What are you reading, Sam? |
2982 | What did you do? |
2982 | What do you charge? |
2982 | What in nation are you steerin''at, anyway? 2982 What is your name?" |
2982 | What makes you pull your words that way? |
2982 | What will you have, Sam? |
2982 | What with? |
2982 | What''s the matter, Sam? 2982 Who did that?" |
2982 | Why did n''t you mention it before? 2982 Why do n''t you get up and light it yourself?" |
2982 | Why, Sammy, what in the world has happened? |
2982 | Yes, sir, it is; what of it? |
2982 | 23--and a lawyer? |
2982 | A gentleman standing on the pavement said to my wife,"Miss, do you go by this stage?" |
2982 | A tall, bony woman came to the door:"You''re secesh, ai n''t you?" |
2982 | And what is a man without energy? |
2982 | At first he looked at the culprit thoughtfully, then he made some inquiries:"Did you strike him first?" |
2982 | Can not the''Californian''afford to keep Mark all to itself? |
2982 | Did you do anything further?" |
2982 | Do n''t you hear me? |
2982 | Do n''t you know that I have expended money in this country but have made none myself? |
2982 | Do n''t you know that I have never held in my hands a gold or silver bar that belonged to me? |
2982 | Do n''t you know that I have only talked, as yet, but proved nothing? |
2982 | Do n''t you know that it''s all talk and no cider so far? |
2982 | Do n''t you know that undemonstrated human calculations wo n''t do to bet on? |
2982 | Do you hear?" |
2982 | Give him a good sound thrashing; do you hear? |
2982 | Have I got to learn the shape of the river according to all these five hundred thousand different ways? |
2982 | Have n''t you got a bite for us to eat?" |
2982 | He opened on me after this fashion:"How much water did we have in the middle crossing at Hole- in- The- Wall, trip before last?" |
2982 | His chief was a constant menace at such moments: One day he turned on me suddenly with this settler:"What is the shape of Walnut Bend?" |
2982 | His mother said:"What''s the matter, Sammy; are you sick?" |
2982 | How could he, with a fortune so plainly in view? |
2982 | How did you ever think of it?" |
2982 | How do you reckon I can remember such a mess as that?" |
2982 | I gave her a conundrum, thus:"My dear madam, why ought your hand to retain its present grace and beauty always? |
2982 | If they want letters from here-- who''ll run from morning till night collecting material cheaper? |
2982 | It always snows here, I expect"; and the final heart- sick line,"Do n''t you suppose they have pretty much quit writing at home?" |
2982 | It may have materialized out of the unseen-- who knows? |
2982 | Klinefelter turned to Sam:"Did n''t you hear him?" |
2982 | L. C.''Which was? |
2982 | Maguire, why Will you thus skyugle? |
2982 | Now is n''t she the devil? |
2982 | One day, soon after, he said to me:"''Steve, do you know that I think that that bogus pipe smokes about as well as the good one?''" |
2982 | Sam said:"What''s that, Steve?" |
2982 | Sam;"he said,"what do they mean by that?" |
2982 | That is to say, is n''t she a right smart little woman? |
2982 | The company rose, drank the toast in serious silence; then Goodman said:"Of course, Artemus, it''s all right, but why did you give us Upper Canada?" |
2982 | W- h- a- r- r''s my g- o- l- den arm?" |
2982 | W- h- a- r- r''s my golden arm? |
2982 | What a child he always was-- always, to the very end? |
2982 | What are you going to do?" |
2982 | What did it matter to him? |
2982 | What name do you want to use''Josh''?" |
2982 | What noise? |
2982 | What the devil does a man want with any more feet when he owns in the invincible bomb- proof"Monitor"? |
2982 | What was the greatest feature in Napoleon''s character? |
2982 | When the children came for eggs he would say:"Your hens wo n''t lay, eh? |
2982 | Where is it Orion''s going to? |
2982 | Why curse and swear, And rip and tear The innocent McDougal? |
2982 | Will it keep the same form, and not go fooling around?" |
2982 | Wo n''t you please stop it? |
2982 | You could n''t possibly teach music with a company of raw recruits drilling overhead-- now, could you? |
2982 | You think that picture looks old? |
2982 | You will continue upon the water for some time yet; you will not retire finally until ten years from now.... What is your brother''s age? |
2982 | and in pursuit of an office? |
2982 | he asked--"pilots in the St. Louis and New Orleans trade?" |
2982 | he said, triumphantly;"you know dose vord?" |
32950 | Ca n''t you see it''s just fresh tracks made since morning? 32950 How far beyond is Squaw Dome?" |
32950 | Well,I greeted them,"what are you doing over here? |
32950 | Wrong trail, eh? |
32950 | A little off your beat, are n''t you?" |
32950 | As for the facts so far: The first thought to occur to a man entirely accustomed to wilderness travel would be, is there perhaps another stream? |
32950 | But suppose you want to use the tent in a flyless land? |
32950 | The picture I have sketched looks to you somewhat like what is known as an"old cow,"does n''t it? |
32950 | Why carry extras, then, merely from a recollection of full bureau drawers? |
32950 | another river flowing into that lake? |
32950 | said he easily;"where does this one go to?" |
19324 | ''Dar, marsa,''says I,''do n''t ye see? 19324 ''His intellect must sort of tell on him, do n''t it?'' |
19324 | ''How does she look?'' 19324 ''Is we got a goose?'' |
19324 | ''Oh, it''s you, is it?'' 19324 ''Well,''says I,''ai n''t cymbals brass?'' |
19324 | ''What hit him?'' 19324 ''What''ll you take for dinner, miss?'' |
19324 | ''What''ll you take for dinner, sah?'' 19324 ''What''s the trouble?'' |
19324 | ''Where do I put him?'' 19324 ''Why ai n''t it fair?'' |
19324 | ''You mean ter say, Chad, dat de gooses on my plantation on''y got one leg?'' 19324 ''_ Is we got a goose?_ Did n''t you help pick it?'' |
19324 | ''_ Is we got a goose?_ Did n''t you help pick it?'' 19324 A what?" |
19324 | Ah, and who was she? |
19324 | An appendicitis case-- an outbreak of measles? 19324 And did he thrash you?" |
19324 | And is mine one? |
19324 | And the Doctor? 19324 And the model fell on to something valuable? |
19324 | And they did not hang the colonel? |
19324 | And was he? |
19324 | And why, pray? |
19324 | And you reason from this that Sullivan''s Lost Chord is a cure for Cholera morbus, eh? |
19324 | And, of course, you''ll send the official invitation from Mrs. Matthewman besides? |
19324 | And_ you''ll_ come? |
19324 | Are n''t you well, Dan? |
19324 | Are you sure she meant_ them_? 19324 Because there are no more drugs must the physician walk?" |
19324 | But did n''t you ever hear from him again? 19324 But how sure are you that Eleanor would marry him if I did manage to find him and bring him back?" |
19324 | But she did n''t say she would n''t marry you, did she? |
19324 | But_ do_ you? |
19324 | Ca n''t you persuade her? |
19324 | Death? |
19324 | Did yer ever saw three balls hangin''over my do''? |
19324 | Did you see the Taylors? |
19324 | Do you mean to say that you know Eleanor Van Coort? |
19324 | Do you mean to say you''re going to give it all up? |
19324 | Does n''t yo''know my name hain''t Oppenheimer? |
19324 | Ezra, are you happy? |
19324 | Ezra? |
19324 | For Saturday? |
19324 | For example? |
19324 | Freddy? |
19324 | Got what? |
19324 | Great Scott, and who''s Bertha? |
19324 | Has n''t she-- as far as a woman can-- hasn''t she called you back to her? 19324 He begins there and ends there, does he, then?" |
19324 | How do you feel, my dear? |
19324 | How does that wood burn? |
19324 | I have the ring in my pocket--"But touch wood, wo n''t you? |
19324 | I''m too big, too, now, ai n''t I? |
19324 | If he misunderstood it-- I mean if he thought it really came from Eleanor-- there could n''t be any fuss about it afterward, could there? |
19324 | Is there any truth in this story,said he,"that you have had some trouble with Stevens, and discharged him?" |
19324 | Is there no chance of anything turning up? |
19324 | Is yo''satisfied? |
19324 | It is n''t possible-- that she''s refused you? |
19324 | Just Harry Jones, then, New York City? |
19324 | King George''s table? 19324 Marsa John? |
19324 | May I not ask the meaning of so peculiar a request? |
19324 | May n''t I even say I love you? |
19324 | Might I inquire who_ you_ are? |
19324 | Mo''coffee, Major? |
19324 | Must I? |
19324 | Never your mamma or your papa? |
19324 | Next minute I yerd old marsa a- hollerin'':''Mammy Jane, ai n''t we got a goose?'' |
19324 | Nor anything at all? |
19324 | Nor died? |
19324 | Of what, Willy? |
19324 | Oh, Eleanor, ca n''t you do anything? |
19324 | Oh, is n''t it exciting? |
19324 | On whad? |
19324 | Sad, beautiful, irrevocable memories-- try tea for breakfast-- do you read Browning? 19324 Say, Jo''nivan,"--her voice sank to a whisper that curdled his blood--"were you ever spanked?" |
19324 | She did n''t ask you to_ change_ your name, did she? |
19324 | She stinted herself to get me through col--"Then why did you ever come here? |
19324 | Still rambling, eh? |
19324 | Suppose I just signed the telegram Van Coort? |
19324 | Suppose some fellow should get into a lodge,asked Amidon,"who had never been initiated?" |
19324 | Surely you wo n''t let Harry ruin his life from a mistaken sense of his duty to you? |
19324 | Surely your mother loves you? |
19324 | Than what? |
19324 | That does n''t seem much, does it? |
19324 | Then why in Heaven''s name did n''t she( it was on the tip of my tongue to say"jump at him")"take him?" |
19324 | Then you do n''t even know if he has married since? |
19324 | They''re not going to lower him with those cords, are they? |
19324 | Watson? 19324 We ca n''t be expected to play on the bench the best man in Pennsylvania in that part, can we?" |
19324 | Well, what about your mother? |
19324 | Well, what do you think? |
19324 | Well, what''s the matter with Cartersville? |
19324 | Were any of you ever in Langtry, Ohio? 19324 Were you ever in Colorado, Doctor?" |
19324 | Whad yer goin''ter do? |
19324 | Whad yo''doin''dat for? |
19324 | Whad yo''mean? |
19324 | Whar''s de c''lateral? |
19324 | Whar''s de fo''cents? |
19324 | What did you do, son? |
19324 | What is the lesson inculcated in this Degree? |
19324 | What is the password of this Degree? |
19324 | What on earth do you suppose she invited you for, then? |
19324 | What people? 19324 What was his first name?" |
19324 | What was? |
19324 | What''s the good of asking what she wo n''t do? |
19324 | What''s the matter, Johnny? |
19324 | What''s the matter, Jones? |
19324 | What''s the price of wood? |
19324 | What, have you raised on_ your_ wood, too? 19324 Where are you going?" |
19324 | Why did n''t she take him then? |
19324 | Why, husband? |
19324 | Why, who else? |
19324 | Would n''t it have been wiser to--? |
19324 | Would you consider two weeks--? |
19324 | Yes, unfortunately--"Why unfortun--? |
19324 | Yes--"What''s the matter with getting some forget- me- nots and mailing them to Jones in an envelope? |
19324 | You do n''t expect me to do it, do you? |
19324 | You said three hundred and four dollars and seventy- five cents, I believe? |
19324 | _ Dat_ ring? |
19324 | ''Baked ham?'' |
19324 | ''Nice breast o''goose, or slice o''ham?'' |
19324 | ''What''s that la- ad doin''?'' |
19324 | ''Will iver they get up?'' |
19324 | ''s are to be taught the_ materia musica_ in addition to the_ materia medica_?" |
19324 | ( I always like to see a cash business, do n''t you?) |
19324 | A BULLY BOAT AND A BRAG CAPTAIN_ A Story of Steamboat Life on the Mississippi_ BY SOL SMITH Does any one remember the_ Caravan_? |
19324 | A fellow owes something to his family, does n''t he? |
19324 | After a decent interval of thumping and grandfathers, and what I had for breakfast, I managed to get in my question:"Ever in Colorado, Doctor?" |
19324 | All pallid was my beaded brow, The reeling night was late, My startled mother cried in fear,"My child, what have you ate?" |
19324 | And China Bloom at best is sorry food? |
19324 | And Rowland''s Kalydor, if laid on thick, Poisons the thirsty wretch that bores for blood? |
19324 | And do n''t she look just lovely in that picture? |
19324 | And the Doctor''s gig and all the appurtenances of his profession-- what becomes of them?" |
19324 | And who would not throw off dull care And be like unto her, When happiness brings, as her share, One hundred dollars per----? |
19324 | And yet-- and yet-- do you know what she actually said to me? |
19324 | Are we_ never_ to get to a cheaper country? |
19324 | As they say in post- office forms?--what was his place of origin?" |
19324 | Beautiful story, is n''t it? |
19324 | Came in from the vestry, did he? |
19324 | Can it be a cabbage? |
19324 | Chad, you wu''thless nigger, ai n''t you tuk dat goose out yit?'' |
19324 | Colorado? |
19324 | Did Eleanor-- I mean, did Miss Van Coort-- express--?" |
19324 | Did n''t she send you the locket? |
19324 | Did n''t she--?" |
19324 | Did you learn anything of Louis XV whilst in France? |
19324 | Did you see Colonel Haywood and his daughters, love?" |
19324 | Do n''t the buzzards ooze around up thare jest like they''ve allus done? |
19324 | Do you mean that you''d do nothing to bring two such noble hearts together?" |
19324 | Does the medder- lark complane, as he swims high and dry Through the waves of the wind and the blue of the sky? |
19324 | Does the quail set up and whissel in a disappinted way, Er hang his head in silunce, and sorrow all the day? |
19324 | Eighteen ninety- two Eighth Avenue, is n''t it?" |
19324 | Eleanor''s gone off a good deal lately, do n''t you think so? |
19324 | Fine countenance, has n''t he? |
19324 | Four dollars cost me it that day, Four dollars earned by sweat of brow, Where was the cord of hick''ry now? |
19324 | H''mn; which table, second or third?" |
19324 | HER VALENTINE BY RICHARD HOVEY What, send her a valentine? |
19324 | Handsome picture, ai n''t it? |
19324 | Have_ you_ ever had belladonna squirted in_ your_ eye? |
19324 | He laughed loud as anybody; an''den dat night he says to me as I was puttin''some wood on de fire:"''Chad, where did dat leg go?'' |
19324 | He looks like a man to do that, do n''t he? |
19324 | How could he look up and face his victorious foe? |
19324 | How d''ye sell your wood_ this_ time?" |
19324 | How did I get two of''em? |
19324 | How do I know I have the strength, the determination, the hardihood to undergo the agonies of another?" |
19324 | How is the name of the town pronounced? |
19324 | How much is it?" |
19324 | How the devil was I to_ begin_? |
19324 | I asked him, as a starter, whether he had ever been in Colorado? |
19324 | I do n''t see why being an old maid is always supposed to be so funny, do you? |
19324 | I heard the bell and the pilot''s hail,"What''s_ your_ price for wood?" |
19324 | I just ca n''t seem to realize that Eleanor Jamison is married at last, can you? |
19324 | I mean, was that the end of it all?" |
19324 | I saw a light just ahead on the right-- shall we hail?" |
19324 | If I were ever tempted by such a thing-- which God forbid-- wouldn''t I prefer to spread bacilli on buttered toast?" |
19324 | Is it worth while? |
19324 | Is n''t that gorgeous? |
19324 | Is that a swan that rides upon the water? |
19324 | Is the chipmuck''s health a- failin''?--Does he walk, er does he run? |
19324 | Is there any such fool as the man that breaks his heart twice for the impossible?" |
19324 | Is they anything the matter with the rooster''s lungs er voice? |
19324 | Lemme have your name, wo n''t you?" |
19324 | My pride-- my woman''s pride--""Oh, how can you let such trifles stand between you? |
19324 | Nothing in it? |
19324 | Now, how does that strike you? |
19324 | Now, is n''t that splendid? |
19324 | Ort a mortul be complanin''when dumb animals rejoice? |
19324 | Perhaps you''ve heard sumfin''about him? |
19324 | Pity, was n''t it?" |
19324 | Pompadour? |
19324 | Smart, was n''t it? |
19324 | Some one else? |
19324 | Surprising what some of these men have gone through, ai n''t it? |
19324 | THE OWL- CRITIC BY JAMES T. FIELDS"Who stuffed that white owl?" |
19324 | Talking about me, did you say? |
19324 | That was nice news, was n''t it? |
19324 | That, I think is-- is-- that-- a-- a-- yes, to be sure, Washington; you recollect him, of course? |
19324 | The other pilot''s voice was again heard on deck:"How much_ have_ you?" |
19324 | Then he was going on Saturday? |
19324 | They were here, then, were they?" |
19324 | Think what would happen to me if it came to Doctor Saltworthy''s ears? |
19324 | Thou''rt welcome to the town; but why come here To bleed a brother poet, gaunt like thee? |
19324 | Was he not seraphically whizzing through space, obeying the diamond telegram of love? |
19324 | Was n''t it foolish? |
19324 | Was there ever anything so unfortunate? |
19324 | Watson wants to see me?" |
19324 | We do n''t want no better signs o''gas th''n th''t, do we, Squire?" |
19324 | Well, I hope?" |
19324 | Well, suh, what was there left for a high- toned Southern gentleman to do? |
19324 | What are your literary habits?" |
19324 | What do you mean by the music cure?" |
19324 | What is the will of the conclave?" |
19324 | What more do you expect her to do? |
19324 | What''s your instrument?'' |
19324 | What, who, was her murderer? |
19324 | When Mr. Watson came back in the evening, he met his wife with a cheery smile as he said,"Well, my dear, how have you enjoyed yourself to- day? |
19324 | Where did you say he lived?" |
19324 | Where do_ I_ come in? |
19324 | Where the first Four Hundred of the town moved at the music''s call? |
19324 | Where''s the ruin?" |
19324 | Who have we next? |
19324 | Who was the Dauphin? |
19324 | Why had we not thought of the artistic regeneration of our sordid life before? |
19324 | Will you make it just straight ritual, or throw in some of those specialities of yours?" |
19324 | Wo n''t you run your horse down to the train and hold that book- agent till I come? |
19324 | You had n''t noticed it? |
19324 | _ When did they sleep?_ Wood taken in, the_ Caravan_ again took her place in the middle of the stream, paddling on as usual. |
19324 | do I hear thy slender voice complain? |
19324 | replied the Captain--(captains did swear a little in those days);"what''s the odd_ quarter_ for, I should like to know? |
19324 | rouge makes thee sick? |
19324 | snorts Cap., rearing up;''I thought you wrote that you played brass?'' |
19324 | what is this that rises to my touch, So like a cushion? |
33625 | Says the colonel,"What are you going to do about it; are you going home now, or are you going to wait for the rest of the boys?" |
33095 | Save yourselves, for me ye can not help, and why should all die together? 33095 Who are you?" |
33095 | Did you ever know of a more remarkable heroism? |
33095 | Do you know what he started westward to find? |
33095 | If they could not get gold in the way they had hoped, why not in another way? |
33095 | On the other hand, how could he hope to conquer that impregnable fortress of rock? |
33095 | The air was full of Columbus and his New World; and what spirited youth could stay to pore in musty law- books then? |
33095 | What could overcome those frightful odds? |
23026 | ''Show him mercy, and mercy shall be shown unto you when you need it;''so what could I do but let him up? |
23026 | ''Spose, then, that I try it to the right and Simon to the left;''spose that each of us takes two persons with him and that they are females? |
23026 | A little harder, Jim,called the missionary"shall I lend a hand?" |
23026 | Am dis de flatboat, and am I in de cellar ob it? |
23026 | And did yo''go right''mong de heathen all alone by yo''self? |
23026 | And he will do so, but what shall he tell the white hunter when he asks whether Wa- on- mon will meet him again and prove he is not afraid? |
23026 | And if I win? |
23026 | And if they ca n''t pick us all off, keep us here till we''re starved out? |
23026 | And if you should get through the lines with''em? |
23026 | And the Indians have been deceived as to our purpose? |
23026 | And the little one asleep there? |
23026 | And the rifles of the Shawanoes have done grievous harm among the pale- faces? |
23026 | And then what will our folks do? |
23026 | And then? |
23026 | And what becomes ob dat? |
23026 | And what is that? |
23026 | And when he returns? |
23026 | And when is that likely to be? |
23026 | And why does he wish to speak to Wa- on- mon? |
23026 | And why does the missionary come to the camp of Wa- on- mon? 23026 And why? |
23026 | And you evened up matters with The Panther? |
23026 | And you? |
23026 | Are the folks coming up the river towards us? |
23026 | Are you hit? |
23026 | But Wa- on- mon once said he was the friend of the missionary; why does he say now that he is an enemy? |
23026 | But how is that to be done? 23026 But how long is it to last?" |
23026 | But suppose my brother, the mighty Wa- on- mon, does not come back? |
23026 | But what about The Panther? |
23026 | But what''s become of The Panther? |
23026 | But which one? 23026 But why is it you are at rest?" |
23026 | But,interposed Hastings, with a nervousness he could not conceal,"ca n''t me and Boone be of help to you?" |
23026 | But-- but,pleaded the distressed girl,"tell father and George to be careful, wo n''t you, please?" |
23026 | Ca n''t you get a candle? |
23026 | Can it be possible? 23026 Can not the missionary speak with a single tongue? |
23026 | Dan''l,returned Kenton, sharply,"did you ever see a ghost?" |
23026 | Did he do so yesterday? |
23026 | Did he not fight against the Shawanoes this night? 23026 Did he say anything?" |
23026 | Did n''t I just tole you dat nuffin did n''t happen? |
23026 | Did you bring him back with you? |
23026 | Did you come yourself, or were you sent ahead to see us? |
23026 | Do n''t you know? |
23026 | Do yo''know dat debbil? |
23026 | Do you expect to use any signallin''for me? |
23026 | Does he not always speak with a single tongue? |
23026 | Does he think the white hunter will spare him? 23026 Does the white hunter think Wa- on- mon is afraid to meet him in the depths of the wood, where no eye but that of the Great Spirit shall see them?" |
23026 | Good evening,he called, nodding his head in salutation;"may I come aboard?" |
23026 | Haben''t I jes''told yo''? 23026 Has my brother seen the white hunter?" |
23026 | Have n''t you any other news for us? |
23026 | Have you any idea where he is? |
23026 | He will not run away? |
23026 | Heard me speak? 23026 Hello, Mr. Kenton, dat''s yo''self, am it?" |
23026 | How are you going to get them women and two children across the river? 23026 How did you make out?" |
23026 | How far off is it? |
23026 | How long after we make our pause will they suspect the truth? |
23026 | How many of the varmints are playing the spy? |
23026 | How many of the varmints are there? |
23026 | How soon? |
23026 | How was it you tried to prevent it? |
23026 | How? |
23026 | How? |
23026 | I say, gal, where be you? |
23026 | I''m all right,mumbled Jim,"fetch on( hic) your rattler; let''em bite-- who cares? |
23026 | I''s afeard dat somethin''may happen to Mr. Kenton, and if it does and he ca n''t get back, nor me neither, what''s goin''to become of de folks? 23026 I, I think I''ve got my bearings; the river off here to the left is how fur away?" |
23026 | If that is the case, how can we reach it from the block- house? |
23026 | Is his heart glad that Wa- on- mon will meet him? |
23026 | Is that probable? |
23026 | Is that you, Dan''l? |
23026 | Is that you, Jethro? |
23026 | It may make you wealthy, George; but how can it help me? |
23026 | Marse George,said Jethro,"whar does dis riber flow?" |
23026 | No danger of his flunking, I hope, parson? |
23026 | No one can be more so; I left the camp to hunt for you; do you know of that rock which lies just above the gulch, on this side of the river? 23026 Not the slightest; but, Simon, may I say one word?" |
23026 | Of course, you had n''t any chance of getting it back again, or you''d done it? |
23026 | Shall I go wid yo''to see yo''do n''t get hurt? |
23026 | Suppose Wa- on- mon does not come back? |
23026 | Suppose anything happens to him and Boone? |
23026 | Suppose,said Mr. Ashbridge, in a tremulous voice,"she is not spared to be taken into camp?" |
23026 | Sure Mr. Boone wo n''t feel bad if I do n''t go wid him? |
23026 | Sure you was n''t nowhere near us? |
23026 | That being admitted,said Altman,"why would it not be wise to cross the river at this point, or make the rest of the journey through the Ohio woods? |
23026 | That being so,continued Kenton,"what''s the news you brought?" |
23026 | That''s the man who put up the cabin a mile back down the river? |
23026 | The missionary thanks Wa- on- mon-- may he call him his brother? |
23026 | Then what will the missionary do? |
23026 | Then why, Shawanoe, did you run away when a short time since you promised to meet me by the splintered tree near the clearing? |
23026 | There ai n''t no speck of doubt about it-- helloa, who''s this? |
23026 | Wal, did n''t yo''obstrust them? |
23026 | What are you waiting for? |
23026 | What caused you to make this stop, Weber? |
23026 | What de mischief am dat? |
23026 | What did the missionary mean by tellin''me a brave man is merciful? 23026 What do you think of things?" |
23026 | What does he wish to say? |
23026 | What good does wishing do? |
23026 | What is it, Kenton? 23026 What is the prayer?" |
23026 | What is to be done? |
23026 | What is your name, please? |
23026 | What is your news? |
23026 | What trouble would it be to tote''em over? |
23026 | What was it? |
23026 | What will they suspect, then, if we stop here? |
23026 | What yo''want to cross de riber fur? |
23026 | What''s that for? |
23026 | What''s that? 23026 What''s that?" |
23026 | What''s the cause of that? |
23026 | What''s the matter with that? |
23026 | What''s the matter? 23026 What''s the matter?" |
23026 | What''s the use, Jim? |
23026 | When was that? |
23026 | Where are they? |
23026 | Where can he be? |
23026 | Where is Mabel? 23026 Where is it? |
23026 | Where is papa? 23026 Where was you when The Panther and me was having our little argyment?" |
23026 | Where? 23026 Who am yo''? |
23026 | Who comes he to see? |
23026 | Who dar? |
23026 | Who dar? |
23026 | Who has charge of''em, Daniel? |
23026 | Who is that man? |
23026 | Whose voice was it, then? |
23026 | Why did n''t you do it? 23026 Why did not the white dogs all come ashore and chase the Shawanoes?" |
23026 | Why do n''t dey be gemmen? |
23026 | Why do you express that doubt, when it has been a good many years since the people in our old homes have suffered from the Indians? |
23026 | Why does n''t General Washington send some one who knows how to fight the Indians, and with men enough to whip them? |
23026 | Why does the missionary come to the camp of Wa- on- mon when more than one of the Shawanoes have fallen by the rifles of the pale- faces? |
23026 | Why not go back for that? |
23026 | Why not go there at once, without stopping at the block- house? |
23026 | Why not? |
23026 | Why? |
23026 | Will he be there when the sun appears above the tree- tops? |
23026 | Would n''t the chief like to lay hands on him? |
23026 | Would you like to do it? |
23026 | Yo''tole me not to speak or move or breve; if I do n''t speak or move, ca n''t you let up on de breving bus''ness? 23026 You do n''t think the gal was mistook?" |
23026 | You remember t''other flatboat,said Kenton, partially recovering his self- mastery,"the one the MacDougalls was on, and they was all killed?" |
23026 | You was n''t at the block- house, Dan''l, when the flatboat stopped there? |
23026 | ''Sposen he had n''t done so, what would hab come of me? |
23026 | Am I wrong in that hope, dearest?" |
23026 | Am yo''name Girty?" |
23026 | And what did I say?" |
23026 | And why did they not do so? |
23026 | But dare lie hope that such an opportunity would be presented to him? |
23026 | Can it be that Simon underestimates the prowess of Wa- on- mon? |
23026 | Can you tell me how the thing is to be done, Dan''l?" |
23026 | Could he believe his eyes? |
23026 | Did he not help the pale face dogs to flee across the river in the boat?" |
23026 | Does he come to seek Wa- on- mon alone?" |
23026 | Have n''t heard anything of Boone since I left you?" |
23026 | He was silent a minute, and replied by means of a pointed question himself:"Is the child on the tree the child of the missionary?" |
23026 | Holding himself somewhat unsteadily, he looked around in the gloom at his elder escort, and demanded:"Where going?" |
23026 | Howsumever,"added the elder ranger,"what''s snakes got to do with the bus''ness afore us?" |
23026 | I wonder whether he had any talk with The Panther? |
23026 | If that''s so, what''s to hinder two or three doing it, by treading on each other''s heels?" |
23026 | It was evident the youth felt quite proud of his exploits, and who can blame him? |
23026 | Kenton?" |
23026 | Kenton?" |
23026 | Kenton?" |
23026 | Kenton?" |
23026 | Nothing has happened to any of''em?" |
23026 | Now, to come down to the point, when we halt near the gulch will our position be such that we can make a good defence against an attack?" |
23026 | Oh, where is she?" |
23026 | Shall I tell the white hunter that these are the words of Wa- on- mon?" |
23026 | Should not the missionary feel thus toward those whom the Great Spirit is pleased to make white?" |
23026 | Starting up, the missionary looked around and inquired:"What has become of the canoe Jethro and I brought with us?" |
23026 | Suppose he fails in both instances-- what then?" |
23026 | Suppose we see nothing of Boone or Kenton again?" |
23026 | Suppressing all evidence of emotion, Finley asked:"What are the wishes of my brother, the mighty Wa- on- mon?" |
23026 | Then Kenton asked, in his guarded undertone:"What do you make of it, Dan''l?" |
23026 | What better chance could they ask?" |
23026 | What can it be?" |
23026 | What do you think the varmints mean to do?" |
23026 | What does it look like?" |
23026 | What has become of Mabel? |
23026 | What has happened?" |
23026 | What more inviting opening could the crouching Shawanoes ask than was here presented to them? |
23026 | What task could be more hopeless? |
23026 | What was to prevent the complete success of the plan? |
23026 | What''s that?" |
23026 | Why not swathe himself in these instead of using the awkward and cumbersome box? |
23026 | called Hastings, who had hastened to return upon hearing his wild shout;"he''s gone under; did he bite you?" |
23026 | exclaimed the chieftain;"how many of them have fallen?" |
23026 | for how long should this be said of them? |
23026 | he asked himself,"or talk in American, so dat anoder gemmen can understand''em? |
23026 | he exclaimed, leaping from the floor in exultation;"why did n''t I tink ob it afore? |
23026 | how''s dat?" |
23026 | muttered the angry Kenton,"but what can have become of the younker?" |
23026 | where is mamma?" |
23026 | who''s this?" |
31919 | Am I happy? |
31919 | For the sinless world is fair, And man''s is the sin and gloom; And dead are the days that were, But what are the days to come? 31919 Where is he?" |
31919 | Why ride ye here, why ride ye there, Why ride ye here so merry? 31919 Why ride ye with your sea- green plumes, Your sea- green silken habit, By balmy bosks of faint perfumes Where squats the cunning rabbit?" |
31919 | Why tarry? 31919 Wilt follow, wilt follow to caverns hollow, That echo the tumbling spry? |
31919 | Yes? |
31919 | Anubis dire forget his ghosts to lead To Hell''s profoundness, and then stay to sip One winking bubble from the wine- god''s cup? |
31919 | Can you love me so, Knowing what I am to him Sitting in his gouty chair On the breezy terrace where Amber fire- flies swim? |
31919 | For the past is a memory: Tho''to- day seem somber as fate, Who knows what to- morrow will be?" |
31919 | Have I not held thee true, True as thy deepest, Sweet and immaculate blue, Of nights that feel thy dew? |
31919 | Have I not known thee, God, As thy stars know Heaven? |
31919 | Have I not striven? |
31919 | Have I not_ known_ thee true, O God that keepest? |
31919 | Hear you r o music in the creaks Made by the sallow grasshopper, Who in the hot weeds sharply breaks The mellow dryness with his cheer? |
31919 | Here I tumble with the bee, Robber bee of low degree Gay with dust: Wit ye of a bracelet bold Broadly belting him with gold? |
31919 | In dells of forest faun and fay, Moss- lounged within the fountain''s spray, How drained we wines too rare to tell, Shall we forget? |
31919 | Of such so lowly? |
31919 | Oh, will you sit and wait, When fields, erst desolate, Now are intoxicate With life that flowers? |
31919 | Or in the Summer, dry and loud, The hard cicada whirr aboon His long lay in a poplar''s cloud, When the thin heat rose wraith- like in a shroud? |
31919 | Purple with love and rife With their fierce budded life, Passion and rosy strife Drained from warm winds and the turbulent showers? |
31919 | The Beautiful, so innocent, sweet, and pure, Why must thou perish, and the evil still endure? |
31919 | The fawn''mid lilies from the mere Sucks genial draughts to dull its thirsts; O fondest spirit, art thou near? |
31919 | The sunlight living in your hair, And in your cheek the cherry? |
31919 | Thou, Spirit of Beauty, with thy bursting flowers, Swollen with pride, wouldst thou usurp my throne, Long planted here deep in the waste''s wild moan? |
31919 | Were they placed, think you, perchance, For such love in hell? |
31919 | What am I, and what is he Who can cull and tear a heart, As one might a rose for sport In its royalty? |
31919 | What am I, that he has made All this love a bitter foam, Blown about a life of loam That must break and fade? |
31919 | What made gold Horus smile with golden lips? |
31919 | Wilt follow thy queen to islands green, Vague islands of witchery? |
31919 | Would you have him thus to know That you died for utter woe And despair o''ermuch? |
31919 | and am I not Your true Guinevere? |
31919 | are you such? |
33614 | );_ The Princyples of Astronamy_( 1547? |
33614 | BOKENAM, OSBERN( 1393?-1447? |
33614 | BOLTON( or BOULTON), EDMUND( 1575?-1633? |
33614 | BONONCINI( or BUONONCINI), GIOVANNI BATTISTA( 1672?-1750? |
33614 | Excavations of recent years have, however, led to the discovery of some 600 ancient Italic( Ligurian?) |
33614 | Several meeting? |
33614 | The most important of his numerous works are_ Hypercritica_( 1618? |
33614 | ein Ketzer?" |
33614 | huts, and of cemeteries of the same and the succeeding( Umbrian) periods( 800- 600? |
33614 | useless or unavailing, and in such expressions, chiefly archaistic, as"what boots it?" |
11723 | ''How old art thou?" |
11723 | A very good general idea,continued Miss Harson,"but perhaps Clara can tell us something more particular about the elms?" |
11723 | And are n''t its chestnuts just splendid? |
11723 | And can people really go and see the very same Mount of Olives now? |
11723 | And could n''t the poor little mouse get out again? |
11723 | And did you think they were hung all over the Lombardy poplars? |
11723 | And do they stay in the woods there all the time? |
11723 | And do you notice how fragrant they are? 11723 And is it for me you intend the cherries, my dear child?" |
11723 | And now Malcolm? |
11723 | And they float it down the rivers on rafts, do n''t they? |
11723 | And was n''t it true, Miss Harson? |
11723 | And what is the particular name for these tree- blossoms? |
11723 | And what is vulcanite? |
11723 | And where does the olive- oil come from? |
11723 | And why are they called_ deciduous?_asked Malcolm. |
11723 | And why could n''t_ you_ say it before Clara put it into your head by saying''Overshoes? |
11723 | And why is it boiled? |
11723 | Are apples mentioned anywhere in the Bible? |
11723 | Are n''t they good to eat? |
11723 | Are snakes ever pretty? |
11723 | Are the leaves like those of our cedar trees? |
11723 | Are the stems all made of India- rubber? |
11723 | Are the stems of the maple trees made of maple- sugar? |
11723 | Are the trees just in one particular place, then? |
11723 | Are there any more kinds of palm trees? |
11723 | Are there any more kinds of pine trees? |
11723 | Are there any more of the walnut family? |
11723 | Are there any of them here? |
11723 | Are there ever many peach trees growing in one place,asked Clara,"like the apple trees in Mr. Grove''s orchard?" |
11723 | Are there gypsies here, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Are there real silkworms on''em? 11723 Are they the same as oak- apples?" |
11723 | Are willow baskets made of willow trees? |
11723 | Are you going to tell us a story, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Are you looking up into the sky for them? 11723 But can figs be naughty, Miss Harson?" |
11723 | But do n''t bees make honey from the lime trees that grow in this country, too, Miss Harson? |
11723 | But do n''t walnuts come from California? 11723 But how can people live in the hut,"asked Malcolm,"if the charcoal is burned in it? |
11723 | But how do people manage to climb such a tree as that,asked Malcolm,"to get the dates? |
11723 | But how do they make the baskets? |
11723 | But is n''t it a shame,said Clara,"to spoil the maple- sugar by making the trees into chairs and things?" |
11723 | But is n''t it strange, Miss Harson, that the Indians and the Britons did n''t get drowned going out in such little light boats? |
11723 | But that is n''t true, is it? |
11723 | But that is n''t_ preserves_, is it? |
11723 | But what did they do it for? |
11723 | But what do they want to find it for,asked Malcolm,"when it kills people?" |
11723 | But why is it called honey- locust? |
11723 | But why is n''t it dark and ugly, like the waterproofs? |
11723 | But why were n''t they saved,asked Clara,"when people thought so much of them?" |
11723 | Can you tell us something more that is done with it, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Could n''t we have a tent, Miss Harson,asked Clara,"and try it?" |
11723 | Did it come from England? |
11723 | Did n''t people use to worship oak trees,asked Malcolm--"people who lived ever so long ago?" |
11723 | Did n''t we have fine times picking''em up? |
11723 | Did people always know about India- rubber? |
11723 | Did they eat''em? |
11723 | Did you_ really_? |
11723 | Do almond trees and peach trees look alike? |
11723 | Do fig trees grow wild? |
11723 | Do n''t they grow in this country? |
11723 | Do n''t we all look, almost the first thing, at the tree by the dining- room window? |
11723 | Do n''t you remember, Miss Harson, that sometimes Edith and I can have only one pear divided between us at dessert because they are so large? |
11723 | Do n''t you remember, Miss Harson,said Edith,"the little tree that I thought was on fire and how frightened I was?" |
11723 | Do n''t you, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Do oak trees ever have apples on''em? |
11723 | Do people ever eat the horse- chestnut? |
11723 | Do pigs ever eat the nuts, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Do prunes really grow on trees, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Do the bees make honey in the trunk? |
11723 | Do the corks that come in bottles grow on it? |
11723 | Do the flowers grow like real necklaces? |
11723 | Do they eat''em instead of bread? |
11723 | Do they have thorns on''em? |
11723 | Do they make holes in the tree for it, as they do for maple- sap? |
11723 | Do they mash''em, like making apples into cider? |
11723 | Do they, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Do willow trees grow everywhere? |
11723 | Do you think we''d like them as well as ours, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Does it grow up from the ground or down from the air? |
11723 | Does n''t the beech tree have nuts? |
11723 | Does that mean Indians, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Does that mean that people can sit inside the tree? |
11723 | Does the Norway spruce come from Norway? |
11723 | Does the apple tree move its head, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Does the sugar come right out of the tree when people tap on it with a hammer? |
11723 | Have n''t we''most come to the end of the trees? |
11723 | Have we any maple- sugar trees? |
11723 | Have we any trees that look like vases, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Have you ever been to a sugar- camp, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Have you so soon forgotten about the real insect- crickets, dear? |
11723 | How about ice- cream? |
11723 | How can people tell when there is any camphor inside the tree? |
11723 | How can that be possible? |
11723 | How can you remember everything so, Miss Harson? |
11723 | How could we refuse a few cherries,said Caroline,"to the man that sheds his blood in our defence? |
11723 | How do they make the cloth? |
11723 | How do you like these pretty quince trees? |
11723 | How high do you think these trees are, Miss Harson? |
11723 | How high does it grow, Miss Harson? |
11723 | How long will it be before they are ripe? |
11723 | How many of them do you wear over your shoulders at once? |
11723 | How_ could_ you? 11723 I hope you do n''t mind our trespassing on your grounds?" |
11723 | I should like to have some of all the trees,replied Clara,"because then we could study about them better.--Wouldn''t you, Miss Harson?" |
11723 | I should like to know,exclaimed Clara, after some thought,"why a tree is called_ locust_, when a locust is such a disagreeable insect?" |
11723 | I thought it was wicked,said she,"to cut off flowers from fruit trees? |
11723 | I thought they grew all over that country? |
11723 | I wonder how the tree got that name? |
11723 | I wonder if all the trees will be so interesting? |
11723 | I wonder what that species has to say for itself? |
11723 | I wonder,said Malcolm,"if the bark is like birch- bark?" |
11723 | I wonder,said Malcolm,"if there is anything else that can be done with the willow?" |
11723 | Is anything done with the bark? |
11723 | Is it a man who has palm trees or who sells dates? 11723 Is it any queerer,"asked her governess,"than to make it from leaves? |
11723 | Is it possible,said he,"that you are the daughter of the mayor of Rebenheim? |
11723 | Is it''the Mount of Olives''? |
11723 | Is n''t it funny,said Edith, laughing,"to go and get their breakfasts from a_ tree_? |
11723 | Is n''t it wicked to kill the poor little birds? |
11723 | Is n''t it_ catkins_? |
11723 | Is n''t that silly? |
11723 | Is n''t that the tree that smells so in summer? |
11723 | Is n''t there something about that in the Bible, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Is that only one tree? |
11723 | Is that what our cedar- chests are made of to keep the moths from our winter clothes? |
11723 | Is that_ true_? |
11723 | Is the red birch really red, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Is there any story about it, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Is there any story about the ash? |
11723 | Is there anything more about hickory trees? |
11723 | Is there anything to tell about the spruce tree? |
11723 | Is_ that_ a mulberry too? |
11723 | Like India- rubber? |
11723 | Miss Harson,asked Clara, with a perplexed face,"what are catkins?" |
11723 | Miss Harson,asked Clara,"do people cut down real cherry trees to make the pretty red furniture like that in your room?" |
11723 | Miss Harson,asked Clara,"why are horse- chestnuts_ called_''horse- chestnuts''? |
11723 | Miss Harson,asked Edith, as the talk seemed to have come to an end,"is n''t there any more about apple trees? |
11723 | Miss Harson,asked Edith, very earnestly,"is n''t the palm tree in the Bible?" |
11723 | Miss Harson,asked Edith, with great earnestness,"has each of our hairs got a number on it? |
11723 | Miss Harson,said Clara,"when people talk about_ weeping_ willows, what do they mean? |
11723 | Miss Harson,said Clara,"wo n''t you tell us, please, how they get the caoutch-- whatever it is-- and make it into India- rubber?" |
11723 | Miss Harson,said Malcolm,"what is the upas tree like, and why is it called_ deadly_?" |
11723 | Not the orange, I hope? |
11723 | Oh, was it you? |
11723 | Oh,exclaimed Edith,"was n''t that dreadful?" |
11723 | Perhaps,said Miss Harson,"our little invalid will not care to hear about trees this evening?" |
11723 | Put what does he do when there is no fresh fruit on them? |
11723 | Shall we have some figs now, by way of variety? |
11723 | So Edie''s''loaves of bread''are green? |
11723 | So they are like feathers? |
11723 | That seems easy enough,said Malcolm,"but how do they make it into gutta- percha?" |
11723 | The kind of olives that papa likes to eat at dinner, and that you and I_ do n''t_ like, Miss Harson? |
11723 | There are no lime trees here, are there? |
11723 | This is n''t a pine tree, is it? |
11723 | Was n''t that dreadful? |
11723 | Was n''t that splendid? |
11723 | Was n''t that wicked, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Well, dear,said Miss Harson, coming to the upper window from which an eager head was thrust,"what is it that you wish me to see?" |
11723 | Well,observed Malcolm,"I do n''t want half an apple.--But, Miss Harson, do they ever have''pear- howlings''in England?" |
11723 | Were there any Indians there, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Were those cherries like ours? |
11723 | Were those weeping willows that we saw to- day? |
11723 | What are oak-_galls_, Miss Harson? |
11723 | What are pitch- knots? |
11723 | What are prickly- pears? |
11723 | What are you thinking about so seriously, Clara? |
11723 | What color are the flowers, Miss Harson? |
11723 | What did my little Edith see when she looked out of the window? |
11723 | What do you notice about them? |
11723 | What does a''palmer''mean, Miss Harson? |
11723 | What does a_ wild_ olive tree mean, Miss Harson? |
11723 | What is the matter, children? |
11723 | What is''a howling crop,''Miss Harson? |
11723 | What kept it from turning into stone too? |
11723 | What kind grow in_ our_ woods? |
11723 | What kind of chestnuts,asked Clara,"are those great big ones, like horse- chestnuts, that they have in some of the stores? |
11723 | What makes it look so_ yellow_ over there, Miss Harson? |
11723 | What tree comes next, Miss Harson? |
11723 | What was the matter? |
11723 | What''s the use of cones, any way? |
11723 | What''s the use,asked Malcolm,"of calling a tree such a name as_ mocker- nut_? |
11723 | When it is not the season for nuts? |
11723 | Where do the real figs grow? |
11723 | Where does slippery elm come from? |
11723 | Who can repeat some words from the New Testament about this mountain? |
11723 | Who put it there, I should like to know, on_ our_ land? |
11723 | Why does n''t the man shoot''em? |
11723 | Why, I thought,said Clara,"that silkworms always lived on mulberry- leaves?" |
11723 | Why, do you not remember our talk about silkworms? |
11723 | Why,_ we_ have only one,exclaimed little Edith,"and we do n''t want any more.--Do we, Clara?" |
11723 | Will it grow then? |
11723 | Wo n''t you have a story for us this evening, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Wo n''t you tell us about that, Miss Harson? |
11723 | Would n''t it be nice,said Edith,"if some would float here?" |
11723 | You, then,said she,"were the good angel that averted such a terrible misfortune from our family?" |
11723 | _ Real_ pink trees? |
11723 | *****"''Children, when in prayers and praises Loudly we with lips adore, While the heart no anthem raises, Are not we like those of yore? |
11723 | *****"Is n''t it beautiful?" |
11723 | --What is''the glory of Lebanon,''Miss Harson?" |
11723 | Am I right or not when I give Caroline the credit, under God, of having saved my life? |
11723 | And is n''t it camphor?" |
11723 | Are they good to eat?" |
11723 | But I think you all can tell me when the hemlock is prettiest?" |
11723 | But did n''t you say, Miss Harson, that it''s always called basswood in our country?" |
11723 | But do n''t figs ever grow in this country, Miss Harson?" |
11723 | But do you know that we have left the apple and rose family now, and have come to the almond family?" |
11723 | But he does n''t gnaw our trees, does he?" |
11723 | But how do they get it out, Miss Harson? |
11723 | But the children thought that hemlock was hemlock: how did it come to be spruce? |
11723 | But what does it mean?" |
11723 | Ca n''t we get some this spring, Miss Harson, before it''s all gone?" |
11723 | Can not one of you tell me where there are some tall, narrow trees that look almost as if they had been cut out of wood and stuck there?" |
11723 | Did n''t I see them first?" |
11723 | Did not our Lord say something else about a fig tree?" |
11723 | Did they have any in Maine where you were, Miss Harson?" |
11723 | Do horses like''em?" |
11723 | Do n''t they ever put their heads out the least bit, Miss Harson?" |
11723 | Do the trees really cry? |
11723 | Do they cut great holes in the trunk of the tree?" |
11723 | Do you remember the cherries which you so kindly gave him?" |
11723 | Does it not seem wonderful that the mighty Ruler of the universe should condescend to such small things? |
11723 | Does it not seem wonderful to think of? |
11723 | How did they escape the enemy? |
11723 | I wonder if some one can tell me about it?" |
11723 | I wonder if you would like to hear the story about it?" |
11723 | In the first place, I should object very much to living in the tent with you, and how could you possibly live there alone?" |
11723 | Is anything done with the bark?" |
11723 | Is it good to eat?" |
11723 | Is n''t that funny, Miss Harson?" |
11723 | Is n''t that very queer, Miss Harson?" |
11723 | Now who can tell_ me_ something about this tree?" |
11723 | Perhaps you will kindly tell us of some of the uses to which charcoal is applied?" |
11723 | Tell me,"said he, in a tone of deep emotion;"was not that little child an instrument in the hand of God to save me from death? |
11723 | The children all laughed, for did n''t papa declare-- with_ such_ a sober face!--that they were eating him out of house and home in brown bread alone? |
11723 | What do you notice about the smoother trees?" |
11723 | What does it mean?" |
11723 | What does that mean, Miss Harson?" |
11723 | What is it, Miss Harson?" |
11723 | What is it?" |
11723 | What other colors can you call them?" |
11723 | What was its name?" |
11723 | Where are they, I should like to know?" |
11723 | Where is there a tree on the grounds answering this description, Malcolm?" |
11723 | Who loves to be called''Little Sunshine''?" |
11723 | Why ca n''t they take those that do n''t?" |
11723 | Why could n''t you say''India- rubber''?" |
11723 | Why do n''t they, Miss Harson, instead of getting killed?" |
11723 | Why_ would_ people always laugh when there was nothing to laugh at? |
11723 | Will you tell us something about it?" |
11723 | Wo n''t these make apples?" |
11723 | Would n''t you like it, Miss Harson?" |
11723 | [ Illustration: IN THE EASY CHAIR]"Are there any poplars at Elmridge?" |
11723 | _ THE MAPLES._"The pink trees next, I suppose,"said Malcolm,"since we have had the yellow ones?" |
11723 | and can we see''em?" |
11723 | called out Clara, in great excitement, as she caught up with her governess on a run;"has n''t Edie poisoned herself? |
11723 | exclaimed Clara, in surprise;"does sago really grow on a tree?" |
11723 | exclaimed Clara;"did you ever see any that was written on?" |
11723 | exclaimed her audience;"could any tree be as old as that?" |
11723 | exclaimed three voices at once;"what is that? |
11723 | said Miss Harson, laughing;"what shall I do with you? |
11723 | what''s the matter with Edie now?" |
15859 | And at present, Señor, all on board, I suppose? |
15859 | And from what port are you last? |
15859 | And how long has this been? |
15859 | And meantime, did no other vessel pass the isle? |
15859 | And obedient in all else? 15859 And prayer?" |
15859 | And the balance you took in specie, perhaps? |
15859 | And there, Señor, you exchanged your sealskins for teas and silks, I think you said? |
15859 | And what is the reason? |
15859 | And what wearies you of it now? |
15859 | And will be to- night, Señor? |
15859 | Are you frantic? 15859 Are you looking for the silent man?" |
15859 | Are you mad? 15859 Are you ready to go on and write now? |
15859 | Bartleby,said I,"Ginger Nut is away; just step around to the Post Office, wo n''t you? |
15859 | Bartleby,said I,"I owe you twelve dollars on account; here are thirty- two; the odd twenty are yours-- Will you take it?" |
15859 | But died of the fever? |
15859 | But tell me, has he not, so far as you have known him, always proved a good, worthy fellow? |
15859 | But the night? |
15859 | But these mild trades that now fan your cheek, do they not come with a human- like healing to you? 15859 But what reasonable objection can you have to speak to me? |
15859 | But, do you not go walk at times? 15859 Cape Horn?--who spoke of Cape Horn?" |
15859 | Deranged? 15859 Do I dream? |
15859 | Does he want to starve? 15859 Don Benito,"said Captain Delano quickly,"do you see what is going on there? |
15859 | Eh!--He''s asleep, ai n''t he? |
15859 | Excuse me, Don Benito,said Captain Delano,"but this scene surprises me; what means it, pray?" |
15859 | Ginger Nut,said I, willing to enlist the smallest suffrage in my behalf,"what do_ you_ think of it?" |
15859 | Hark!--sure we left no soul above? |
15859 | He''s odd, ai n''t he? |
15859 | How did you come to cross the isle this morning, then, Hunilla? |
15859 | How is this, Bannadonna? |
15859 | How would a bar- tender''s business suit you? 15859 How''s this?" |
15859 | How, Bannadonna? 15859 How, then, would going as a companion to Europe, to entertain some young gentleman with your conversation-- how would that suit you?" |
15859 | How? 15859 How?" |
15859 | How? |
15859 | In mercy''s name, who is he? |
15859 | Introduce me, will you? |
15859 | Is there no other cure, or charm? |
15859 | Is this so? |
15859 | Nay, Señor;--but--"You do not speak; but_ what_, Hunilla? |
15859 | Nippers,said I,"what do_ you_ think of it?" |
15859 | Nor those in belfries? 15859 Of what use is your rod, then?" |
15859 | Oh,_ prefer_? 15859 On board this ship?" |
15859 | Sir, will you be so good as to tell me your business? 15859 Sir,"said I, bowing politely,"have I the honor of a visit from that illustrious god, Jupiter Tonans? |
15859 | So it seems; but what is it for? |
15859 | Some happy one,returned I, starting;"and why do you think that? |
15859 | Tell me, Don Benito,continued his companion with increased interest,"tell me, were these gales immediately off the pitch of Cape Horn?" |
15859 | Tell me, Don Benito,he added, with a smile--"I should like to have your man here, myself-- what will you take for him? |
15859 | The hottest, weariest hour of day, you mean? 15859 The shadow''s? |
15859 | There were more days,said our Captain;"many, many more; why did you not go on and notch them, too, Hunilla?" |
15859 | Think of it? |
15859 | This house? 15859 Turkey,"said I,"what do you think of this? |
15859 | Well, Bannadonna,said the chief,"how long ere you are ready to set the clock going, so that the hour shall be sounded? |
15859 | Well, then, would you like to travel through the country collecting bills for the merchants? 15859 What are you doing here, Bartleby?" |
15859 | What do you mean? 15859 What do you say, Hunilla?" |
15859 | What do you? |
15859 | What earthly right have you to stay here? 15859 What have I said?" |
15859 | What is wanted? |
15859 | What word, sir? |
15859 | What, pray, was Atufal''s offense, Don Benito? |
15859 | What? 15859 Who are you?" |
15859 | Why, how now? 15859 Will you tell me, Bartleby, where you were born?" |
15859 | Will you tell me_ anything_ about yourself? |
15859 | Will you, or will you not, quit me? |
15859 | Would you like a clerkship in a dry- goods store? |
15859 | You are decided, then, not to comply with my request-- a request made according to common usage and common sense? |
15859 | You are saved,cried Captain Delano, more and more astonished and pained;"you are saved: what has cast such a shadow upon you?" |
15859 | You have tried the pillow, then? |
15859 | You mean this shaggy shadow-- the nigh one? 15859 You saw ships pass, far away; you waved to them; they passed on;--was that it, Hunilla?" |
15859 | You see his head, his face? |
15859 | You_ will_ not? |
15859 | Your eyes rest but on your work; what do you speak of? |
15859 | Your ships generally go-- go more or less armed, I believe, Señor? |
15859 | _ Prefer not_, eh? |
15859 | _ Why_ do you refuse? |
15859 | A foolish thought: why do I think it? |
15859 | A pretty big bone though, seems to me.--What? |
15859 | After the lightning is beheld, what fool shall stay the thunder- bolt? |
15859 | Ah, heaven, when man thus keeps his faith, wilt thou be faithless who created the faithful one? |
15859 | Am I not right?" |
15859 | And here, in calm spaces at the heads of glades, and on the shaded tops of slopes commanding the most quiet scenery-- what do you think I saw? |
15859 | And might not that same undiminished Spanish crew, alleged to have perished off to a remnant, be at that very moment lurking in the hold? |
15859 | And respectful?" |
15859 | And upon what ground could you procure such a thing to be done?--a vagrant, is he? |
15859 | And want to get into the harbor, do n''t you?" |
15859 | And what could I say? |
15859 | And what further and deeper aberration might it not yet produce? |
15859 | And why do n''t he, man- fashion, use the knocker, instead of making that doleful undertaker''s clatter with his fist against the hollow panel? |
15859 | And yet, when he roused himself, dilated his chest, felt himself strong on his legs, and coolly considered it-- what did all these phantoms amount to? |
15859 | Any of your rods there?" |
15859 | Are not lonely Kentuckians, ploughing, smit in the unfinished furrow? |
15859 | Are you moon- struck? |
15859 | Are you so grossly ignorant as not to know, that the height of a six- footer is sufficient to discharge an electric cloud upon him? |
15859 | Are your eyes recovered? |
15859 | Arms in the hands of trodden slaves? |
15859 | At last, puzzled to comprehend the meaning of such a knot, Captain Delano addressed the knotter:--"What are you knotting there, my man?" |
15859 | Besides, who ever heard of a white so far a renegade as to apostatize from his very species almost, by leaguing in against it with negroes? |
15859 | Boys and bob- o- links, do they never come a- berrying up here?" |
15859 | But how come sailors with jewels?--or with silk- trimmed under- shirts either? |
15859 | But how? |
15859 | But if not a lunatic, what then? |
15859 | But if that story was not true, what was the truth? |
15859 | But if the whites had dark secrets concerning Don Benito, could then Don Benito be any way in complicity with the blacks? |
15859 | But look, what are yon wobegone regiments drawn up on the next shelf above? |
15859 | But the past is passed; why moralize upon it? |
15859 | But then, might not general distress, and thirst in particular, be affected? |
15859 | But then, what could be the object of enacting this play of the barber before him? |
15859 | But what are these particular precautions of yours? |
15859 | But what could he be doing there?--copying? |
15859 | But what then, thought Captain Delano, glancing towards his now nearing boat-- what then? |
15859 | But, if damps abound at times in Westminster Abbey, because it is so old, why not within this monastery of mountains, which is older? |
15859 | By your order, of course?" |
15859 | Come, all day you have been my host; would you have hospitality all on one side?" |
15859 | Could it have been a jewel? |
15859 | Could you copy a small paper for me this morning? |
15859 | Deborah?--Where''s Jael, pray?" |
15859 | Did indisposition forbid? |
15859 | Did the secret involve aught unfavorable to his captain? |
15859 | Did they not seem put with much the same object with which the burglar or assassin, by day- time, reconnoitres the walls of a house? |
15859 | Did this imply one brief, repentant relenting at the final moment, from some iniquitous plot, followed by remorseless return to it? |
15859 | Did you ever lay eye on the real genuine Equator? |
15859 | Did you hear of the event at Montreal last year? |
15859 | Did you know Monroe Edwards?" |
15859 | Did you not see it? |
15859 | Did you sail from port without boats, Don Benito?" |
15859 | Do n''t you see him? |
15859 | Do you pay any rent? |
15859 | Do you pay my taxes? |
15859 | Does any balloonist, does the outlooking man in the moon, take a broader view of space? |
15859 | Does your beat extend into the Canadas?" |
15859 | Glancing towards the hammock as he entered, Captain Delano said,"You sleep here, Don Benito?" |
15859 | Going to the captain he said,"Sir, shall I put off in a boat? |
15859 | Good hand, I trust? |
15859 | Hark!--Dreadful!--Will you order? |
15859 | Has he been robbing the trunks of the dead cabin- passengers? |
15859 | Have you a rug in the house? |
15859 | Have you ever, in the largest sense, toed the Line? |
15859 | He is like one flayed alive, thought Captain Delano; where may one touch him without causing a shrink? |
15859 | He would do nothing in the office; why should he stay there? |
15859 | How did you know it? |
15859 | How? |
15859 | If some books are deemed most baneful and their sale forbid, how, then, with deadlier facts, not dreams of doting men? |
15859 | If we sought to tell others, what the wiser were they? |
15859 | In a word, will you do anything at all, to give a coloring to your refusal to depart the premises?" |
15859 | In view of the description given, may one be gay upon the Encantadas? |
15859 | Is it not so? |
15859 | Is it that I live so lonesome, and know nothing?" |
15859 | Is there any part of my house I may touch with hopes of my life?" |
15859 | Is this voluntary on their part, Don Benito, or have you appointed them shepherds to your flock of black sheep?" |
15859 | Know you not that yon iron bar is a swift conductor? |
15859 | Know you not, that the heated air and soot are conductors;--to say nothing of those immense iron fire- dogs? |
15859 | Look at this specimen one? |
15859 | Man avoid man? |
15859 | May I ask how many men have you, Señor?" |
15859 | No? |
15859 | Now what sort of business would you like to engage in? |
15859 | Now, what was ginger? |
15859 | Now, which side? |
15859 | Or does he live without dining?" |
15859 | Or is this property yours?" |
15859 | Or was the Spaniard less hardened than the Jew, who refrained not from supping at the board of him whom the same night he meant to betray? |
15859 | Ought I to acknowledge it? |
15859 | Pray, will you tell me where and how one may be safe in a time like this? |
15859 | Shall I acknowledge it? |
15859 | Shall I go and black his eyes?" |
15859 | Shall I put down your name? |
15859 | So you were n''t acquainted with Monroe?" |
15859 | Sun gild this house? |
15859 | Surely you do not mean to persist in that mulish vagary?" |
15859 | Tell me at once, which is, in your opinion, the safest part of this house? |
15859 | That the ship had unlawfully come into the Spaniard''s possession? |
15859 | The Spaniard, still with a guilty shuffle, repeated his question:"And-- and will be to- night, Señor?" |
15859 | There now, do you mark that? |
15859 | To assume a sort of roving cadetship in the maritime affairs of such a house, what more likely scheme for a young knave of talent and spirit? |
15859 | Under the circumstances, would a gentleman, nay, any honest boor, act the part now acted by his host? |
15859 | Upon gaining that vicinity, might not the San Dominick, like a slumbering volcano, suddenly let loose energies now hid? |
15859 | Was Bartleby hot and spicy? |
15859 | Was anything amiss going on? |
15859 | Was it not at Criggan last week, about midnight on Saturday, that the steeple, the big elm, and the assembly- room cupola were struck? |
15859 | Was the negro now lying in wait? |
15859 | Was there any other thing in which I could procure myself to be ignominiously repulsed by this lean, penniless wight?--my hired clerk? |
15859 | Well, well, he looks like a murderer, does n''t he? |
15859 | Were those previous misgivings of Captain Delano''s about to be verified? |
15859 | What a pleasant voice he has, too?" |
15859 | What added thing is there, perfectly reasonable, that he will be sure to refuse to do? |
15859 | What do you think of it, Nippers? |
15859 | What do you think of it, Turkey?" |
15859 | What had one best do? |
15859 | What imported all those day- long enigmas and contradictions, except they were intended to mystify, preliminary to some stealthy blow? |
15859 | What is it, sir, pray, that he_ prefers_ not to do now?" |
15859 | What meant this? |
15859 | What other bodily being possesses such a citadel wherein to resist the assaults of Time? |
15859 | What outlandish beings are these? |
15859 | What say you, Don Benito, will you?" |
15859 | What shall I do? |
15859 | What shall I do? |
15859 | What was that which so sparkled? |
15859 | What was to be done? |
15859 | What was to be done? |
15859 | What will you have for dinner to- day?" |
15859 | What, then, will you do? |
15859 | When those are given, and the-- block yonder,"pointing towards the canvas screen,"when Haman there, as I merrily call him,--him? |
15859 | Who are you?" |
15859 | Who has empowered you, you Tetzel, to peddle round your indulgences from divine ordinations? |
15859 | Who is this that chooses a time of thunder for making calls? |
15859 | Who would murder Amasa Delano? |
15859 | Who, by his own confession, had stationed him there? |
15859 | Why decline the invitation to visit the sealer that evening? |
15859 | Why should it? |
15859 | Why was the Spaniard, so superfluously punctilious at times, now heedless of common propriety in not accompanying to the side his departing guest? |
15859 | Will it be credited? |
15859 | Will master go into the cuddy?" |
15859 | Will you buy? |
15859 | Will you not speak? |
15859 | Will you order one of my rods? |
15859 | With half a mile of sea between, how could her two enchanted arms aid those four fated ones? |
15859 | Wo n''t he dine to- day, either? |
15859 | Would I not be justified in immediately dismissing Bartleby?" |
15859 | Would fifty doubloons be any object?" |
15859 | Would you like to re- engage in copying for some one?" |
15859 | You are part owner of ship and cargo, I presume; but none of the slaves, perhaps?" |
15859 | You judge some rich one lives there?" |
15859 | You will not thrust him, the poor, pale, passive mortal-- you will not thrust such a helpless creature out of your door? |
15859 | Your rod rusts, or breaks, and where are you? |
15859 | deranged is it? |
15859 | does it not sound like dead men? |
15859 | exclaimed I,"do no more writing?" |
15859 | exclaimed I;"suppose your eyes should get entirely well-- better than ever before-- would you not copy then?" |
15859 | have you saved my life, Señor, and are you now going to throw away your own?" |
15859 | he a vagrant, a wanderer, who refuses to budge? |
15859 | hearing a sound,"was that the wind?" |
15859 | is that-- a footfall above?" |
15859 | or help examine a few lines? |
15859 | or step round to the post- office? |
15859 | or, if nothing could be done, was there anything further that I could_ assume_ in the matter? |
15859 | surely you will not have him collared by a constable, and commit his innocent pallor to the common jail? |
15859 | there, on the long hill- side: the field before, the woods behind; the white shines out against their blue; do n''t you mark it? |
15859 | what a crash!--Have you ever been struck-- your premises, I mean? |
15859 | what next?" |
15859 | what ought I to do? |
15859 | what rank and file of large strange fowl? |
15859 | what sea Friars of Orders Gray? |
15859 | you will not dishonor yourself by such cruelty? |
33000 | Colonel,said he,"can you capture that battery?" |
33000 | He was all alone, was he? 33000 I wonder if that''s possible,"said Marshall, beginning to think his companion was right;"how can we find out?" |
33000 | So it is in these times, but we''ll give it to you in gold, if you''ll show us where we can get a chance at the rebel; did you see him? |
33000 | The Indians, men and women, were in high good humor, and why should they not be? 33000 What stronger evidence can be given,"he asked,"of the want of energy in our government than these disorders? |
33000 | Who is Franklin Pierce? |
33000 | Above all, had not"Old Hickory"won the battle of New Orleans, the most brilliant victory of the War of 1812? |
33000 | And he was mounted on a black horse with a white star in his forehead, and he was going like a streak of lightning, was n''t he?" |
33000 | And what did November tell? |
33000 | But what American can not be convinced that he is pre- eminently fitted for the office? |
33000 | Can it be the breeze of morning which sounds''click, click?'' |
33000 | Happening to look around, he asked:"What is that shining near your boot?" |
33000 | If there is not a power in it to check them, what security has a man for his life, liberty, or property? |
33000 | In the midst of the terrific fighting, when the_ Richard_ seemed doomed, Captain Pearson of the_ Serapis_ shouted:"Have you struck?" |
33000 | It consisted of the words,"What hath God wrought?" |
33000 | The salutation, when one member met another, was,"Have you seen Sam?" |
33000 | We recall that one of the most popular songs began:"Oh, where, tell me where, was the log- cabin made? |
33000 | What fate awaited it on the morrow? |
33000 | What is that noise? |
33000 | What shall we do with them? |
33000 | What steps did she take to do so? |
33000 | When that officer was brought into Hancock''s tent the latter extended his hand to his old acquaintance, exclaiming heartily,"How are you, Ned?" |
33000 | While Washington lived and was willing thus to serve his country, what other name could be considered? |
32892 | ''And I?'' 32892 Oh,_ ça!_"replied the charming South American, with a shrug:"Is that all? |
32892 | But what can I do? |
32892 | Can the stern patriot Clara''s suit deny? |
32892 | Did you not bid me tempt God and die? |
32892 | For instance, what could be more suggestive of utter simplicity than the diary of Abigail Foote, to which reference has just been made? |
32892 | How oft have you eaten and drunk your own damnation?" |
32892 | If in the history of these people a Queen Esther stands forth as a cruel monster, did not proud Rome produce a Messalina? |
32892 | If the cold Puritans were not guiltless in this wise, what could be expected from the Cavaliers or the warm- blooded sons of France? |
32892 | Or had they some, but with our Queen is''t gone? |
32892 | Or need we go beyond the records of a later date of the people of one of the most cultured nations of Europe? |
32892 | They were imperative in their instant demands; they must be satisfied; but how? |
32892 | What symptoms of the workings of the devil could seem surer to a man of Mather''s prejudices and sympathies? |
32892 | Where shall we place the blame? |
32892 | Who could refuse a fairy, and above all the Blue Fairy? |
32892 | Will they lay out their hair, and wear their false locks, their borders, and towers like comets about their heads?" |
32892 | or have they none? |
13345 | Ai n''t we going to stay here a few days? 13345 And Father Josef?" |
13345 | And Little Blue Flower-- what became of her? |
13345 | And Uncle Esmond? 13345 And after that?" |
13345 | And did he? |
13345 | And if you refuse to marry this scoundrel? |
13345 | And let the Cheyennes, and Kiowas, and Arapahoes, and other desperadoes of the plains gnaw clear into the heart of us? 13345 And never have to fight Marcos any more? |
13345 | And that man is Ramero? |
13345 | And the third? |
13345 | And what became of your Fred Ramer? |
13345 | And what''s one Indian, anyhow? 13345 And why not?" |
13345 | Are the Ramero''s so powerful here that they can control the Church in their scheme to get what they want? |
13345 | Are you awake? |
13345 | Are you going our way? 13345 Banney, just why did n''t you join the army? |
13345 | Bathing in the river? 13345 Bev, do n''t you ever take anything seriously?" |
13345 | Bev, how many auld- lang- syners do you reckon we''ll meet in this land of sunshine and_ chilly_ beans? |
13345 | Beverly, do you remember that Indian boy that we saw out at Agua Fria? |
13345 | But what else happened? |
13345 | But what if the Indians should get us? |
13345 | But who''ll we have for the giant? 13345 But why should it find us right here to- night, like it had been led back?" |
13345 | Ca n''t I go with you to Santa Fé, Uncle Esmond? |
13345 | Ca n''t a boy remember things? |
13345 | Ca n''t any of you talk? |
13345 | Ca n''t we all go? |
13345 | Can I serve you? |
13345 | Could Mat Nivers ever be a real princess, do you reckon? |
13345 | Did he follow us, too, like the pony, or did he ride the pony after us? |
13345 | Did he say anything more? |
13345 | Did n''t Felix Narveo go to Fort Leavenworth once, just before Uncle Esmond brought us with him to Santa Fé? |
13345 | Did n''t you and this Clarenden outfit go through here''bout ten years ago one night? 13345 Do I take away the little girl, Eloise, unmolested, if you are satisfied?" |
13345 | Do n''t I do, too? |
13345 | Do you know what the people of Hopi- land call this month? |
13345 | Do you need the defense of a bull- whacker of the plains against these things? |
13345 | Do you recall our prophecies here that night when we were children? |
13345 | Do you remember the day you came in here and threw Marcos Ramero out of that door? |
13345 | Do you remember what I called you the first time I saw you? |
13345 | Do you want anything, Gail? |
13345 | Eloise, do you really care? |
13345 | Eloise? |
13345 | Gail Clarenden, are you crazy? |
13345 | Gail, may I say something to you? |
13345 | Gail, may we take another passenger to- morrow? |
13345 | Gail, why not take the old trail for our golden- wedding anniversary-- a long journey, clear to the mountains? |
13345 | Got a thorn in your shoe, or a stone- bruise, or a chilblain? |
13345 | Have you lost a man, Jondo? |
13345 | How could it ever get here? |
13345 | How did that boy get here, Rex? 13345 How far can a man''s hate run, Jondo?" |
13345 | How soon do you start, Clarenden? |
13345 | If you are friendly, why do n''t you say so? |
13345 | Is he our friend? |
13345 | Is it likely to be necessary? 13345 Is she a squaw in some hogan or pueblo, after all that the Sisterhood of St. Ann''s did for her?" |
13345 | Is that his boy? |
13345 | Is that what you call Pike''s Peak, Bill? |
13345 | Is the Apache following? |
13345 | Is there no variation in palmistry? |
13345 | It''s just like living in a fairy- story, is n''t it, Gail? |
13345 | Jondo, why does Ramero stir up the Indians and Mexicans against Uncle Esmond? |
13345 | Krane, have you decided about this trip yet? |
13345 | Mat, will you let me take you down to see the villain get what''s due all villains? 13345 Mat, wo n''t you try to get them to let me go?" |
13345 | May we have a song by the choir? |
13345 | Mexicans with silver and skins worth double our stuff, what have they to do with us? |
13345 | Now you see why I did n''t join the army, do n''t you, Krane? |
13345 | Oh, Gail Clarenden, is it really you? |
13345 | On the parade- ground? 13345 So that''s what we''ve come out for to see, is it?" |
13345 | Some of them shot at him, then? |
13345 | The day we found Little Lees asleep in the church? |
13345 | They ai n''t but three men of you, is they? 13345 They do n''t? |
13345 | This tavern does n''t have a very good name with the traveling public, does it, Clarenden? |
13345 | Was it really so long ago, Bev, that we came in here, all eyes and ears? |
13345 | We wo n''t give up Gail, will we, Bill? |
13345 | We? 13345 Well, how many of them do you remember, Mr. Cyclopedia of Prominent Men and Pretty Women?" |
13345 | Well, if he''s all right, why did he bring Eloise back here into the heart of all this trouble? |
13345 | What are we waiting for, Bev? |
13345 | What are you thinking about, Gail? |
13345 | What boy? |
13345 | What did he do that for? |
13345 | What did you decide to do about the trip to Santa Fé? |
13345 | What did you find out? |
13345 | What do you know about this trip, Aunty Boone? |
13345 | What do you mean? |
13345 | What happened to you, Little Lees, after I left you? |
13345 | What have you in Santa Fé? |
13345 | What if the other fellow gets there first? |
13345 | What if there are six of them all staring at you? |
13345 | What in Heaven''s name to you see? |
13345 | What kind of a looking child was she, Gail? |
13345 | What makes you think he wo n''t be? |
13345 | What makes you think so, Jondo? |
13345 | What makes you think so? |
13345 | What news of the plains? |
13345 | What was that important something you were going to tell me? 13345 What was your wish, Gail?" |
13345 | What will be the outcome, Uncle Esmond? 13345 What will you be, Gail?" |
13345 | What would these Kiowas do to us, then? |
13345 | What''s Mat''s wish? |
13345 | What''s he, a bachelor or married man? |
13345 | What''s its offense? |
13345 | What''s the matter now, little weather- vane? 13345 What''s the matter, little plainsman?" |
13345 | What''s the matter? 13345 What''s your game, Jondo?" |
13345 | What''s your great rush? |
13345 | What''s your name? |
13345 | When did romance begin with you, Little Lees? |
13345 | When did you get this? 13345 When was that Gail?" |
13345 | Where did you leave Krane and Bev? |
13345 | Where do we go, and why? |
13345 | Where have I been? 13345 Where is he now?" |
13345 | Where the devil-- I mean the holy saints and angels, did you come from? |
13345 | Where''s Gail? |
13345 | Where''s your pony now, Bev? |
13345 | Who is she, Gail, that tall one by little fat Uncle Esmond? |
13345 | Who is that man, Bev? 13345 Who said he was?" |
13345 | Who said the Kiowas was n''t friendly? 13345 Who says so, Bev?" |
13345 | Who told you all that? |
13345 | Who told you, Eloise? |
13345 | Why ca n''t we ride the ponies? 13345 Why do n''t you go to bed, Gail?" |
13345 | Why do n''t you youngsters stay home with your mother, or is she going with you? |
13345 | Why do you make this trip now, Esmond? |
13345 | Why do you sacrifice helpless innocent ones? |
13345 | Why you come hangin''''round here? |
13345 | Will the Church be bribed by the St. Vrain estate and urge this wedding? |
13345 | Will they put Beverly to death? |
13345 | Wo n''t Mat go, too? |
13345 | Wo n''t you stay, too? |
13345 | Would Father Josef be party to such a transaction? |
13345 | Would you do it again, if it were necessary? 13345 Yo''skeered of this little puff?" |
13345 | You are going to start back just as if there were no dangers to be met? |
13345 | You did n''t mean to kill the nun? 13345 You do n''t reckon he''s married, Bev? |
13345 | You go to Santa Fé? 13345 You mean to say you know that cavalryman to be Charlie Bent?" |
13345 | You never would let Marcos in if he came to Fort Leavenworth, would you? |
13345 | You remember me, Santan, the Apache, at Fort Bent? |
13345 | You saw some one follow Daniel into camp? |
13345 | You takin''that nigger? |
13345 | Your sister''s child? |
13345 | Ai n''t you all one family?" |
13345 | And I? |
13345 | And all for the sake of the commerce of the plains? |
13345 | And are you that little blossom?" |
13345 | And how could the girl beside me know that I was speaking thus to keep down the shiver of that cold shadow? |
13345 | And this infant here?" |
13345 | And what could a little girl do''way out on the prairies, and no mother to take care of her, while we were shooting Indians?" |
13345 | Anybody on earth seen Gail Clarenden this morning?" |
13345 | Are these your demands?" |
13345 | Are we to lose all we have gained out here?" |
13345 | Are you goin''on, anyhow, Clarenden, crowd or no crowd?" |
13345 | At what hour do you leave to- morrow? |
13345 | Bill?" |
13345 | But who can pity nothing?" |
13345 | But why should he not remember her here, as well as I? |
13345 | Ca n''t we get Eloise outside of it?" |
13345 | Ca n''t you hurry his coming a bit?" |
13345 | Can you do it? |
13345 | Can you meet me here?" |
13345 | Could it be here?" |
13345 | Could n''t I Gail? |
13345 | D''ye mind if I say somethin''?" |
13345 | Did I ever see him before he came to the fort, or did I dream it?" |
13345 | Did he hold the heart of the golden- haired girl who had walked into my life to stay? |
13345 | Did she ever fail to have her way?" |
13345 | Do n''t you remember Little Blue Flower?" |
13345 | Do n''t you remember he told us about six of the devils getting him in their friendly camp that morning? |
13345 | Do n''t you remember the little sinner at old Fort Bent, Bev?" |
13345 | Do n''t you?" |
13345 | Do not these things call for restoration and repentance?" |
13345 | Do their ghosts rise up and walk at midnight? |
13345 | Do you remember the two spies Krane talked about at Council Grove? |
13345 | Do you see the trick in the game, and why Ramero can say that if he chooses he can take her heritage away from her? |
13345 | Do you think this thin streak of humanity would try it?" |
13345 | Do you want to take the risk?" |
13345 | Have you ever seen him since you left Santa Fé?" |
13345 | He had just"gone out"to her-- why not to all of us? |
13345 | How about it, Mat? |
13345 | How could I know that it was I who could not understand? |
13345 | How could I speak otherwise than carelessly and not show what must not be known? |
13345 | How could the plains make cowards out of such as he? |
13345 | How did you ever get away up into Kansas Territory, anyhow?" |
13345 | How there?" |
13345 | I make restoration-- of what? |
13345 | I stared at both of them until Jondo said, laughingly:"You little owl, what are you thinking about?" |
13345 | If you ca n''t leave him, how can you leave her? |
13345 | Is he a friendly Indian?" |
13345 | Is he a soldier from down there?" |
13345 | Is it so far across, or only seeming so? |
13345 | Is n''t that important?" |
13345 | Is n''t there safety for me somewhere?" |
13345 | Is she bad, Uncle Esmond? |
13345 | Is that the way the trail runs? |
13345 | Jondo? |
13345 | Knock him over that precipice, wo n''t some of you?" |
13345 | Krane?" |
13345 | Little Blue Flower, may I have the pleasure of your company? |
13345 | Maybe you knew young Bent?" |
13345 | No? |
13345 | No? |
13345 | No? |
13345 | No? |
13345 | No? |
13345 | No? |
13345 | No? |
13345 | Not there? |
13345 | Over there across the sand- bar?" |
13345 | Say, Clarenden, how''d you get hold of this information? |
13345 | Say, Gail, I''d like mighty well to see the grown- up Little Lees, would n''t you? |
13345 | Something went wrong with sleep and me for a long time, and once I called out, softly:"Bev, ca n''t you sleep?" |
13345 | That priest, footing it out by that dry creek- thing they call a''royo?" |
13345 | The third one over there?" |
13345 | The young riders, where shall I tell him they have gone?" |
13345 | They do n''t? |
13345 | This country fairly teams with romance, does n''t it?" |
13345 | Was it really so many years ago that I stood by the bushes on the Flat Rock''s edge and saw that which I see so clearly now? |
13345 | Was there a real earnestness under the lightly spoken words, or did I imagine it so? |
13345 | We? |
13345 | What Mat told me last night when we were watching the moon rise?" |
13345 | What became of that boy, Marcos? |
13345 | What d''ye say to a cool thousand?" |
13345 | What do you suppose he came here for? |
13345 | What do you want of more mules?" |
13345 | What do you want, Beverly?" |
13345 | What keeps this Ramero in Santa Fé, if he is there?" |
13345 | What matter that the life before me be filled with danger, and all the coarse and cruel things of the hard days of the Santa Fé Trail? |
13345 | What shall we do?" |
13345 | What was it you said about Little Blue Flower?" |
13345 | What will be the end of this day''s work? |
13345 | What''s come of that little redskin?" |
13345 | What''s the real job for us now, Uncle Esmond?" |
13345 | When did romance begin with you, or have you forgotten in the busy years of a life swallowed up in mercantile pursuits?" |
13345 | Where am I going?" |
13345 | Where do you live when you_ do_ live?" |
13345 | Where is Gail?" |
13345 | Where would Jondo''s Indians be?" |
13345 | Where''s Bill? |
13345 | Where? |
13345 | Where? |
13345 | Who is he?" |
13345 | Who is the fellow with the smile, Captain?" |
13345 | Who put this poison here?'' |
13345 | Who the devil are''we''? |
13345 | Who the devil is Jean Deau?" |
13345 | Why be a coward now? |
13345 | Why cut off all visible means of support in a time like this? |
13345 | Why did Father Josef bring me back here if the Church is not with them? |
13345 | Why did I recall that here? |
13345 | Why did he do that?" |
13345 | Why did that day on the parade- ground at Fort Leavenworth and a boy''s pleading face lifted to mine, come back to me at that moment? |
13345 | Why do n''t you believe it all, serious or frivolous?" |
13345 | Why do n''t you tell Jondo?" |
13345 | Why do you go with me?" |
13345 | Why do you take such chances to do business with such people, Clarenden?" |
13345 | Why do you want to know to- night?" |
13345 | Why go back to that now? |
13345 | Why let the black plague snuff me out of it? |
13345 | Why should a hope spring up within me that would die as other hopes had died? |
13345 | Why to- night, though?" |
13345 | Will you go?" |
13345 | Will you take me as an added burden? |
13345 | Wo n''t it be great to view that mud- walled town again? |
13345 | Would I? |
13345 | Would n''t you like to go, too, Aunty? |
13345 | Would n''t you?" |
13345 | Would you like to go up to the west side of town and look into New Mexico?" |
13345 | You remember little Eloise St. Vrain, of course?" |
13345 | You stay here long?" |
13345 | _ He''s all right._""How did he get hurt?" |
31758 | And if I do n''t make it? |
31758 | Any relation to Lewis Wetzel? |
31758 | Are you familiar with the customs of Indians of, say, two hundred years ago? |
31758 | Are you suggesting I shoot them down without warning? |
31758 | At_ this_ hour? 31758 Based solely on this man''s costume and speech, would you say he is an impostor?" |
31758 | Bed? 31758 Call who?" |
31758 | Could I have three minutes for a fast shower? |
31758 | Do they deny the blood of their fathers? |
31758 | From whence do you come? |
31758 | Going on? |
31758 | How is it that your skin is white but you speak in the way of the Orbiwah? |
31758 | How much farther? |
31758 | I assume you have some questions? |
31758 | If you make so much money at it, why are you still a reporter? |
31758 | Is that your answer, Wetzel? |
31758 | May I see your identification? |
31758 | More Indians? |
31758 | My God, man, how can it be? 31758 Reckon they be a little hard to talk to?" |
31758 | Recognize any landmarks? |
31758 | Sam? |
31758 | Sam? |
31758 | The_ White_ House? 31758 What about_ me_? |
31758 | What did he want? |
31758 | What language? |
31758 | What the hell was_ that_ all about, Sam? |
31758 | Where do I fit into this? |
31758 | Who says I did n''t? |
31758 | Yeah? |
31758 | Yeah? |
31758 | You are part Indian, I believe? |
31758 | You coming to bed? 31758 You coming to bed?" |
31758 | You do n''t think it true? |
31758 | You mean he''s doing all that for_ us_? |
31758 | You say this-- you with the blood of the Orbiwah in your veins? |
31758 | You speak the language? |
31758 | Your name Quinlan? |
31758 | Cut out the gags, will you? |
31758 | Do you mind?" |
31758 | How do I know they are true?" |
31758 | If you''re that tired--""Who said anything about being tired?" |
31758 | Is n''t he the reason you''re in such a hurry?" |
31758 | Is that clear?" |
31758 | Is that clear?" |
31758 | Is that it?" |
31758 | What I''d like to know is why?" |
31758 | What else would one of the country''s leading authorities on the original Americans be writing about? |
31758 | What''s he want?" |
31758 | When introductions were completed, I said,"How do you do?" |
31758 | Who is it?" |
31758 | With the amenities out of the way, the Chief said,"Why has the White Chief sent you to me?" |
31758 | You aimin''to await the dawn?" |
31758 | You mean--?" |
22670 | Ai n''t Hite ther lubber wots allers grubbin''fer money? |
22670 | Ai n''t they likely to return to the James Boys? |
22670 | An wot''s that? |
22670 | And at fifty miles an hour? |
22670 | And it runs by electricity? |
22670 | And left you here with your load? |
22670 | And then? |
22670 | And what''s the trouble with you, sir? |
22670 | Any of you afraid to fight, if it became necessary? |
22670 | Any particular place? |
22670 | Anything happened? |
22670 | Are all of you armed? |
22670 | Are yer goin''ter stop? |
22670 | Are you fastened? |
22670 | Are you getting crazy? |
22670 | Are you hurt any? |
22670 | Are you members of their gang? |
22670 | Are you pretty sure about them there James Boys? |
22670 | Are you soft enough to imagine you can get away with all of us single handed? |
22670 | Are you sure they were the James Boys? |
22670 | Ay, but whar''s the bandits? |
22670 | Be yer follerin''him? |
22670 | But what about my horses? |
22670 | But where''s your team? |
22670 | But why did you say she could catch Jesse James''horse Siroc? |
22670 | Ca n''t you go ahead? |
22670 | Can I go now? |
22670 | Can he overtake us? |
22670 | Can we reach it with this stage? |
22670 | Can you help me roll the wagon inside to protect the grain in case it rains before I can find Eliza again? |
22670 | Can you manage him? |
22670 | Cause why? 22670 Come to crow over me?" |
22670 | Could n''t you find him? |
22670 | D''yer reckon as thar''s any more o''his messmates in ther farm- house? |
22670 | D''yer s''pose Tim Topstay would tell a lie? |
22670 | D''yer wanter see him? |
22670 | Dangerous place? |
22670 | Decoy''em, eh? |
22670 | Den dot feller by horses back vos van ohf dem? |
22670 | Den ve only by plind luck must go? |
22670 | Did he say anything about the ledge? |
22670 | Did the gentleman inquire particularly about this stage? |
22670 | Did yer see me drop forty o''them pirates vi''one shot? |
22670 | Did you kill him? |
22670 | Did you tell us about something? |
22670 | Do n''t you know whether it was or not? |
22670 | Do you doubt the probability of such an engine? |
22670 | Do you know which way they went? |
22670 | Do you suppose our prisoner knows what method Jesse James will employ in his attempted raid? |
22670 | Do you want me to prove it? |
22670 | Do you want them to escape? |
22670 | Do you want to throw your neck in the halter by doing this with all hands looking at you? 22670 Does that description tally with the general appearance of the James Boys?" |
22670 | Eliza? 22670 For the Lord''s sake, boy, what''s that you''ve got there-- the sun?" |
22670 | For what purpose did you build her? 22670 Forty?" |
22670 | Goin''arter''em, lad? |
22670 | Have they got the best of some one else? |
22670 | Have you got far to go? |
22670 | Hit yer? |
22670 | How can one man lift such a heavy thing as that? |
22670 | How can we prevent it? |
22670 | How could you see in the dark? |
22670 | How did Wood Hite get free to escape? |
22670 | How did you escape? |
22670 | How do you mean? |
22670 | How long before Timberlake will discover our ruse? |
22670 | How long have they been gone? |
22670 | How so? |
22670 | How so? |
22670 | How ve get across dot streams ter shase dem? |
22670 | How would you like to accompany us? |
22670 | How? |
22670 | How? |
22670 | I wonder if he''s in trouble? |
22670 | If dem vas der Chames Poys''horses vunct, dey vill back by deir owners go, do n''t it? |
22670 | If you were a prisoner where did you got the lit pipe? |
22670 | In a big lie? |
22670 | In what way was that a sharp move? |
22670 | In which direction did that man go? |
22670 | Is Mr. Jack Wright in? |
22670 | Is it correct? |
22670 | Is that all? |
22670 | Is that so? |
22670 | Is that so? |
22670 | Is that the Independence stage? |
22670 | Is ther lamps injured, my lad? |
22670 | It ca n''t be possible? |
22670 | It''s aluminum,replied Jack,"Have you a revolver?" |
22670 | Kin ye fix it, my lad? |
22670 | Kin yer git her ready in time? |
22670 | No; how could I go below ter look at sich a time? |
22670 | Now? |
22670 | S''posen we runs him down? |
22670 | Say, my lad, how wuz that fer a wictory? |
22670 | Say, now, is them varmints around? |
22670 | Say, sheriff d''yer mean ter insinuate as I''m a liar? |
22670 | Shall I heave him one, an''drop him? |
22670 | Shiminey Christmas, Dim, who oxbected dot alretty? |
22670 | Shiminey Christmas, vos yer tink I vould listen ter some more ohf dem lies mitoud dot I trownd it oud alretty? |
22670 | Simply because I have made up my mind to do so? |
22670 | So dey gotted der money from der pank? |
22670 | Supposin''them''ere lundsharks is on ther road now? 22670 That''s where we''re to look for them, ai n''t it?" |
22670 | The question is, has the train passed? |
22670 | The woman is acquainted with you, ai n''t she? |
22670 | Then he rode off? |
22670 | Then you have an idea that by following the lone horseman we have accidentally run into the outlaw''s encampment? |
22670 | Tim, is that a lie, or a fabrication? |
22670 | To do this job he would need the gang, would n''t he? |
22670 | To leave the State what place would they go to first? |
22670 | To what do you allude? |
22670 | To what do you refer then? |
22670 | Vhere yer tink dey go now, Dimperlake? |
22670 | Vhy yer tink me dot? |
22670 | Vos a yarn comin''? |
22670 | Vos iss now? |
22670 | Vos iss? |
22670 | Vot veak point? |
22670 | Vot''s der droubles? |
22670 | We ca n''t, hey? |
22670 | We must be pretty near the ledge road now, ai n''t we? |
22670 | Well, what are you going to do about it? |
22670 | Well,asked Jack,"suppose an electric overland engine were to chase that remarkable quadruped, do n''t you think he might be overtaken? |
22670 | Well? |
22670 | Well? |
22670 | Wha''--wha-- what d''yer mean? |
22670 | Whar is they? |
22670 | Whar''s ther sheriff? |
22670 | Whar? |
22670 | What are you going to do about the hold- up to- night, Jesse? |
22670 | What are you going to do? |
22670 | What are you stopping for? |
22670 | What are you talking about? |
22670 | What did you tell the gentleman about it? |
22670 | What do you mean? |
22670 | What do you think of that for bullet- proof armor? |
22670 | What do you want to know, sir? |
22670 | What does this mean anyway? |
22670 | What for? |
22670 | What for? |
22670 | What is it, Timberlake-- a madman? |
22670 | What is it, anyway? |
22670 | What new villainy is brewing? |
22670 | What sort of a place is Wrightstown? |
22670 | What then do you mean? |
22670 | What victory? |
22670 | What was you doing in that farm house? |
22670 | What were they doing with you? |
22670 | What would bring them there? |
22670 | What''s his purpose, Timberlake? |
22670 | What''s that-- a sort of a trolley car? |
22670 | What''s the matter, Jesse? |
22670 | What''s the matter? |
22670 | What''s the matter? |
22670 | What''s up? |
22670 | What? |
22670 | When will you depart? |
22670 | Where are the rest of the gang? |
22670 | Where are they? |
22670 | Where is the cave situated? |
22670 | Where''s Siroc? |
22670 | Where''s the Terror? |
22670 | Where? |
22670 | Where? |
22670 | Where?'' 22670 Who are they?" |
22670 | Who goes there? |
22670 | Who he vos? |
22670 | Who-- the bandits? |
22670 | Why did they treat you this way? |
22670 | Why do n''t you? |
22670 | Why has it been such a difficult task? |
22670 | Why not, sir? |
22670 | Why not? |
22670 | Why should I? |
22670 | Why so? |
22670 | Why so? |
22670 | Will nothing bribe you? |
22670 | Will you be kind enough to explain how those saurians happened to be in that sea in such a docile frame of mind, Tim? |
22670 | Will you give in? |
22670 | Will you give me that money? |
22670 | Will you quit? |
22670 | Will you? 22670 Without tracks?" |
22670 | Wo n''t anything else satisfy you? |
22670 | Wot d''yer mean? |
22670 | Wot fer? |
22670 | Wot is it? |
22670 | Wot kin I do fer yer ter- day? |
22670 | Wot''s he standin''thar for like a statoo? |
22670 | Would n''t the entrance of his gang to the town excite a great deal of comment and attention if there were no fair? |
22670 | Would you know all the men if you saw them? |
22670 | Wuz them lubbers down in that''ere holler? |
22670 | You have? |
22670 | You just heard our version of how the James Boys eluded us? |
22670 | You wish to see me, sir? |
22670 | And say---""Well?" |
22670 | Bein''as ther guns wuz useless, wot did we do? |
22670 | But in spite of this you did some remarkably good shooting, did n''t you, Tim?" |
22670 | But never mind---""Vot''s all dot shootin''?" |
22670 | But why d''yer want all or this infermation?" |
22670 | Ca n''t we get a supply near here?" |
22670 | D''you hear that?" |
22670 | Did I give away ter ther general panic? |
22670 | Did I run? |
22670 | Did n''t yer like ther yarn?" |
22670 | Did they ever see you commit a cool, deliberate murder?" |
22670 | Go to Missouri in pursuit of the James Boys?" |
22670 | Had n''t we better get out of here?" |
22670 | Hev a chaw er terbacker?" |
22670 | How are we going to ride back to Missouri without a cent? |
22670 | How ve go ahet now ter safe dot drain?" |
22670 | It echoed piercingly through the hotel, and the sheriff started and demanded with a frown:"What did you do that for?" |
22670 | Just then Tim stumped up to them, and proffering a plug of tobacco to the sheriff he asked:"Have a chew?" |
22670 | Now how wuz that fer a bloodless wictory?" |
22670 | Now wuzn''t that a worry mysterious perceedin''?" |
22670 | Now you see my stage?" |
22670 | Now, what shall we do?" |
22670 | See there?" |
22670 | The moment the gang got him alone, Frank whispered:"Where did you get the roll, Jess?" |
22670 | Then he growled:"What do you want?" |
22670 | They refused---""And you dropped the light into the powder?" |
22670 | Timberlake gave a slight start and now said:"Do you know that the James Boys generally prefer to make their camp in just such hollows as this is?" |
22670 | Timberlake?" |
22670 | Was you in the navy?" |
22670 | Whar else did I git this leg blowed off?" |
22670 | Whar wuz we ter look next? |
22670 | Whar? |
22670 | What do you want?" |
22670 | What has happened?" |
22670 | What time does the stage leave the next town?" |
22670 | What''s the plan?" |
22670 | When they returned Jack said:"I wonder if the dynamo spring can be broken?" |
22670 | Who goes there?" |
22670 | Who is she?" |
22670 | Will you acknowledge now that I''ve got you?" |
22670 | Wot did I do? |
22670 | Wot happened then? |
22670 | Wot wuz it? |
22670 | exclaimed Wood Hite,"Where''s the curve?" |
22670 | groaned Tim,"they''ve throwed us off ther course entirely now, Wot one''ll we foller?" |
22670 | he cried,"What''s the matter?" |
22670 | he gasped,"what''s that thing?" |
22670 | what''s that? |
22670 | what''s this?" |
15625 | A lake like that on top of a mountain-- in weather like this, does n''t it sound like heaven? |
15625 | Ai n''t heard anything more? |
15625 | Am I kicking? |
15625 | An''do I need a pilgrim to remind me av that? 15625 An''fer what, then, Mike, should the gurrl be lookin''out? |
15625 | An''if they ai n''t after gold, what they diggin''fer, then? |
15625 | An''what have ye dug outy yer buke now? |
15625 | An''who iver said they was after gold, now? |
15625 | Anybody starting out to hunt that girl? |
15625 | Aw, what''s the use of going away up there? 15625 Aw, what''s the use? |
15625 | Better go back and help-- what? 15625 But what I want to know is, what have you done?" |
15625 | But you do n''t, ay? 15625 But-- would you have to stay five years, Kate?" |
15625 | Ca n''t do much till the storm lets up, can they? |
15625 | Ca n''t you see it''s coming this way? |
15625 | Ca n''t you signal about ten o''clock tomorrow, if you''re coming out? 15625 Ca n''t you-- can''t you even go down to the lake and fish, when you want to?" |
15625 | Can you arrange for a conveyance of some kind? 15625 Did n''t bring anything to read, I suppose?" |
15625 | Did you go away up there just because you--_wanted_ to see me? 15625 Did you say that lookout man has a claim up here somewhere?" |
15625 | Do we not go into the mountains? |
15625 | Do you stay up here all the time and scowl, all by yourself? |
15625 | Do you want the job? |
15625 | Does it cost extra? |
15625 | Does that answer what''s in your mind? |
15625 | Done? |
15625 | Feller that had the lookout last summer, guess he hangs out somewhere around here, do n''t he? 15625 Fer if not that, will ye tell me why else they want''er opened up? |
15625 | Go back_ nothing!_ And let''em get our number? 15625 Go on down the creek, why do n''t you?" |
15625 | Has a young lady been lost up there? |
15625 | Has any one heard any more about it? |
15625 | Have you had any breakfast? |
15625 | Hey, you darn mutts, whatcha shootin''for? 15625 Hey-- you want to go in the ditch?" |
15625 | How did it happen? 15625 How do I know that dad ever gave her a square deal, either? |
15625 | How do you mean-- beating it? |
15625 | How is the fire? 15625 How''s the fire?" |
15625 | I never saw anything like it before-- did you? 15625 I ought to know, ought n''t I? |
15625 | If they ai n''t diggin''fer gold, then what are they_ diggin''_ fer? |
15625 | Is n''t it wonderful? |
15625 | Is there no other coach on this train? |
15625 | Is_ that_ all I have to do? |
15625 | It just burns as if it had a grudge against the country, does n''t it? 15625 It''s awful, but I simply could n''t live without-- without--""Me? |
15625 | It''s something new, is n''t it? 15625 Jack who? |
15625 | Kin any man be trusted? |
15625 | Know that first turn, up ahead here? 15625 Now you_ did_ fix things, did n''t you? |
15625 | Now, what does the old girl want--? |
15625 | Now,_ what_ do you know about_ that_? 15625 Oh, did you get it put out? |
15625 | Oh, with all those blankets? |
15625 | Pretty cold, ai n''t it? 15625 Quit before I''m invited to leave? |
15625 | Remember that nice air- hole in the top where the wind whistled in and made a kind of tune? 15625 S- o- m- e little bandits!--what?" |
15625 | See that rocky peak over there? 15625 Shall I fix you something to eat, Douglas?" |
15625 | Shall I poach you some eggs? 15625 Some little heliographing-- what? |
15625 | Stop at the Forest Service, will you? 15625 Think I could n''t?" |
15625 | Well, but I was afraid--"Afraid of Kate? 15625 Well, but why do n''t you keep the fire going? |
15625 | Well, can you get word to my son that I am here and should like to see him? |
15625 | Well, do we go back? |
15625 | Well, what do you know about that? |
15625 | Well, what do you know about that? |
15625 | Well, what do you know about_ that_? |
15625 | Well, what if? 15625 Well, what of it?" |
15625 | Well, what--? |
15625 | Well, why do n''t you run and tell? |
15625 | Were you down there in it? 15625 What darn fool was it that shot first? |
15625 | What did mother do when they--? |
15625 | What did that perfessor wade clear down to Marston through the storm for, and report her lost, if she ai n''t lost? |
15625 | What do you want?--a scalp, shampoo, or just dressed, or a curl, or what? |
15625 | What feller''s that, Hank? |
15625 | What has salt--? |
15625 | What if a fire broke out while I was gone? |
15625 | What were you thinking about when you kept staring up here? 15625 What yuh going up to help hunt her for, then?" |
15625 | What yuh mean, done? |
15625 | What''s going on in the world, anyway? 15625 What''s he hidin''out for, Hank? |
15625 | What''s the matter with phoning that you''re all right? 15625 What''s the matter with pine knots?" |
15625 | What''s the matter, Jack? 15625 What''s the matter, Kate? |
15625 | What''s the use of your hiding out in a cave, for goodness''sake, if you''re going to let people see you whenever they come up this way? 15625 When was it they brought word?" |
15625 | Where was I? |
15625 | Who says I was the ringleader? 15625 Who''s Fred?" |
15625 | Why do n''t you cut the legs off this table? 15625 Why do you think so? |
15625 | Why should n''t it concern me to spoil a pair of nine dollar shoes? 15625 Why? |
15625 | Will I take care av me tools, an''it buildin''a sthorm? |
15625 | Will you please shut up? |
15625 | Would n''t you kind of like to be canned-- under the circumstances? |
15625 | You did? 15625 You do, hey?" |
15625 | You heard what I said about piffling human beings? |
15625 | You think, then, that the young woman went to meet Jack? |
15625 | You told, did you? |
15625 | You''re sure I wo n''t do? 15625 You-- you are n''t really uncomfortable, are you, Jack?" |
15625 | After all, what would it matter? |
15625 | An''while ye''re talkin''''bout wood, have yer got yer wood fer the winter? |
15625 | And I think a log cabin is the dearest way to live-- don''t you? |
15625 | And I''ll bring you reading-- oh, have you put down candles, Jack? |
15625 | And do n''t you think, Marion, it would be much better for you if you did n''t wait for the Martha to let you go but gave them notice instead?" |
15625 | And do you think for a minute, you big silly kid, that I''ll let you go alone? |
15625 | And even-- why do n''t you come on out anyway, till we get ready to start? |
15625 | And for a change, you can watch the lake, or just gaze at the scenery; and say!--does the star spangled banner still wave?" |
15625 | And if they are not there?" |
15625 | And not get half the fish? |
15625 | And where is Fred? |
15625 | And where would she be most likely to meet him? |
15625 | And who was the other spy that stayed up on Taylor Rock? |
15625 | And why did n''t the men go tramping around like that, since they were all in together? |
15625 | And, Jack,--you are n''t really uncomfortable up there, are you? |
15625 | And-- mother, do n''t you think maybe all this trouble has been kind of a good thing after all? |
15625 | And-- oh, will you please tell her that I took the bread out of the oven before I left, and that it''s under the box the cream came in? |
15625 | Any news from-- down South?" |
15625 | Anything they want me to haul up? |
15625 | Are there lots of bears up there, Jack?" |
15625 | Are they getting it put out?" |
15625 | Are you beating it, now?" |
15625 | As for his mother-- would his mother care so very much? |
15625 | Asleep?" |
15625 | Because there''s Kate-- can''t we go and see?" |
15625 | Brown?" |
15625 | But was it Jack whom the man called Hank referred to? |
15625 | But you will, wo n''t you? |
15625 | By George, did she do that?" |
15625 | Calling her cute-- why cute, in particular? |
15625 | Can you scare up something right away for us to eat? |
15625 | Come back here in an hour, can you? |
15625 | Corey?" |
15625 | Could n''t you, ay?" |
15625 | Damn it, what yuh killin''time for? |
15625 | Did Hank, by any chance, refer to Marion''s little strategies in getting things for Jack? |
15625 | Did she feel as he felt about the woods and mountains? |
15625 | Did she sit by the creek again until after dark, refusing to stir?" |
15625 | Did the bear come at you?" |
15625 | Did you do that, mother? |
15625 | Did you find out about-- anybody knowing you''re here? |
15625 | Did you go up where you could obtain a view of the fire, Kate?" |
15625 | Did you hurt yourself? |
15625 | Did you skin him?" |
15625 | Do n''t you care--?" |
15625 | Do n''t you-- want me to-- marry you? |
15625 | Do you know?" |
15625 | Do you see what time it is? |
15625 | Do you think that I ought to touch up my hair, Marion? |
15625 | Do you want to go up and meet him? |
15625 | Ever study tracks?" |
15625 | Fellow on Claremont-- that''s it away over there; see that white speck? |
15625 | Floatin''round with your arms full of sunshine-- oh, you thought you was puttin''something over on the rest of us-- what?" |
15625 | For why do n''t ye get down wit yer pick, man, and_ see_ what''s in the ground? |
15625 | Had he given her any reason for caring, beyond the natural maternal instinct which is in all motherhood? |
15625 | Had she found any means of getting back to her camp, or of sending any word? |
15625 | Has it burned any of our timber? |
15625 | Have I got to simply propose to you? |
15625 | Have we any vaseline?" |
15625 | He cleared his throat again, sighed and inquired mildly:"Are you asleep, Marion?" |
15625 | He gets awfully grouchy over the least little thing--""Marion, how old is he?" |
15625 | He had a mental picture of her hurrying to tell Fred:"What do you know about it? |
15625 | He says he will not endure another cut-- he simply can not, and--""And support an elocutionist?" |
15625 | Honest?" |
15625 | Honestly, do n''t they let you leave here at all?" |
15625 | Hot- headed, selfish children, what did they know about the deeper problems of life? |
15625 | How about a henna rinse, Marion? |
15625 | How about a scalp? |
15625 | How about it?" |
15625 | How am I going to get home? |
15625 | How could she make any claim to human sympathy for a mother''s sorrow if she withheld the message that would bring relief? |
15625 | How do you like mine today?" |
15625 | How long will it be before chuck''s ready, Kate?" |
15625 | How soon do you think it will be? |
15625 | How soon you going back, Hank? |
15625 | I could do what you would do, could n''t I? |
15625 | I do n''t see how anybody could mind him-- do you?... |
15625 | I do n''t suppose she could get back, after the fire got started,"she admitted grudgingly,"but she might have done_ something_, do n''t you think? |
15625 | I wish to goodness I''d thought to put on my blue velvet suit-- but then, how was I going to know that I''d need it to get married in?" |
15625 | I''d like being on a mountain, I believe-- did you ever see such hot nights as we''re having?" |
15625 | I''m gittin''my wages fer the diggin'', ai n''t I? |
15625 | I-- I suppose you can be trusted, Murphy?" |
15625 | If Jack Corey''s such a villain, why do n''t you do something about it? |
15625 | Is he nice to talk to?... |
15625 | Is it up on a mountain, or up in the State, that you said the place was? |
15625 | Is it your ankle?" |
15625 | Is it your ankle?" |
15625 | Is n''t it_ keen_, to have a volcano spouting off right in your front view? |
15625 | Is the fire out? |
15625 | It isn''t--""Do I draw any salary as chaperone, Kate?" |
15625 | It''s getting worse, do n''t you think? |
15625 | It''s halfway up the mountain-- do you happen to know the young lady that was lost up there, yesterday?" |
15625 | It''s my business to watch fires and see how they''re acting, is n''t it?" |
15625 | Let''er out, why do n''t yuh? |
15625 | Listen, could you get off early today? |
15625 | Made to order? |
15625 | Make a lot of coffee, will you? |
15625 | Make''em think they''ve got a blowout-- get the idea?" |
15625 | Marion, do you-- care?" |
15625 | Mercy, ai n''t it awful about that poor girl being lost? |
15625 | Mum''s the word-- get that?" |
15625 | Murphy, you can take care of the tools and cover up the hole, will you?" |
15625 | Must a fellow padlock that door every time he went out, to keep folks from going where they had no business to be? |
15625 | No, sir--""How''s the trains, Barney?" |
15625 | Of what use was this preparation, unless he had some real money to use with it? |
15625 | Oh, do you suppose it has burned down as far as the cabin? |
15625 | One, two-- one, two, three-- could anything in the world be more maddening? |
15625 | Or had the police really gotten upon the trail of Jack? |
15625 | People kind of keep your mind tied down to little things that part of you hates, do n''t you know? |
15625 | Say, Jackie, if this old car could talk, would n''t momma get an ear- full on Monday, hey? |
15625 | Shall I make you some lemonade, Douglas?" |
15625 | She can help you get it ready, ca n''t she?" |
15625 | She kept saying:"Oh, papa, do n''t you wish you could get a snap of that?" |
15625 | She waited, holding the receiver to her ear until Central, in that supercilious voice we all dislike so much, asked crisply,"Are you waiting?" |
15625 | She was staying at Toll- Gate--""Is Toll- Gate a town?" |
15625 | Should she warn the professor to say nothing to Fred? |
15625 | Sounds to me like a good place to save money-- what?" |
15625 | Stayed out in the hills-- and that ai n''t natural for a young city feller, is it? |
15625 | That''s-- do you know anything at all about the Forest Service, young fellow?" |
15625 | The girl, Marion-- had Jack loved her? |
15625 | The lookout on Claremont, he''ll draw a bead on it too, and phone in_ his_ number-- see? |
15625 | The what?... |
15625 | Then I wo n''t have to climb clear up here if something happens that you ought to know about-- don''t you see? |
15625 | Then she added carelessly--"What would have happened, if you had n''t answered that man at all?" |
15625 | Then some day I''ll drop off and try my luck--""Do n''t run to Lake Almanor, does it? |
15625 | There''s an excited young man here who keeps telling me this is_ not_ a public telephone booth-- do you mean him, I wonder?... |
15625 | Think it''ll storm today, Murphy?" |
15625 | Think you could get by with it? |
15625 | Use plenty of tonic, wo n''t you, Marion? |
15625 | Want that guy to call a cop and pinch the outfit? |
15625 | Was it possible that the Humphrey woman had been talking to outsiders? |
15625 | Was the girl playing double? |
15625 | We''d rather wait a few minutes longer and get a square meal, would n''t we, boys? |
15625 | Well, he asked himself, what kind of a fool would he make of himself next? |
15625 | Well, of course, a person does n''t look for politeness away up... Ha- ha-- why, does the altitude make a difference? |
15625 | Were you boys honest- to- goodness bandits, or what?" |
15625 | What are you trying to build up anyway? |
15625 | What are_ you_, you poor piece of cheese, to talk about a woman?" |
15625 | What business had she inside, anyway? |
15625 | What do you do when a fire breaks out?" |
15625 | What do you use him for? |
15625 | What had she done, that Hank should consider her so cute? |
15625 | What have you done that they should put you up here and make you stay up here? |
15625 | What if Hank Brown found out about Jack and set the sheriff on his trail? |
15625 | What if they had seen you?" |
15625 | What kind of a mother would she have been, he wondered, if he had petted her a little now and then? |
15625 | What kinda folks do you think we are, around here? |
15625 | What made you apologize for keeping a telephone call waiting while you went out and saved a perfectly good life? |
15625 | What possible use could Fred be, more than any other man? |
15625 | What was Marion doing with Hank Brown, the one man in all this country who held a definite grudge against Jack? |
15625 | What would they think if they could look upon him now? |
15625 | What''ll yuh give me if I tell yuh what I do think?" |
15625 | What''s your name?" |
15625 | What?" |
15625 | What?" |
15625 | What?... |
15625 | What?... |
15625 | What?... |
15625 | What_ can_ they think, not knowing Marion at all, and just judging by appearances?" |
15625 | Whatever had started the fellow to suspecting such things? |
15625 | When does that train go down, Jack? |
15625 | Where were the fire- fighters, that they did not check the mad race of flames before they crossed that canyon? |
15625 | Where''s Marion? |
15625 | Where''s everybody?" |
15625 | Where''s them blankets? |
15625 | Which way would be best to go around it, do you think?" |
15625 | Which would you have, Marion?" |
15625 | Which, he wondered, was the real Marion Rose? |
15625 | Who is that man, Marion? |
15625 | Who would care? |
15625 | Who would ever identify him there as Jack Corey? |
15625 | Why could n''t he enter the girl''s foolery? |
15625 | Why could n''t he have been a girl? |
15625 | Why could n''t he have kept his troubles to himself? |
15625 | Why did n''t somebody do something? |
15625 | Why did they not find Jack and the girl? |
15625 | Why dig deeper into the grief that must be mastered somehow, if she would go on living? |
15625 | Why do n''t you call up the office and have them send the sheriff hot- footing it up here? |
15625 | Why not? |
15625 | Why should she be following the girl, when the girl went tramping around in the woods? |
15625 | Without an invitation? |
15625 | Would it be worth while?" |
15625 | Would n''t that be just dandy on the screen?" |
15625 | You any relation to the girl that''s lost?" |
15625 | You ca n''t stop me from riding on the train, can you? |
15625 | You_ do_? |
15625 | Yuh travelin''or just goin''somewheres?" |
15625 | Yuh trying to throw us down? |
15625 | a signal fire, or something?... |
15625 | you wanta break a leg?" |
28791 | All this time? |
28791 | Can_ you_ shingle? |
28791 | Did n''t I warn you? |
28791 | Do we really_ see_ the ocean? |
28791 | Do you need another hand? |
28791 | Do you want some skilled help? |
28791 | Have I been wrong? |
28791 | Have times changed? 28791 Have you got it yet?" |
28791 | How can I go east? 28791 How can so many people find a living in one place?" |
28791 | How can we share our good fortune with her and with sister Jessie? |
28791 | How could I do that? 28791 How do I look?" |
28791 | How long did you_ think_ you''d slept-- two days? |
28791 | How will he receive me? 28791 I hope to be able to work into a professorship in literature some day.--What do you intend to do?" |
28791 | If the city is miles across, how am I to get from the railway station to my hotel without being assaulted? |
28791 | Is n''t it the next day? |
28791 | Is that thee, friend Richard? |
28791 | Is the workman in America, as in the old world, coming to be a man despised? |
28791 | Richard, is that you? |
28791 | Shall I give up my career at this point? 28791 So you are Dick''s boy? |
28791 | Well, Dick,Grandad began,"so ye''re plannin''to go west, air ye?" |
28791 | Well, Garland,said he,"what are you going to do after you graduate this June?" |
28791 | What am I to do? |
28791 | What are you going to do with it? |
28791 | What are you going to do? |
28791 | What did you gain by this disagreeable habit of early rising? |
28791 | What do you mean by such a performance? |
28791 | What does it all mean? |
28791 | What is it, mother? |
28791 | What is it, my boy? |
28791 | What is that? |
28791 | What is the matter? |
28791 | What is the use of laying up a store of goods against the early destruction of the world? |
28791 | What is there for me to do out here? |
28791 | What is this about? |
28791 | What would he do there? 28791 What''s that? |
28791 | What''s the matter? |
28791 | What''s the meaning of all this? |
28791 | When can you move? |
28791 | Where did you get all that fruit? |
28791 | Where have you been? |
28791 | Where will we stay? |
28791 | Why, mother!--what is the matter? |
28791 | Wo n''t you be seated? |
28791 | Wo n''t you come and see your poor old father when he comes home from the war? |
28791 | Yes, but where are your tools? |
28791 | You think it not quite like me? 28791 You will write to me, wo n''t you?" |
28791 | Your father is suffering sharply, is he? |
28791 | _ It''s the next day!_"We''ve slept twenty- four hours!--What will the landlady think of us? |
28791 | ***** As I was leaving next day for Chicago, I said,"Mother, what shall I bring you from the city?" |
28791 | Addison wants you to spend the winter with him, and mother wants to see David once more-- why not go? |
28791 | At last on the door- step she turned and said,"Wo n''t you come in again?" |
28791 | At the end of a long talk he said,"Why do n''t you come to Boston and take a special course at the University? |
28791 | At this point David came in, and everybody shouted,"Did you stop them?" |
28791 | Beckie, where are you going to put these children?" |
28791 | Ca n''t you borrow a little?" |
28791 | Can any other country on earth surpass the United States in the ruthless broadcast dispersion of its families? |
28791 | Can you keep me all night?" |
28791 | Can you wonder therefore that I trembled with joyous excitement as I paced the platform next morning waiting for the chariot of my romance? |
28791 | Could any other land furnish a more incredible momentary re- assembling of scattered units? |
28791 | Cross?" |
28791 | David, looking toward the kitchen, said,"Is n''t there some way to keep her from working?" |
28791 | Do you wonder that when I left Boston a week or two later, I did so with elation-- with a sense of conquest? |
28791 | Does n''t the whole migration of the Garlands and McClintocks seem a madness?" |
28791 | Father was inclined to ask,"What''s the good of it?" |
28791 | For the glance of eyes undimmed of tears, for the hair untouched with gray? |
28791 | For thirty years you''ve carried mother on a ceaseless journey-- to what end? |
28791 | Grandmother was cheerful in the midst of her toil and discomfort, for what other mother had such a family of noble boys and handsome girls? |
28791 | Grandmother was waiting for us and our places were ready, so what did it matter? |
28791 | Has a spirit of unrest and complaining developed in the American farmer?" |
28791 | Have you spoken to the Librarian about it?" |
28791 | He honors bright colors, for has he not set the rainbow in the heavens and made water to reflect the moon? |
28791 | He never failed to ask of a morning,"Well, when are you going back to shingling?" |
28791 | He performed each habitual act with most minute care, till I, impatient of his silence, his seeming indifference, repeated,"Do n''t you understand? |
28791 | His big shoulders began to shake and a chuckle preceded his irritating joke--"Going back to shingling?" |
28791 | How can I best serve my mother?" |
28791 | How can I carry out such a plan?" |
28791 | How could I help it? |
28791 | How could I sneak back with empty pockets?" |
28791 | How could I? |
28791 | How could he? |
28791 | How could people stay all their lives in one place? |
28791 | How is Dick getting along?" |
28791 | How will he look? |
28791 | How''s Belle?" |
28791 | I asked myself,"Why have these stern facts never been put into our literature as they have been used in Russia and in England? |
28791 | I knew that I was physically on the down- grade, but what could I do? |
28791 | I passed on to bay Kittie whose bright eyes seemed to inquire,"What is the matter?" |
28791 | In a meek, husky voice I asked,"Is Mr. Howells in?" |
28791 | Is there not something wrong in our social scheme when the unremitting toiler remains poor?" |
28791 | Is this the''fairy land''in which we were all to''reign like kings''? |
28791 | It''s in a rich and sheltered valley and is filled with associations of your youth.--Haven''t you had enough of pioneering? |
28791 | It''s perfectly legitimate material for a novel, as picturesque in its way as_ The Rise of the Vendà © e_--Can''t you make use of it?" |
28791 | Kirkland had read some of my western sketches and in the midst of his praise of them suddenly asked,"Why do n''t you write fiction?" |
28791 | Like Millet, I asked,"Why should all of a man''s waking hours be spent in an effort to feed and clothe his family? |
28791 | Lonely like a withered tree, What is all the world to me? |
28791 | Made his pile, I s''pose?" |
28791 | Nevertheless I hoped, and in that hope I repeated,"You will write to me, wo n''t you?" |
28791 | Not knowing precisely how to retreat, I faltered out,"Have you a bed for us?" |
28791 | Of what avail this constant quest of gold, beneath the far horizon''s rim? |
28791 | One day, early in''91, as I was calling upon him in his office, he suddenly said,"Garland, why ca n''t you write a serial story for us? |
28791 | One that shall deal with this revolt of the farmers? |
28791 | Should we wear white ties and white vests, or white ties and black vests? |
28791 | Sometimes he would ask,"Do n''t you think the horses ought to have a rest as well as yourselves?" |
28791 | The Doctor understood this feeling and asked,"How much are you paying now?" |
28791 | The scene became too painful for me at last, and I fled away from it-- out into the fields, bitterly asking,"Why should this suffering be? |
28791 | Then there was the famous passage,"Did ye not hear it?" |
28791 | Then, bending down, he asked of me,"What is your name and occupation?" |
28791 | They were at once familiar and mysterious-- mysterious with my new question,"Is this life worth living?" |
28791 | This pleased him greatly, but he asked,"Do you think you can stand it?" |
28791 | Timid souls began to inquire,"Are all Dakota summers like this?" |
28791 | Two hours passed swiftly in this way and as the interview was about to end he asked,"Where do you live?" |
28791 | W''at ye doin''down there?" |
28791 | Want it? |
28791 | Was it only a useless obsession on the part of my pioneer dad? |
28791 | Was she never to enjoy a roomy and comfortable dwelling? |
28791 | Well, what are you doing on the road a night like this? |
28791 | What is it all about, anyhow, this life of ours? |
28791 | What right had I to share in this splendor? |
28791 | What shall I say to him?" |
28791 | What were we to do when our schooling ended? |
28791 | What would you think of such a plot?" |
28791 | What''s the matter?" |
28791 | Where are the''woods and prairie lands''of our song? |
28791 | Who is the writer of it?" |
28791 | Who was she? |
28791 | Why Concord, do you ask? |
28791 | Why could n''t we have slept till six, or even seven? |
28791 | Why do n''t you board with me? |
28791 | Why do n''t you come and stay with me? |
28791 | Why has this land no story- tellers like those who have made Massachusetts and New Hampshire illustrious?" |
28791 | Why not go back and be sheltered by the hills and trees for the rest of your lives? |
28791 | Why rise before the sun? |
28791 | Why should children cry for food in our cities whilst fruits rotted on the vines and wheat had no value to the harvester? |
28791 | Why should mother be wrenched from all her dearest friends and forced to move away to a strange land?" |
28791 | Why should our great new land fall into this slough of discouragement? |
28791 | Why was she there? |
19590 | About the car or the letter or what? |
19590 | Am I a wild animal? |
19590 | Am I out of the troop? |
19590 | And Hervey? |
19590 | And did you? |
19590 | And so you joined as a stunt? |
19590 | And so you think you could do this stunt? |
19590 | And they have to save lives too, do n''t they? |
19590 | And you did it? 19590 And you''ve always kept it?" |
19590 | Are there wild animals in that camp? |
19590 | Are we lost? |
19590 | Are you going to open it? |
19590 | Are you? |
19590 | Back again? 19590 Because it all depends,"Roy continued;"a scout is n''t supposed to fight, is he? |
19590 | Been over there, eh? |
19590 | Bobbed it? |
19590 | But did you see my image in the eyes of the dead man? |
19590 | But he did n''t tell you where he had been-- or anything? |
19590 | But you know I''m good on stunts? 19590 Can you send an animal by mail?" |
19590 | Can you unscramble eggs? |
19590 | Come in and see the Supreme Court in session, wo n''t you? 19590 Come up again, wo n''t you?" |
19590 | Comfortable? |
19590 | Cross come yet? |
19590 | Did he actually mention the Gold Cross? |
19590 | Did he reach the bus? |
19590 | Did it do any good? 19590 Did n''t I tell you I''d fix it?" |
19590 | Did you hear some one scream? |
19590 | Did you see that crazy stick he was using for a cane? |
19590 | Did_ you_--did you ever see anything like that? |
19590 | Do n''t you suppose I know that? |
19590 | Do you know a person can scream after he''s dead? |
19590 | Do you know anything about the stage? |
19590 | Do you know what one of his troop told me? 19590 Do you notice any connection between that article in the newspaper and the letter the dead man got from England?" |
19590 | Do you think I''d let anybody? |
19590 | Do you think a fellow like Willetts would go home? 19590 Do you think it''s easy to hang around camp all the time? |
19590 | Do you think this is a picnic we''re on? |
19590 | France? |
19590 | Funny thing, did you ever hear how the eyes of a dead man reflect the last thing he saw? 19590 Good? |
19590 | H''lo, Mr. Carroll,said Tom;"alone in your glory?" |
19590 | H''lo, Slady, can we go with you? |
19590 | H-- how soon are-- the rest of you coming back? |
19590 | Has any one ever accused you of lying, Hervey? |
19590 | Have we got a right to read it? |
19590 | Have you got some matches? |
19590 | He found a dead man last night, did n''t he? |
19590 | He said I would n''t dare-- do you know what a four flusher is? |
19590 | He sent a note after you? 19590 He''s alive?" |
19590 | He-- he was n''t the kid who was knocked down by an auto? |
19590 | Hervey say anything? |
19590 | How about the remains of Pee- wee''s signal tower? |
19590 | How about you, Roy? |
19590 | How can a troop have a handwriting? |
19590 | How do I know it? |
19590 | How do you_ know_ he started for home? |
19590 | How would you like to be out on the lake now? |
19590 | Hunting for your handbook, Hervey? |
19590 | I bet you licked the Germans, did n''t you? |
19590 | I do n''t exactly blame you, Slade----"Me? |
19590 | I do n''t know anything about it,said Gilbert;"I think you have to come back, do n''t you?" |
19590 | I guess we''re not going to be killed after all, hey? |
19590 | I''m glad we''re in Tyson''s troop, are n''t you? |
19590 | If they ask me, that''s what I''ll tell''em,said Goliath,"hey?" |
19590 | Is it him? |
19590 | Is n''t it good to save lives? |
19590 | Is that fellow that''s inside lying on the seat-- is he dead? |
19590 | It is n''t everybody who can find you, is it? |
19590 | It was damaged when it came here, was n''t it? |
19590 | It was n''t on account of his hurt? |
19590 | It''s good Tyson saved our lives, is n''t it? |
19590 | It''s too late now, is n''t it? |
19590 | Kid comfortable? |
19590 | Maybe I''ll get to be a regular scout, hey? |
19590 | Maybe he''ll get a reward, hey? 19590 Me?" |
19590 | Me? |
19590 | Me? |
19590 | Mr. Carroll,said Tom,"Gilbert did n''t say anything about going up the mountain with me last night?" |
19590 | No? |
19590 | No? |
19590 | Oh, it was a sort of a wager? |
19590 | On the mountain? 19590 Or maybe a squirrel, huh? |
19590 | Scream? 19590 See that lead pencil mark? |
19590 | Shall we stroll down to supper? |
19590 | Sit down, wo n''t you? |
19590 | So? 19590 Some storm, hey, Tomasso?" |
19590 | Started for the train, you mean? |
19590 | That? 19590 The Gold Cross?" |
19590 | The cross? |
19590 | The crowd from the bus is all right then? |
19590 | There''s a funny fellow inside; want to see him? |
19590 | There''s always_ some_ way up a mountain.... Maybe the light we saw up there... let''s have a squint at that letter, will you? |
19590 | Think you''re going to have a good time? |
19590 | Walking my way? |
19590 | Want to hear another? |
19590 | Was it in their own handwriting? |
19590 | We ca n''t do anything, can we? |
19590 | We should worry about his name if he does n''t want to give it, hey? |
19590 | We''d all be dead,''would n''t we? |
19590 | We''re not going to let it worry our innocent young lives, anyway, are we, Gilly? 19590 Well, Gilbert, you got away with it, huh?" |
19590 | Well, after all, who wants to tame a squirrel? |
19590 | Well, how do you think you like Temple Camp? |
19590 | Well, how do you think you like us up here? |
19590 | Well, it''s beginning to look like a dam, is n''t it? |
19590 | Well, then, we''ll all go? |
19590 | Were you ever in a hospital? |
19590 | What are they trying to hand me now? |
19590 | What are we going to do for two hours, waiting for supper? |
19590 | What are you going to do about it? |
19590 | What can we do? |
19590 | What did I tell you? |
19590 | What do you mean? |
19590 | What face? |
19590 | What for? |
19590 | What for? |
19590 | What race? |
19590 | What troop? |
19590 | What was that? |
19590 | What was what? |
19590 | What''s a stunt? |
19590 | What''s in a name? |
19590 | What''s that? |
19590 | What''s the matter with you kids? 19590 What''s this? |
19590 | What? 19590 What?" |
19590 | When did you suppose? 19590 When was it he came here?" |
19590 | When? |
19590 | Where did that big feller go? |
19590 | Where did they run into him? |
19590 | Where do you suppose this tree came from? |
19590 | Where is he, anyway? |
19590 | Where is he? |
19590 | Where you been, Slady? 19590 Where''s Gilbert?" |
19590 | Where''s Hervey? |
19590 | Where''s our wandering boy to- night? |
19590 | Where-- what-- where-- is-- it-- anyway? |
19590 | Where-- where-- th-- the dickens-- is north? |
19590 | Who are you? |
19590 | Who dived? |
19590 | Whose car is this, anyway? |
19590 | Whose car is this? 19590 Why do n''t you tell him yourself, Hervey?" |
19590 | Why was n''t it? |
19590 | Why? |
19590 | Will we get to that camp soon? |
19590 | Will you help him to get the medal-- Tyson? |
19590 | Willetts is the name? 19590 Would n''t_ know_ it?" |
19590 | Yes, my boy,said one of the scoutmasters;"what is it?" |
19590 | Yes? |
19590 | Yes? |
19590 | You call me a bluffer? |
19590 | You do n''t call this luck, do you? |
19590 | You do n''t suppose that''s true, do you? |
19590 | You know I''m Harlowe? |
19590 | You mean he was just fooling you about the medal? |
19590 | You mean if the average is small? |
19590 | You think I''d bust a resolution? 19590 You''ll go back?" |
19590 | You-- you know? |
19590 | About Willetts?" |
19590 | All safe and sound, are you?" |
19590 | And where was the lumbering old bus? |
19590 | And where was the originator of it? |
19590 | Are you game to skirt the lake? |
19590 | Are you lost, or what?" |
19590 | But how came the light there? |
19590 | But where were you? |
19590 | But will you listen to me if I tell you the whole of that story-- the whole business? |
19590 | CHAPTER XXVI LOVE ME, LOVE MY DOG"Where did you find the hat?" |
19590 | Ca n''t you wait two hours?" |
19590 | Can I go? |
19590 | Can you sprint? |
19590 | D''you see? |
19590 | Denny?" |
19590 | Did Harlowe, therefore, climb the mountain to_ escape_ man or to_ seek_ man? |
19590 | Did n''t you, Gilly?" |
19590 | Did n''t you? |
19590 | Did you ever kill anybody?" |
19590 | Did you not know that eagles live on mountain crags? |
19590 | Did you not know that the shriek of the eagle must have been from the mountain in the north? |
19590 | Do n''t you know anything about your troop''s affairs? |
19590 | Do you feel like telling me the rest now? |
19590 | Do you know him?" |
19590 | Do you see it? |
19590 | Do you think I need a train? |
19590 | Do you think it would look good on my hat?" |
19590 | Even if you-- if you apologized-- I wouldn''t----""Apologize? |
19590 | Ever hear of anything like that? |
19590 | Ever see a person who has suffered violent death, Hood?" |
19590 | Got any candy?" |
19590 | Had he called for help? |
19590 | Have you any theory of just how it happened?" |
19590 | Have you it with you?" |
19590 | He could see, just see, those clear gray eyes, honest, reckless, brave...."Yes, Hervey?" |
19590 | Hear it?" |
19590 | Helping? |
19590 | Hervey Willetts?" |
19590 | Hey, Hervey? |
19590 | How about you, Hervey? |
19590 | How about you, Roy? |
19590 | How could he tell Tom Slade of this frightful thing? |
19590 | How''s that?" |
19590 | I bet you were never crazy, were you?" |
19590 | I found Aaron Harlowe''n that''s enough, hain''t it?" |
19590 | I guess I will, hey?" |
19590 | I guess that''s what you''d call a racer, now, hain''t it?" |
19590 | I knew if I could get to the log-- did you see the log?" |
19590 | I know who you are; you''re boss, ai n''t you?" |
19590 | I think it just possible he intended-- Come inside, wo n''t you? |
19590 | I''d like to know what went on inside his head, would n''t you?" |
19590 | I''m going to follow that trail up a ways----""To- night?" |
19590 | I''ve seen more broken hearts here at camp than broken heads.... You''re a new troop, are n''t you?" |
19590 | I-- I can hike to Jonesville, ca n''t I? |
19590 | If it had not been for this tree the boat would have been borne upon the flood, with what tragic sequel who shall say? |
19590 | It''s got bunged up a little, hey?" |
19590 | Let''s see, how many lives have you got left now?" |
19590 | Lost, strayed or stolen? |
19590 | Missed the train, eh? |
19590 | More merit badges?" |
19590 | Next week? |
19590 | Now you know how to see a dark thing in the dark....""Do you know how to tell time with a clothespin?" |
19590 | Page 190]"So? |
19590 | Pretty soon one of the curtains opened and a voice said,"What''s all the danger about?" |
19590 | Reaching Mr. Carroll, he asked in a cheery undertone,"May I use one of your scouts for a little while?" |
19590 | Reminds you of the League of Nations in session.... H''lo, Shorty, what are you here for? |
19590 | See? |
19590 | See? |
19590 | See? |
19590 | See?" |
19590 | See?" |
19590 | Should he despatch the remainder of the tomato into his mouth, or at the bulletin board? |
19590 | Should he go on with this thing and see it through? |
19590 | Slade did n''t try to lure you back with hints about such a thing?" |
19590 | Slade?" |
19590 | So he just said,"Not hurt much, huh? |
19590 | So he''s a hero, ai n''t he?" |
19590 | Storm was a good thing after all, huh?" |
19590 | Take me? |
19590 | Take us on the lake, Slady?" |
19590 | Takes a long time to get a habit out of your nut, does n''t it? |
19590 | The annual electrical show?" |
19590 | The question was, had this happened, and if so, had the bus reached the fatal spot? |
19590 | Understand?" |
19590 | Want to hear more? |
19590 | Want to see it? |
19590 | Want to see it?" |
19590 | Was it too late? |
19590 | We''ll sit in one of those old cars, hey?" |
19590 | We''ll_ all_ go, what do you say? |
19590 | Were you in the swamp? |
19590 | What do you say, Gilly? |
19590 | What do you say?" |
19590 | What else? |
19590 | What had the victim thought of, while going down-- down? |
19590 | What sort of a scout are you? |
19590 | What''d''you say, Hoody? |
19590 | What''s that for?" |
19590 | What''s the news?" |
19590 | Where he went, I do n''t know----""You_ do n''t_?" |
19590 | Who shall say what good angel prompted him to look behind? |
19590 | Who''s this fellow?" |
19590 | Why bother more about that? |
19590 | Why did you not face into the wind and you would have headed north? |
19590 | Why make a fuss about it? |
19590 | Will you come and see me cop the cross?" |
19590 | Would you let any fellow call you a Camp- fire Girl-- would you? |
19590 | Would you take a double dare if you were me? |
19590 | Yet what could he do? |
19590 | You do n''t think I''m a liar, do you? |
19590 | You know about that?" |
19590 | You know how much money we have in our treasury, do n''t you?" |
19590 | You know-- do you-- I''m square-- yes?" |
19590 | You notice I gave the compass to Roy? |
19590 | You see it now in its true light, do n''t you? |
19590 | You see?" |
19590 | You were disobedient and insubordinate, and that led to-- what?" |
19590 | You wo n''t take a dare, hey? |
19590 | he urged,"and then?" |
35272 | _ 4to, brown levant morocco, gilt back, side panels, gilt edges, by Rivière._ First edition(?). |
35272 | _ 8vo, brown straight- grain morocco, Janseniste, gilt edges, by The Club Bindery._ Grotesque frontispiece with the legend"--Risum teneatis amici?" |
35272 | _ 8vo, five volumes, half morocco, gilt top, uncut edges._ George Daniel''s copy on large paper(? |
35272 | _ Small 8vo, brown levant morocco, gilt back, gilt edges, by Rivière._ First printed anonymously in the"Public Advertiser,"( November?) |
18180 | A killyloo bird''s? |
18180 | A scout is observant, hey? |
18180 | A thrush? |
18180 | A turtle? |
18180 | A turtshplsh-- can''t you hearshsph? |
18180 | A what? |
18180 | A which? |
18180 | Almost an Eagle fool, hey? |
18180 | Am I going to see my mother and father? |
18180 | And do you mean to tell me that a scout can be any more of a scout than that-- an Eagle Scout? |
18180 | And his stocking? |
18180 | And there''s just the one way to get there, is that it? |
18180 | And when you whistled we came and got you, hey? 18180 And will you clap?" |
18180 | And will you prove it for me? |
18180 | Anything doing, Hervey? |
18180 | Are n''t you coming back to camp with me? |
18180 | Are you bringing the bird? |
18180 | Are you going up there, Slady? |
18180 | Are you sure this is the right mountain? |
18180 | Asbestos? |
18180 | Can he get higher than the top if he has a balloon? |
18180 | Cantshunderstand Englsphish? |
18180 | Did either of you fellows do that? |
18180 | Did either of you fellows do that? |
18180 | Did n''t you ever sail up the Hudson? |
18180 | Did n''t you ever see one before? |
18180 | Did n''t you see it yet? |
18180 | Did you ever hear any one say that there is more than one way to kill a cat? |
18180 | Did you ever kill a councilman? |
18180 | Did you see anything beside the bird? |
18180 | Did you see that bird that Tom Slade got? 18180 Do you know Tom Slade?" |
18180 | Do you know what I think I''ll do, Slady? |
18180 | Do you know where there are any wild animal tracks? |
18180 | Do you know who is the smartest fellow in this camp? |
18180 | Do you want to see it? 18180 Do you want to see those tracks I found? |
18180 | Does-- does it mean I ca n''t have the badge? |
18180 | Eagle fell asleep at the switch, did n''t you, Eagle? |
18180 | Eagle with clipped wings, hey? |
18180 | Ever make one of those willow whistles? 18180 Everybody''ll be sure to see it, wo n''t they?" |
18180 | Gee whiz, if he does n''t care for food what_ does_ he care for? |
18180 | Getting all cleared up? |
18180 | Hang on like a bulldog, hey? |
18180 | Have a heart, Slady, and wait a minute, will you? |
18180 | Have you brought any one else up here? |
18180 | Have you got a trail-- any tracks? |
18180 | He fell all over himself, hey? |
18180 | He''s a peach of a scout, hey? |
18180 | Hear that? |
18180 | Help us take down this troop pole, will you? |
18180 | Herve,he said,"I do n''t suppose you ever tried your hand at keeping a secret, did you? |
18180 | Hervey Willetts, he''s a hero, is n''t he? |
18180 | Hervey,said he,"do you know what kind of tracks those were you followed?" |
18180 | How do we know what was under the mackinaw jacket? |
18180 | How many merit badges have you got, anyway, Mr.--Slady? |
18180 | How much good has it done you trying for it? |
18180 | I bet all my troop will like me then, wo n''t they? 18180 I bet he''s got as much as a hundred dollars, has n''t he?" |
18180 | I bet you do n''t care about tracks-- do you? |
18180 | I bet you do n''t shake all over when Mr. Temple speaks to you, do you? |
18180 | I bet you''re smart, ai n''t you? |
18180 | I could n''t pin it on there very well, could I? |
18180 | I do n''t mean just exactly where, but do you know a good place to hunt for any? 18180 I guess they were right when they said you''d be a good guide, philosopher, and friend, hey?" |
18180 | I mean another that has something to do with that? |
18180 | I''d like to know what that is? |
18180 | I''d make a good sneak thief, hey? |
18180 | If I win the Eagle you''ll say so, wo n''t you? |
18180 | In the village? |
18180 | Is it architecture or cooking or interpreting or one of those? |
18180 | Is it safe to stop here? |
18180 | Is n''t Temple Camp getting famous? 18180 Is that fair to the troop, Hervey? |
18180 | Is that what you have to do to be a second- class scout, Skinny? 18180 It must be about tracking, hey?" |
18180 | It''s a turtle-- t- u- r- t- e- l-- I mean l- e-- can''t you understand English? |
18180 | Just once-- will you? |
18180 | Like every story, hey? |
18180 | Looks as if a jack- knife had been at work around here, huh? 18180 Maybe if I was n''t a- scared I''d ask him to look at the tracks too, hey? |
18180 | Maybe you do n''t even care if I tell them what you did? |
18180 | Maybe you do n''t know what kind of an animal made these tracks, maybe, hey? |
18180 | Maybe you''ll get that canoe some day, hey? |
18180 | No one is in this but just you and I, hey? |
18180 | Now I can prove I''m a second- class scout by my badge, ca n''t I? |
18180 | Now for the buried treasure, hey, Slady? |
18180 | Oh, I did n''t exactly commit a murder,the other laughed,"but I fell down, Sla-- you do n''t mind my calling you Slady, do you?" |
18180 | Oh, you mean about guides? |
18180 | Old top, hey? |
18180 | Once a scout, always a scout, hey? |
18180 | See it? |
18180 | See? |
18180 | So you see I''ve been pretty busy since I''ve been here, too busy to talk to interviewers, hey? 18180 Some climb, hey?" |
18180 | Some excitement, hey? |
18180 | Some rags, hey? |
18180 | Sounds like tomato, hey? |
18180 | Still after the Eagle, huh? 18180 Suppose while I''m doing it I should decide I''d rather do something else? |
18180 | Terrible Hustler? 18180 The canoe?" |
18180 | The highest honor, that''s the Eagle award, is n''t it? |
18180 | They''re not going to put you through a lot of book sprints, are they? |
18180 | They''re_ real_ tracks, ai n''t they? 18180 Think I will?" |
18180 | Tom Slade is wrong for once; how about that? 18180 Up on that mountain, maybe, hey?" |
18180 | Was n''t it? |
18180 | We''re going to sneak up the back way, hey? |
18180 | Well, I''ll be there to tell them different, wo n''t I, Skinny, old boy? |
18180 | Well, are you willing to help me or not? |
18180 | Well, how do you want me to help you? |
18180 | Well, if you ca n''t keep a badge do you think you can keep a secret? 18180 Well, if you were in my place, where would you go to look for a trail? |
18180 | Well, then I''d better get busy hunting for some tracks, had n''t I? 18180 Well, what do you think of eagles now?" |
18180 | Well, what''s on your mind? |
18180 | Well, you want the Eagle badge, do you? |
18180 | Were you in France? |
18180 | What canoe is that, Alf? |
18180 | What did you do? |
18180 | What did you quit? |
18180 | What did_ he_ say-- Tom Slade? |
18180 | What do you know about this? |
18180 | What do you mean to do with her now that you''ve got her? |
18180 | What do you suppose_ I_ care? 18180 What do you think you''re doing here? |
18180 | What gate? |
18180 | What good is he? |
18180 | What is it? |
18180 | What is it? |
18180 | What kind of pie? |
18180 | What more do you want? |
18180 | What''ll I do with this eagle flag? |
18180 | What''ll we do with him? 18180 What''s on your mind, Skinny?" |
18180 | What''s that belt made out of? |
18180 | What''s that? 18180 What''s the good of my going? |
18180 | What''s the matter with Tomasso? |
18180 | What''s the matter with old Hickory Nut? |
18180 | What''s the use? |
18180 | When my soul burst forth in gladness, hey? 18180 When you''re asleep?" |
18180 | Where did you get that scout suit, Tomasso? |
18180 | Where is it? |
18180 | Where? |
18180 | Why? 18180 Will you go with me all the way up to where the mountain begins-- will you?" |
18180 | Will you promise that you''ll make good? 18180 Will you-- will you take me out in it?" |
18180 | Yes, and what are you doing here, Alf? |
18180 | Yop,he called back;"did you see his nobs fly away? |
18180 | Yop,said Tom;"what do you think of it?" |
18180 | You all right? |
18180 | You and I both fell down, hey? 18180 You call me a fool?" |
18180 | You did n''t even tell them I saved that little bird, did you? |
18180 | You did n''t happen to notice those letters up there, did you? |
18180 | You did n''t happen to see that canoe in Council Shack, did you? |
18180 | You fellows going home soon? |
18180 | You going to be on hand at five? |
18180 | You going to hang around, Slady? |
18180 | You got stung when you made a prophecy about me, did n''t you? |
18180 | You heard them call me a dare- devil, did n''t you? |
18180 | You know about good turns, do n''t you? |
18180 | You mean a sub- division? |
18180 | You mean stalking? |
18180 | You mean you''re_ sure_ I will? |
18180 | You mean you''ve won thirteen more since you''ve been here? |
18180 | You see I''m all through bird study,Hervey said with amusing artlessness,"so I think you''d better adopt Erastus-- is that the way you say it?" |
18180 | You think he will? |
18180 | You want what you want when you want it, do n''t you? |
18180 | You would n''t drop a trail after you once picked it up, would you? 18180 You''ve got the bird badge,"Tom said, smiling a little;"ca n''t you guess?" |
18180 | You_ guess?_ I bet you''ve got the Gold Cross. 18180 _ Positive?_""That''s what I said." |
18180 | _ You''re not?_Hervey asked in puzzled dismay. |
18180 | ( Laughter)"I wonder how many of you scouts who are down for these awards realize what the awards mean? |
18180 | A hunk of candy?" |
18180 | A mind reader?" |
18180 | Ai n''t they?" |
18180 | Am I right?" |
18180 | And they''ll surely let me be a second- class scout now, wo n''t they?" |
18180 | And they''re_ mine_, ai n''t they? |
18180 | Anyway, how did_ you_ happen to come here?" |
18180 | Are you a second- class scout?" |
18180 | Are you game?" |
18180 | Are you going to give me a tip about some tracks?" |
18180 | Are you lost?" |
18180 | Are you willing to risk your life-- again?" |
18180 | At all events, what other explanation was there? |
18180 | Back to the crags for him, hey? |
18180 | Because I found them? |
18180 | But you ai n''t, are you?" |
18180 | CHAPTER V WHAT''S IN A NAME? |
18180 | Can you balance a scout staff on your nose?" |
18180 | Can you beat that?" |
18180 | Can you give me a tip?" |
18180 | Come now, is n''t that right?" |
18180 | Could it be? |
18180 | Could it really mean anything in connection with that lost child? |
18180 | Did you ever have a bicycle?" |
18180 | Do n''t mind if I come along with you, do you? |
18180 | Do n''t mind if I stroll along with you a little way, do you? |
18180 | Do n''t you know that aviators discover trails that even hunters never knew about before? |
18180 | Do you know what those letters might possibly stand for?" |
18180 | Do you know what you did, you clumsy old ice wagon? |
18180 | Do you realize what you have done?" |
18180 | Do you think you can do that?" |
18180 | Do you want to see how I did it-- do you?" |
18180 | Do you want to see it?" |
18180 | Do you want to see me follow them again? |
18180 | Ever follow a woodchuck-- or a coon? |
18180 | First off I was a- scared to ask_ you?_""Tracks are my middle name, Alf." |
18180 | Good I wo n''t have to, hey?" |
18180 | Good idea, hey?" |
18180 | H.?" |
18180 | His patrol colors? |
18180 | How far up are you going to follow the tracks?" |
18180 | How many guesses do I have?" |
18180 | How many of those things do you remember now? |
18180 | How will your father feel about the bicycle he had looked forward to giving you? |
18180 | How would he get down with it through all that network of lower branches? |
18180 | I bet you know everything in the handbook, do n''t you?" |
18180 | I bet you like crullers?" |
18180 | I bet you''re a hero, ai n''t you?" |
18180 | I guess you think I''m kind of happy- go- lucky, do n''t you?" |
18180 | I suppose of course you''re an Eagle Scout?" |
18180 | I tried to manage my own campaign and now I''m stuck-- with a capital S.""How many merits have you got?" |
18180 | I want you to do something for me, will you?" |
18180 | I wonder what he thinks? |
18180 | I''d look nice going up on the platform Saturday night? |
18180 | I''d never win the reason badge, hey?" |
18180 | I''ve got to make good to_ you_ as well as to my troop, have n''t I?" |
18180 | I''ve got trails on the brain, have n''t I?" |
18180 | Is it a trade mark or something like that? |
18180 | Is it fair to yourself? |
18180 | Is it true that there are wild cats up in these mountains?" |
18180 | Is that the badge you meant that I forgot about? |
18180 | It appears that your memory and your handbook study have not kept pace with your sprightly legs and arms----""How about his dirty face?" |
18180 | Keep him?" |
18180 | Look down there, hey? |
18180 | Looks swell with all the bunting over it, does n''t it?" |
18180 | Lost, strayed, or stolen?" |
18180 | Maybe you think I just chose easy ones, hey?" |
18180 | No accounting for tastes, hey? |
18180 | No, sir, you ca n''t get above that-- no,_ siree_.... Do you mean to tell me that there''s anything higher in scouting than the Eagle award?" |
18180 | Old Mother Nature''s got herself into a fine mess of a tangle through here, hey? |
18180 | Right the first time, hey? |
18180 | See them? |
18180 | See this trickle of water? |
18180 | See? |
18180 | See? |
18180 | See? |
18180 | See? |
18180 | See?" |
18180 | See?" |
18180 | Should the human scout be found wanting where this humble little hero had triumphed? |
18180 | Some choice, hey? |
18180 | That is n''t so bad, is it?" |
18180 | That it?" |
18180 | That the idea?" |
18180 | That was n''t the right kind of a trail, was it?" |
18180 | The astronomy badge?" |
18180 | The scout Caruso, hey, Slady? |
18180 | Then we can say you did it all by yourself, see? |
18180 | These are_ my_ tracks, see? |
18180 | They might say it was n''t a half a mile, hey?" |
18180 | Think she''d stand for it?" |
18180 | Want to hear me stand up in front of the class and say them?" |
18180 | What are we going to meet under the elm tree for?" |
18180 | What are you? |
18180 | What care we? |
18180 | What did you do, Alf, old boy?" |
18180 | What does_ he_ care? |
18180 | What is it?" |
18180 | What would a happy- go- lucky nut like I am be doing, paddling around in a swell canoe like that?" |
18180 | What''s in a name, hey? |
18180 | What''s that streak of red, anyway? |
18180 | What, then, was it? |
18180 | When I get my mind on a thing.... Hey, Slady, what in the dickens is that streak of red in the nest? |
18180 | Where is it?" |
18180 | Where is it?" |
18180 | Where''s your Eagle badge?" |
18180 | Who''s running this show? |
18180 | Who, then, was T. H.? |
18180 | Why did you call me that name-- Asbestos?" |
18180 | Will you ask your troop to clap?" |
18180 | Will you clap when I go on? |
18180 | Will you stay with me so you can tell them? |
18180 | Yet if he cut the branch where it was thick, how could he handle it after it was detached? |
18180 | You ca n''t blame the boys, Hervey, now can you?" |
18180 | You have to track an animal, or something like that? |
18180 | You know Pee- wee Harris-- the little fellow that fell off the springboard?" |
18180 | You or I?" |
18180 | You think it is?" |
18180 | You''d think he''d get seasick, would n''t you?" |
18180 | [ Illustration:"DID EITHER OF YOU FELLOWS DO THAT?" |
35009 | ''Can you build this bridge?'' 35009 ''Have you applied to General Halleck?'' |
35009 | ''How is that?'' 35009 ''John,''said he,''did n''t you promise to let me do all the swearing of the regiment?'' |
35009 | ''Madam, have you been to see the Post Surgeon at Alexandria about this matter?'' 35009 ''What church, madam?'' |
35009 | Did you ever see anything like it? |
35009 | Giving her a very close and scrutinizing look, he said:"''Well, madam, what can I do for you?'' |
35009 | How much will you give to assist in building a hospital?" |
35009 | It is contagious, I believe?" |
35009 | One day as the lawyers were riding their horses along the road, some one said:"Where is Abe?" |
35009 | The Judge overtook me and said:"''Hello, Lincoln, going to the court house? |
35009 | The father said:"Do n''t you see that squirrel up there in the tree?" |
19311 | ''Why, is n''t he down in your mill?'' 19311 A turpentine camp?" |
19311 | An Indian? |
19311 | And I always treats my help right, no matter what happens after they hire out; do n''t I, boys? |
19311 | And I wonder what they want of him? |
19311 | And did he go South? |
19311 | And do you really mean to say you can take us there? |
19311 | And have you no home-- no friends? |
19311 | And may we come? |
19311 | And now are you young ladies ready to go back? |
19311 | And stay out all night? |
19311 | And the other one, too? |
19311 | And what has n''t happened to me? |
19311 | And what will we do with it when we get to Bentonville? |
19311 | And you were going to say I was so thin that the wind did n''t take long to go through me; were n''t you? |
19311 | Anything else? |
19311 | Are n''t you going to rescue them to- night? |
19311 | Are the girls thinking of going cruising among the Everglades? |
19311 | Are the young ladies all right? |
19311 | Are there Everglades here? |
19311 | Are there really any there, Amy? 19311 Are we coming back with the men when they make the rescue?" |
19311 | Are we going to be here for breakfast? |
19311 | Are we moving? |
19311 | Are you all ready? |
19311 | Are you going to let him stay down there? |
19311 | Are you going to let him stay, Daddy? |
19311 | Are you going to take the_ Gem_? |
19311 | Are you sure you saw one, Grace? |
19311 | At what? |
19311 | But are you sure we are lost? |
19311 | But can we-- ought we-- go back without Tom? |
19311 | But how? |
19311 | But if we come out again? |
19311 | But if we go, can Tom find his way back? |
19311 | But is n''t it awfully light, Mollie? |
19311 | But the question is-- what could we do? |
19311 | But what about those rough men? |
19311 | But what are we going to do? |
19311 | But what can be towing our boat? |
19311 | But what can we do? |
19311 | But what does it all mean, Grace? 19311 But what in the world are you girls doing down here?" |
19311 | But what is it, Grace? |
19311 | But who is this other one you started to help? |
19311 | But who was he-- can''t you tell his name, or something about him? |
19311 | But you''re not going to give up without trying to get back to the grove; are you? |
19311 | Ca n''t something be done for him? |
19311 | Ca n''t you be nice? 19311 Can you tell us any more about all this? |
19311 | Caught? 19311 Come, have you girls no good news to cheer her up with?" |
19311 | Comforting-- isn''t she? |
19311 | Cottontails-- did you call them-- do you mean rabbits? |
19311 | Could n''t come-- why? |
19311 | Could n''t you locate him, Daddy? |
19311 | Did he give any intimation that he was going to leave? |
19311 | Did they-- did they come in a motor boat? |
19311 | Did this other young man-- the one who gave you money-- tell you his name? |
19311 | Did you get home all right? |
19311 | Did you inquire whether there are navigable waters near the orange grove? |
19311 | Do n''t do what? |
19311 | Do n''t go where? |
19311 | Do n''t you remember the big creatures we saw in the New York aquarium a year or so ago? |
19311 | Do n''t you remember''alligator tears?'' |
19311 | Do n''t you remember-- Flowery Easter? |
19311 | Do you mean-- your hair? |
19311 | Do you really mean it? |
19311 | Do you see it? |
19311 | Do you think we''ll ever get off? |
19311 | Do you think you could pilot this boat to Mr. Stonington''s place? |
19311 | Do you want to meet them, Grace; or shall I say you do n''t feel well-- have a headache? 19311 Do?" |
19311 | Does n''t he like-- girls? |
19311 | Does n''t it seem odd to see oranges that are n''t in a crate, or a fruit store? |
19311 | Forgot what? |
19311 | Girls, did you see my chocolates? |
19311 | Girls,she said finally,"does everything look right?" |
19311 | Go South? 19311 Gracious, I wonder if he thinks we wanted to capture him?" |
19311 | Gracious-- I wonder if he means the boat or the alligator? |
19311 | Has oo dot any in oo pockets? |
19311 | Have you heard no word from Will himself? |
19311 | He? 19311 Hey, ca n''t you stop and answer a civil question?" |
19311 | How about you, Amy? 19311 How did it happen?" |
19311 | How do you like it in Florida? |
19311 | How is she? |
19311 | How would you like it, Mollie Billette, if Paul should be missing some day? |
19311 | How-- how can you find him? |
19311 | How? |
19311 | I say Tom, where are you? |
19311 | I wonder how it would do if I got out and dug around the bow? |
19311 | I wonder if he is a desperate criminal? |
19311 | I wonder if there are alligators in it? |
19311 | I wonder if there is any chance of them coming down this summer? |
19311 | I wonder if those two suspicious characters Mr. Hammond spoke of could be the ones who followed us in the boat? |
19311 | I wonder if, by any chance, Will could have gone there? 19311 I wonder what alligators are good for, anyhow?" |
19311 | I wonder what possessed that sea cow to swim off with it? |
19311 | I wonder what they are going to do? |
19311 | I wonder when they will bring her up and launch her? |
19311 | I wonder who he may be? |
19311 | I wonder whom he is going to get help for? 19311 I wonder why an alligator ran off with our boat?" |
19311 | I wonder why they called him that? |
19311 | I''m afraid we''ve taken the wrong turn in the river, and that----"You do n''t mean to say that we''re lost; do you? |
19311 | Ill from too many chocolates? 19311 Is Mrs. Stonington very ill?" |
19311 | Is it a baseball engine? |
19311 | Is it as bad as that? |
19311 | Is it the current taking it away, Betty? |
19311 | Is the''other one''like that? |
19311 | Is there another alligator there? |
19311 | It reminds me of a wedding-- hark, can you hear the strains of Mendelssohn? |
19311 | It was n''t Will, was it? |
19311 | Long to do what? |
19311 | No, but I wonder if we could take it along? |
19311 | Now can you make it fast? 19311 Now who is making direful suggestions, I''d like to know?" |
19311 | Now will you help us again? |
19311 | Oh, are you going all the way back to where we ate? |
19311 | Oh, are you going to call him Tom? |
19311 | Oh, do you really have to go? |
19311 | Oh, what shall I do? 19311 Oh, what shall we do?" |
19311 | Oh, what-- what are we going to do? |
19311 | Oh, where can Tom be? |
19311 | Oo dot tandy? |
19311 | Ought not we to keep him with us? |
19311 | Prepaid? 19311 Really?" |
19311 | Shall I answer, Grace? |
19311 | Shall I bring them right in, Grace? |
19311 | Silly? 19311 Stuck?" |
19311 | Suppose some of us go up in the bow and push? |
19311 | The question is what can we do? |
19311 | Then I could use slang, such as-- oh, well, what''s the use? 19311 Then do you think you will be all right?" |
19311 | Then he knew that he had left Atlanta? |
19311 | Then tell us where Tom is-- who has him-- how did he come to send you for us-- who is''the other one''? |
19311 | Then what can we do? 19311 They are going to help us; are n''t they, Betty?" |
19311 | This is the Mayfair river-- our river; is n''t it? |
19311 | Trouble? |
19311 | Was I? |
19311 | Was n''t it odd to get good and bad news so close together? |
19311 | We will take our lunch again, and----"Get trapped by alligators or snakes? |
19311 | We? |
19311 | Well, I do n''t care-- why do n''t they answer? 19311 Well, are you ready, girls?" |
19311 | Well, he is n''t there; is he? |
19311 | Well, we''ll forgive her if she''ll run us off again; wo n''t we, girls? |
19311 | Wha-- what? |
19311 | What about that, Amy? |
19311 | What are the particulars? 19311 What are those other things?" |
19311 | What can I do to pour oil on troubled waters? 19311 What can we do? |
19311 | What did he do? |
19311 | What do you say-- had we not better turn back? |
19311 | What for? |
19311 | What happened? 19311 What has happened? |
19311 | What is he doing in Jacksonville? |
19311 | What is it-- bad news? |
19311 | What is it? 19311 What is it?" |
19311 | What is that? |
19311 | What is the trouble? 19311 What kind?" |
19311 | What makes you say so, Betty? |
19311 | What same men? |
19311 | What shall we do if we meet those men who are after him? |
19311 | What was that? |
19311 | What would we do for valises and satchels if we had no alligators, I''d like to know? |
19311 | What''s a sea- cow? |
19311 | What''s that? |
19311 | What''s that? |
19311 | What''s the matter with it? |
19311 | What''s the matter with it? |
19311 | What''s the matter-- cold? |
19311 | What-- what are we going to do with him? |
19311 | What-- what do you mean? |
19311 | What-- what is it? |
19311 | What-- what kind of suspicious characters were they? |
19311 | When is it postmarked, father? |
19311 | When they get ready they''ll crawl out here and-- and-- what is it alligators do to you, anyhow-- charm you? |
19311 | Where have n''t I been? |
19311 | Where is Grace-- what has happened? |
19311 | Which means am I going to get you off this bar? 19311 Who told you?" |
19311 | Who''s Tom? |
19311 | Who-- the boat or the alligator? |
19311 | Why ca n''t you say something less-- less scary? |
19311 | Why do n''t you act-- naturally? |
19311 | Why do n''t you, yourself, Betty Nelson? |
19311 | Why do they have to punch the cows? |
19311 | Why do you think-- I mean, in what way do you think anyone might try to bother us? |
19311 | Why not? |
19311 | Why not? |
19311 | Why should n''t they tell? |
19311 | Why, Mollie, dear? |
19311 | Why, is she worse? |
19311 | Why? |
19311 | Will you rescue them? |
19311 | Will you tell us your name now, or are you still afraid? |
19311 | Wo n''t you come aboard? |
19311 | Wo n''t you tell us if you''ve seen a ragged lad in a boat? 19311 Would you mind?" |
19311 | Would you-- I mean, can we do anything for you? |
19311 | Yes; but how? |
19311 | Yes? 19311 You came to look for us?" |
19311 | You were going to say you had n''t my temper, were n''t you, now? |
19311 | All we wanted to know was if you had seen a tall young fellow, with blue eyes, in a small skiff?" |
19311 | And the ugly creatures always come out on a sand bar to sun themselves; do n''t they?" |
19311 | And will you do me a favor?" |
19311 | Are you ready, young ladies?" |
19311 | Betty looked triumphant, as though saying:"There, did n''t I tell you?" |
19311 | But oh, what are we going to do?" |
19311 | By whom?" |
19311 | CHAPTER VIII LAUNCHING THE BOAT"Can you smell the orange blossoms?" |
19311 | CHAPTER XVI SUSPICIOUS CHARACTERS"What shall we do?" |
19311 | CHAPTER XVIII BETWEEN TWO PERILS"What-- what are we going to do?" |
19311 | Ca n''t you cheer up Grace?" |
19311 | Can the engine have started of itself?" |
19311 | Can you catch a rope?" |
19311 | Can you do it?" |
19311 | Can you get it? |
19311 | Did we come this way?" |
19311 | Do n''t you say so, Hammond?" |
19311 | Do they bark, Amy?" |
19311 | Do you mean that you are n''t going to stop?" |
19311 | Do you think you can?" |
19311 | Do you, girls?" |
19311 | Does Mrs. Ford know?" |
19311 | Grace clung to Betty, murmuring over and over again:"What shall I say? |
19311 | Has an alligator got hold of us?" |
19311 | Have we been here before? |
19311 | Have you a ring- bolt there?" |
19311 | Hello, what''s this, though? |
19311 | How can I tell her? |
19311 | How did you come here?" |
19311 | How is your mother?" |
19311 | I wonder if Mr. Belton could give us any information, since he is in the labor contracting business?" |
19311 | I wonder if we can get off?" |
19311 | I''m the biggest dealer in labor around here; ai n''t I, boys?" |
19311 | Is anyone dead-- or-- or hurt?" |
19311 | Is anyone in the dining room?" |
19311 | Is it familiar? |
19311 | Is n''t it horrid?" |
19311 | Is someone here?" |
19311 | Let''s see now; what does the rascal say?" |
19311 | Need any men down there?" |
19311 | Now, then, have you that rope fast?" |
19311 | Oh, can you help him?" |
19311 | Or, The Tyler Will If you had been poor and were suddenly left a half- million dollars, what would you do with it? |
19311 | Poor little mother-- I wonder how she will take it?" |
19311 | Read faster, please, if you can; wo n''t you, father?" |
19311 | So you''re from the orange grove; eh? |
19311 | Stonington?" |
19311 | That''s what you wanted; was n''t it?" |
19311 | Then one of the men called:"I say, young ladies, will you stop a minute? |
19311 | This is the night he gets home late; is n''t it, Grace?" |
19311 | Was it fancy, or did Betty detect fierce and eager gleams in the eyes of the colored men? |
19311 | We''ll have to eat, and----""Where''s Tom?" |
19311 | Well, Betty, are you going to get forgiven?" |
19311 | What can we do for you?" |
19311 | What do you mean?" |
19311 | What if we do get wet? |
19311 | What in the world is it?" |
19311 | What shall I do?" |
19311 | What shall I do?" |
19311 | What shall we do?" |
19311 | What sort of a looking young man might your brother be?" |
19311 | What was it they called him--''The Duck?''" |
19311 | When are you going?" |
19311 | When did he leave your house?" |
19311 | Where are my chocolates? |
19311 | Where did he go?" |
19311 | Where have you been, and what happened to you?" |
19311 | Where is Mr. Stonington''s orange grove, Amy-- near Palm Beach?" |
19311 | Where is Will? |
19311 | Where is poor Will?" |
19311 | Where were you? |
19311 | Who do you mean?" |
19311 | Who''s going downtown?" |
19311 | Who''s that?" |
19311 | Why did Tom go away?" |
19311 | Why do n''t you come out and help Betty and me throw stones at them?" |
19311 | You know that; do n''t you?" |
19311 | You wo n''t go away; will you?" |
32702 | Are there no such machines? |
32702 | B-- b-- but,stammered one of them,"how can we take it away? |
32702 | Did you hear the news about Deering? |
32702 | Do you see that machine? |
32702 | Do you see these American machines? |
32702 | Have n''t I seen you before? |
32702 | Have you money to invest? 32702 How do you like the work, Jack?" |
32702 | How many castings did your men make last year? |
32702 | Ten minutes later the big fellow looked up from the catalogue and asked--''How much do you want for ten of these binders?'' 32702 Well,"said the other,"why ca n''t we fix a platform on the reaper, and have the grain carried up to us?" |
32702 | What am I to do? |
32702 | Why do n''t you use a scythe? 32702 ''Can you get me three thousand dollars by daylight to- morrow morning?'' 32702 ''Have you a thousand dollars in your pocket?'' 32702 At the time the International was organised, Stanley said to the others:What about the men? |
32702 | Ca n''t you give us a cheque?" |
32702 | Could the West have risen toward its present greatness if its billion acres had to be harvested by hand? |
32702 | Could the railways alone, which produce nothing, have given us more food for less work-- the first necessity of a civilised democracy? |
32702 | Could we have swung through four years of Civil War, as we did, without famine or national insolvency? |
32702 | How can we save these twelve millions and completely Americanise the trade? |
32702 | How could anything be more important to a three- dollar- a- day man than his job? |
32702 | How? |
32702 | If you would not in the case of a horse, why should you, in the case of a mower, reaper, or self- binding harvester? |
32702 | Is there anything cheaper than bread? |
32702 | It was a riotous game of"Farmer, farmer, who gets the farmer?" |
32702 | Mr. McCormick turned to his wife and said,"Which shall it be?" |
32702 | Or that Minnesota and the Dakotas( names that the world of his day had never heard) produce enough wheat to feed all the people of England? |
32702 | Then he asked me--''Can these machines be made in Germany?'' |
32702 | What could be more essentially American, or more profitable to the human race? |
32702 | What matter? |
32702 | What sort of an American nation would we have, if we were still using such food- implements as the sickle and the flail? |
32702 | Which is the International Harvester Company? |
32702 | Why should their trains be pushed to one side and delayed, to expedite a mere consignment of freight? |
32702 | Why? |
32702 | Why? |
32702 | Why? |
32702 | Why? |
32702 | Why? |
35634 | What do you see so funny in me to laugh at? |
35634 | And there is no greater evidence of the use of the expression"Who''s yere?" |
35634 | Could one refuse to drink with such a company? |
35634 | Furthermore, if a person who came to a house called"Who''s yere?" |
35634 | This consideration has led to the suggestion that the expression from which the word came was"who is yer?" |
35634 | what cause would there be for calling the people who lived in the house"who''s yeres?" |
36068 | Can you believe this wondrous tale? |
29158 | Admitting, for the sake of argument,said this ever- judicial host,"that the doctor is right, what follows? |
29158 | Ah,said Sir Robert,"you suppose yourself to have some connection with the Huddlesford Vanes?" |
29158 | And did you really design it for me? 29158 Are you an American?" |
29158 | Brother Gregory, will you see that our guest''s effects are at once transferred to his room here? |
29158 | But he heard me ask for your husband''s house,--did he not, Miss Vila? 29158 But why did n''t you invite him in, Henry?" |
29158 | But why do you make such a mystery of it all? |
29158 | But, my dear, suppose I should be worse? 29158 By whom?" |
29158 | Can you not, in the face of this so beautiful landscape, get rid of your eternal subjunctive mood? 29158 Could I make a horse- car the hero of my story?" |
29158 | Did that happen here? |
29158 | Did you ever hear the call before? |
29158 | Did your dog come this way, Elsa? |
29158 | Do you mean to say that you never heard anybody talk like me? |
29158 | Do you think anything can be done to keep me from hurting anybody else? |
29158 | Do you think so? |
29158 | Does she live here? |
29158 | Eh? 29158 Ellen? |
29158 | From whom did you learn these facts? |
29158 | Have I missed a call from you? |
29158 | Have n''t you got any other name than Bijou? |
29158 | How is Ramsay opening the American oyster? |
29158 | I asked,''Can you see the contents of this room?'' 29158 I did n''t know that he was goin''with anybody?" |
29158 | If anything be anything? 29158 Indians?" |
29158 | Is Mr. Ramsay coming back to England? |
29158 | Is it the maiden who dwells in this house? |
29158 | My good friend,he said, with judicial calmness,"why do you wish to espouse Miss Reinfelter?" |
29158 | Oh, are you? 29158 Oh, you heard that report, then?" |
29158 | Shall you accept his invitation? |
29158 | Should you go if he possessed not a pretty daughter? |
29158 | Sister Rena, what did that man want still? |
29158 | So? 29158 The Marcomanni were a Suevic race, were they not?" |
29158 | Was it a black dog, with rough, curly hair? |
29158 | Was your hand entirely uncovered? |
29158 | We do n''t sit still and say,''_ Quien sabe?_''like you agnostics. 29158 We, Henry? |
29158 | Well,said he at last,"are you ready to start with me for New York to- morrow morning, and for Liverpool next Monday?" |
29158 | What are you going to do with him? 29158 What do you hear from that idiotic young Ramsay?" |
29158 | What is it made by? |
29158 | What is it, then? |
29158 | When do you find time to learn so much about birds? |
29158 | Where do you live, then? |
29158 | Which side of the road is he, sir? |
29158 | Why not try getting a room somewhere in this neighborhood? 29158 Why not, then, have the experience first?" |
29158 | Why not? 29158 Why, do you mean to say that anybody would care for_ that_, or think of the_ trouble_, with a friend lying sick in their house? |
29158 | Why, who''s that with Tom Worth? |
29158 | Why, why not? |
29158 | Why, you do n''t mean to say that the buffaloes in this country ca n''t climb, do you? |
29158 | Will agnosticism let you be absolutely sure his statements are true? |
29158 | Will the''Allgemeine Zeitung''have the benefit of your researches? |
29158 | You did n''t dream that I cared for you, did you? |
29158 | You live in America? 29158 _ Alle Wetter!_ Are you married?" |
29158 | _ Poverina!_ what would you have? |
29158 | ''Can you see to read this newspaper?'' |
29158 | ''De Lower Liar''?" |
29158 | A portly old gentleman of opulent appearance was stepping aboard with his daughter( or wife? |
29158 | A_ watch_-dog indeed; for is he not the one thing to be on the watch for, now that the day of spring- guns and man- traps is past? |
29158 | And did not Mr. Ketchum give the groom a pair of trotting- horses that afterward attracted much attention in Hyde Park? |
29158 | And then little Teresa spoke up,--she was always as wise as a little angel:"Mamma,"says she,"the baby must have her supper, must n''t she?" |
29158 | And then was there not cotton, the machinery employed on rice-, sugar-, and cotton- plantations to"go, into"? |
29158 | And then, turning to his wife, he said,"Do n''t you wish you were going home, too?" |
29158 | And was there not, too, serious business to be done? |
29158 | Are there many buffaloes near here? |
29158 | As the boy turned away, his disappointment was so evident that Brent said,"Do you want her to do anything for you, Casper?" |
29158 | Bazaroff, this fine mind, this hero, a caricature? |
29158 | Buckingham?" |
29158 | But hath not a dog teeth? |
29158 | But is it not better than the simple drum and fife of a common training- day? |
29158 | But the night my little girl died, nine years ago, she rose up in bed once, an''she says,''Who is that a- cryin''up there in the mount''ins?'' |
29158 | But, permit me, dear A. P., why do not the oncoming young people take this task upon themselves? |
29158 | Can you ask why? |
29158 | Confess it; do n''t you make up stories about this Mr. Buckingham? |
29158 | Could there be a kinder family? |
29158 | Could this be the American type of his dreams? |
29158 | Creepin''through mercy, eh? |
29158 | Did n''t you see how the men kept askin''for it to be passed? |
29158 | Did they know of any other school where a teacher was wanted? |
29158 | Do atheists ever have doubts about anything?" |
29158 | Do n''t you perceive yourself that he is the most congenial of all my characters? |
29158 | Do you know I am making myself quite wretched lest I should be sickening with something,--something serious? |
29158 | Do you know whose it is?" |
29158 | Do you really believe that all that you reproach me with never entered my own mind? |
29158 | Few singers attempt the"Adelaïde"or"Che faro?" |
29158 | For are we not bidden,"if there be_ any_ virtue, and if there be any praise,"to"think on these things"? |
29158 | For who is going to get up every time the dog barks in the night? |
29158 | From what mystic circle cast In the dim æonian Past? |
29158 | From what sphere Float these phantoms flickering here? |
29158 | Had she ever taught before?" |
29158 | Hath not a dog great, dirty paws, a venomous and fiery tongue, and a throat which is the organ of all discords? |
29158 | Have you many friends in town?" |
29158 | He caught sight now of these two people, and at once addressed Buckingham:"Can you tell me whereabouts Mr. Martindale lives?" |
29158 | How can I who am unmarried write such stories? |
29158 | How did you discover that? |
29158 | I like to recall the first time I ever heard"Che faro senza Eurydice?" |
29158 | I talk it all the time, do n''t I?" |
29158 | I was a little afraid that I had offended him, because every evening he used to say, as I rose from the table,"Are you coming back to- morrow?" |
29158 | If some one else be fair to me, what care I how fair this''t other one be? |
29158 | Is n''t it the luckiest fluke that ever was? |
29158 | It began after quite formal greetings with,"Do you know that you are looking most awfully well, Miss Brown?" |
29158 | Lillie, do you suppose he saw us talk?" |
29158 | Of what use are talents, even learning, for such work? |
29158 | Pray, who is we?" |
29158 | Ramsay?" |
29158 | Shall you room in the college buildings?" |
29158 | She alighted in front of it, and was proceeding to hitch her horse, when the door opened, and a man stepped out, greeting her with a friendly"Howdy?" |
29158 | She left the hateful drawing- room car with her packages and her papa(?). |
29158 | Stepping forward as she was passing, he lifted his hat, and said,"Will you be good enough to tell me the way to the nearest encampment of Indians?" |
29158 | Take him somewhere and drown him?" |
29158 | The father will-- what will the father do or say? |
29158 | The young woman over there where the mountains stand?" |
29158 | There were declamations from the third and fourth readers,--"How big was Alexander, Pa?" |
29158 | Was there ever a country in which the scenes shifted so completely with a few hours or days of travel? |
29158 | Was there nothing in it?" |
29158 | What did they call her still? |
29158 | What do you think he would like best?" |
29158 | What does he mean by teasing you as if you were a little white kitten, or a green and yellow parrot, or some other ridiculous thing? |
29158 | What house did you find it in?" |
29158 | What idea have you got in your head, my boy?" |
29158 | What is the especial attraction? |
29158 | What will my people say?" |
29158 | What''s that?" |
29158 | What, for instance, can be more necessary or elementary than teaching the peasant to read and write, helping him to get hospitals, etc.? |
29158 | When do we leave this?" |
29158 | When nobody shall believe or disbelieve, who will_ act_?" |
29158 | When they had gone, Brent said,"What do you think that sound is?" |
29158 | Which of our Lord''s miracles does the signora think the finest? |
29158 | Who would ever suppose them to be countrymen of Ketchum''s?" |
29158 | Who''d''a''thought they would be here together? |
29158 | Why did you not let Parsons do that? |
29158 | Why not walk home from here? |
29158 | Why should you stop on the public highway and talk nothingness to a harmless girl?" |
29158 | Wilding, I hope you did n''t repeat any of the foolish speeches your cousin made at the tea- table?" |
29158 | Will you have the kindness to make us acquainted?" |
29158 | Will you see that the disadvantages of the property are set before him clearly, especially such as a stranger would certainly overlook? |
29158 | Will you try?'' |
29158 | Would you kindly send for one, or, rather, tell Parsons where to go? |
29158 | Would you try for a degree?" |
29158 | Yet what could it have been? |
29158 | You know we exercise an influence over students, do n''t you?" |
29158 | You say, too, that I meant to caricature the youth of Russia in Bazaroff? |
29158 | do n''t you call him Austin all by yourself?" |
29158 | how shall we ever tell her?" |
29158 | or, rather, how can I appropriate it for my purposes? |
29158 | said a gentleman to a friend,"what''s that you''ve got under your coat?" |
29158 | you repeat this-- pardon the frankness of the expression-- nonsensical accusation? |
32598 | And which is the brightest? |
32598 | Another story? |
32598 | Are n''t these interesting names? |
32598 | Are they ready to leave it, and explore some other? |
32598 | Can you see a small triangle made by three stars, of which Vega is one? |
32598 | Could a flood have scattered them as they are found? |
32598 | Could any substance become liquid with such a weight upon it, whatever heat it attained? |
32598 | Could you think of a more interesting adventure than to find the oldest rocks that show the skeletons of horses? |
32598 | Did you ever use a piece of chalk that scratched the black- board? |
32598 | Do they feel now that they know their river? |
32598 | Do we think often enough of this invisible, life- giving element upon which we depend so constantly? |
32598 | Do you know the name of one great western river of which I am thinking? |
32598 | Do you see a little dead fish in the water? |
32598 | Do you see two rather bright stars about twenty- five degrees from the Pole? |
32598 | Got it? |
32598 | Have you ever seen a Sickle in the sky? |
32598 | Have you ever seen a drop of pond water under a compound microscope? |
32598 | Have you ever seen the chalk cliffs of Dover? |
32598 | Have you ever visited a brick- yard? |
32598 | Have you not seen little trees growing on a patch of moss which gets its food from the air and the rock to which it clings? |
32598 | Have you the Cross now? |
32598 | How can any one know that these bones belonged to a horse''s skeleton? |
32598 | How do I know that? |
32598 | How do I know that? |
32598 | How does he look to you? |
32598 | How long ago did those first islands appear above the sea? |
32598 | How many years ago did the first Nile overflow take place? |
32598 | How would you like to start a Star Club like ours? |
32598 | Is Arcturus really red? |
32598 | Is that a true story? |
32598 | Is that a true story? |
32598 | Is there any stream in your neighbourhood which has such peculiar ways? |
32598 | KING COAL In this country, and in this age, who can doubt that coal is king? |
32598 | Look where Orion is threatening to strike, and you will see a V. How many stars in that V? |
32598 | More yellow than red? |
32598 | Remember?) |
32598 | See the arm and the club-- about seven stars in a rather poor curve-- beyond the red star Betelgeuse? |
32598 | See the shield-- about four rather faint stars in a pretty good curve? |
32598 | Some people believe this because Job said,"Canst thou guide Arcturus with his sons?" |
32598 | THE EARTH_ PAGE THE GREAT STONE BOOK 3 THE FOSSIL FISH 6 THE CRUST OF THE EARTH 9 WHAT IS THE EARTH MADE OF? |
32598 | That red one at the top of the left branch of the V? |
32598 | To illustrate, do you know the_ Pointers_? |
32598 | WHAT BECOMES OF THE RAIN? |
32598 | WHAT IS THE EARTH MADE OF? |
32598 | Well, do you see the star in the beak of the Swan, or foot of the Cross? |
32598 | What becomes of it all? |
32598 | What becomes of the hot air that rises in a constant stream above the"Doldrums,"pushed up by the cooler trade winds that blow in from north and south? |
32598 | What color is it? |
32598 | What explanation is there for this extensive distribution of unsorted débris? |
32598 | What if we children jumped the rope so hard as to break through the fragile shell, and drop out of sight in a sea of fiery metal, like melted iron? |
32598 | What should we do for wells if it were not for the water basins that lie below the surface? |
32598 | Where does the dust come from? |
32598 | White? |
32598 | Who can estimate the time it took to form those thick, solid layers of lime rock? |
32598 | Who has not cut his foot on the broken shells that lie in the sandy bottom we walk on whenever we go into the surf to swim or bathe? |
32598 | Who has not spent hours gathering dead shells which the tide has thrown up on the beach? |
32598 | Why does n''t this list agree with yours? |
32598 | Why is the trend of the great mountain systems almost always north and south? |
32598 | Why should anybody be afraid of anything so lovely as Sirius? |
32598 | You want another true story? |
32598 | _ What is soil made of?_ Ground rock materials and decayed remains of animal and plant life. |
32598 | _ What is soil?_ It is the surface layer of the earth''s crust, sometimes too shallow on the rocks to plough, sometimes much deeper. |
32598 | _ What is the best garden soil?_ A mixture of sand, clay, and humus is called"loam." |
32573 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? 32573 They tell me that we are weak; but shall we gather strength by irresolution? |
32573 | When rattling thunder ran along the clouds, Did not the sailors poor and masters proud A terror feel, as struck with fear of God? 32573 And is it not as bad for our assembly to violate their own declaration of rights as for the British parliament to break our charter? |
32573 | And what have we to oppose to them? |
32573 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
32573 | Bacon demanded,"How it could be possible that the chief fort in Virginia should be threatened by the Indians?" |
32573 | Being seated, the chairman asked her"How many men she would lend the English for guides and allies?" |
32573 | But is not a confederacy of our states previously necessary?" |
32573 | But what avails his conquest? |
32573 | But what has been the consequence? |
32573 | Have we anything new to offer? |
32573 | Henry replied:"What has there been in the conduct of the British ministry for the last ten years to justify hope? |
32573 | How could they have been thus deprived, if, as was contended, all the people of England were still virtually represented? |
32573 | How many deserted or demolished houses and plantations? |
32573 | How many poor families obliged to fly in consternation and leave their all behind them? |
32573 | How was England to prevent this union? |
32573 | How wide an extent of country abandoned? |
32573 | If not, of what advantage was the appointment of a commander- in- chief at all? |
32573 | If the office of speaker of itself gave no influence, why had it been always sought for? |
32573 | Is the author a whig? |
32573 | May I venture to hope that you may think me so far worthy of your confidence as to preserve them for me? |
32573 | Mr. Henry, on his return home, being asked,"Who is the greatest man in congress?" |
32573 | Shall we resort to entreaty and supplication? |
32573 | Shall we try argument? |
32573 | The act had been denounced as treasonable; but were the legislature to sit with folded arms, silent and inactive, amid the miseries of the people? |
32573 | Was it by quartering armed soldiers in their families? |
32573 | Washington?" |
32573 | What breaches and separations between the nearest relations? |
32573 | What is that religion good for that leaves men cowards upon the appearance of danger? |
32573 | What painful ruptures of heart from heart? |
32573 | What shocking dispersions of those once united by the strongest and most endearing ties? |
32573 | Wherever I go the evil Manethoes pursue me;"and he earnestly enquired,"What shall I do?" |
32573 | Who is there to mourn for Logan? |
32573 | [ 480: C] The dying Braddock ejaculated in reference to the defeat,"Who would have thought it?" |
32573 | [ 549: A] In discussing the question,"Whether the colonies are represented in the British Parliament?" |
32573 | by depriving the colonists of legal trials in the courts of common law? |
32573 | is it proposed then to reclaim the spendthrift from his dissipation and extravagance by filling his pockets with money?" |
32573 | love you not me?" |
32573 | or by harassing them by tax- gatherers, and prerogative judges, and inquisitorial courts? |
26631 | About what, Patsy? |
26631 | Ai n''t it the truth? |
26631 | Alive are you? |
26631 | An'', please sweet grace, why should n''t he? 26631 An''him?" |
26631 | And Cousin? |
26631 | And leave this excellent shelter? |
26631 | And never come back to them alive? |
26631 | Any news, Lige? |
26631 | Any signs of the Cherokees coming in? |
26631 | Aye? 26631 Basdel, why not stay on this side of the mountains? |
26631 | But if she loves the man----"But what if she believes she does n''t love him quite enough to take him and his rifle and live in the woods? 26631 But why retain it when it is needed elsewhere?" |
26631 | But why run any risk? |
26631 | Ca n''t we go the way they did and be safe? |
26631 | Ca n''t we learn something from them? |
26631 | Coming out here? |
26631 | Crabtree is n''t going with you? |
26631 | Crabtree is there, is he? |
26631 | Did the ancient Virginia Indians prosper by civilization? 26631 Did you git it?" |
26631 | Do n''t you understand it, men? 26631 Do you mean that there is no need of this war? |
26631 | Do you mean they would resent it? |
26631 | Do you remember me? |
26631 | Do you wish I had shot him? |
26631 | Does Pennsylvania still blame Michael Cresap for the death of Logan''s people? |
26631 | Does it hurt much? |
26631 | Go as what? |
26631 | Gone away? 26631 Gone back home?" |
26631 | Have you medicine to make it into a cannon? |
26631 | Have you seen Ericus Dale, the trader? |
26631 | Hear what I say? |
26631 | Honest? |
26631 | How about the Injuns being willing for us to go down into the Kentucky country? |
26631 | How can the country expand unless the settlers have land? 26631 How did Dale''s girl stand the journey?" |
26631 | How far to the Grisdol cabin? |
26631 | How is the arm this morning? |
26631 | How many cabins on Howard''s Creek now? |
26631 | In God''s mercy why should we have war with the Indians? 26631 In trade?" |
26631 | Is n''t that about enough? |
26631 | Is she promised to you? |
26631 | Meaning John Ward? |
26631 | My daughter? |
26631 | Need of war? |
26631 | No danger? 26631 Oh, the young man with the sad history? |
26631 | Oh, young Morris, eh? 26631 Remember you, Basdel? |
26631 | She will never come back to us? |
26631 | Shelby? |
26631 | Stand it? |
26631 | The white trader, the Pack- Horse- Man, spoke words that drive them back? |
26631 | Then why have n''t you tried to make the settlement? 26631 Then you will not wait? |
26631 | This white woman? 26631 Wait for what? |
26631 | Wait till night? 26631 Was it your rifles, or was it trade that stopped an attack on these cabins night before last? |
26631 | What about it? 26631 What about the girl?" |
26631 | What call had Ward to say he was a fool? |
26631 | What do the men think? |
26631 | What do they plan? 26631 What does Dale now think of his Indian friends?" |
26631 | What does all this mean, Runner? 26631 What does it mean?" |
26631 | What does the white Injun say? |
26631 | What losses in there? |
26631 | What luck? |
26631 | What odds where they''re killed so long as they''re rubbed out? |
26631 | What village were you kept in? |
26631 | What''s the matter with you, Basdel? |
26631 | When did they ride? |
26631 | When did they start? |
26631 | Where are the Dales? |
26631 | Where are the Dales? |
26631 | Where does Black Hoof lead his warriors? |
26631 | Where is the white woman? 26631 Where''d you git it, Baby?" |
26631 | Which way did they ride, Aunty? |
26631 | White? |
26631 | Who is it? |
26631 | Who of us will be alive a hundred years from now? 26631 Who was he?" |
26631 | Who''s there? |
26631 | Why do n''t you come along? |
26631 | Why do n''t you whistle now? |
26631 | Why do n''t you whistle now? |
26631 | Why do that? |
26631 | Why, she ai n''t sick or hurt, is she? |
26631 | With the woman to watch you? |
26631 | You are sure they made for the mountains? |
26631 | You do n''t go for to figger me in with Baker an''Greathouse? |
26631 | You have tried once? |
26631 | You know who he is? |
26631 | You mean you are free to go and come unwatched? |
26631 | You see those? |
26631 | You were in the cabin with the dead Englishman? |
26631 | You would not go with him? |
26631 | A home in the wilderness? |
26631 | A snake?" |
26631 | After a protracted silence he abruptly asked:"My sister said she was sendin''me a new sister, you say?" |
26631 | After another silence he asked:"You''low she''s with daddy an''mammy?" |
26631 | And as he slowly advanced he shouted in the Shawnee language:"Do my brothers fire on their brother? |
26631 | And ca n''t we start now? |
26631 | And if the Indians block the trail how can we get the land without fighting for it? |
26631 | And then what if he comes back, rifle in hand, and that''s all? |
26631 | And why does youth in such juvenile cataclysms feel forced to seek new fields in making the fresh start? |
26631 | Any of you believe it?" |
26631 | Are n''t you thankful he was here to stop the attack?" |
26631 | Are you as blind as all that?" |
26631 | Are you sure they did n''t take your heart?" |
26631 | Are you, too, blind? |
26631 | At last I managed to ask:"What you said back there was a trick of course? |
26631 | But what if she has always lived in town and is n''t used to that sort of life?" |
26631 | But why a squaw on a war- path? |
26631 | But why should the turkey- buzzards follow him? |
26631 | But why talk of war now? |
26631 | Could your friends, the killers, have sent them away so quickly? |
26631 | Cousin''s arm was around my neck, and as he pulled me back he passionately cried:"Will it help her to git killed? |
26631 | Dale seems to have a pert amount o''authority over''em; but how long''s he goin''to stay here? |
26631 | Did any fools work and save up so we could take life soft and easy? |
26631 | Did he have the chunk of johnny- cake in his meat- trap?" |
26631 | Did n''t you like me back in Williamsburg?" |
26631 | Did the French try to settle Canada? |
26631 | Did you kill her?" |
26631 | Do I carry any hope with me when I go back to the forest?" |
26631 | Do scalps grow at the bottom of holes?" |
26631 | Do the Shawnees fire guns at the Pack- Horse- Man? |
26631 | Do the Shawnees hurt the friends of the Pack- Horse- Man? |
26631 | Do they harm their brother''s friends? |
26631 | Do they want to be? |
26631 | Do you begrudge giving my father his due? |
26631 | Do you go out?" |
26631 | Do you reckon I treated that dog any worse than the Shawnees treated my father and mother and little sister ten years ago? |
26631 | Do you wish that? |
26631 | Does she know her father is dead?" |
26631 | Does the Pack- Horse- Man ask his red brothers to be kind only to have his words fall on dead ears? |
26631 | Ever hear of Indians making a profit out of our civilization? |
26631 | Ever see a single piaster of profit made out of a dead Indian unless you could sell his hair? |
26631 | Had not Cornstalk and other chiefs, the best of their breed, sworn friendship to the whites in Virginia in 1759 and during Pontiac''s War? |
26631 | Had they not feasted with old friends, and then, catching them off their guard, chopped them down? |
26631 | Has there ever been a time when you or your fathers could stop their raids with rifles? |
26631 | Having prepared him for seeing Patricia, I shifted his line of thought by asking,"What do you think of John Ward?" |
26631 | He gave a little gasping sob and whispered:"How near to the cabin now?" |
26631 | Her words stunned him for a bit, then he managed to gasp out,"Who is this man?" |
26631 | Hiding my skepticism I asked,"When will it begin?" |
26631 | His actions attracted the attention of the men, and Black Hoof asked:"What does Red Arrow think is in the log? |
26631 | How do you feel about the doings of night before last?" |
26631 | How ye goin''to stop her? |
26631 | How''s my woman? |
26631 | Hughes laughed hoarsely and called out to the silent settlers:"What do you fellers say to all this twaddle? |
26631 | If I could not feel a full confidence in John Ward, born white, how could I place a deep and abiding trust in those who were born red? |
26631 | If not that why should they be makin''east into the mountains? |
26631 | Is n''t he Johnny Ward, took by the Injums when a boy, an''just managed to scoot free of''em?" |
26631 | Is n''t that enough? |
26631 | Is n''t there something moving in the bushes?" |
26631 | Is that fair to ask any woman?" |
26631 | It wo n''t put you out any to see her and tell her?" |
26631 | John Ward went with them?" |
26631 | Line both sides of the Ohio with log cabins and stick a white family in each and what good does it do? |
26631 | Loaded? |
26631 | Now, Mr. Rifleman, what do you think about the influence of an honest trader?" |
26631 | Only once did she revert to his taking off, and then to ask:"Was there a single chance for him to escape?" |
26631 | Ready?" |
26631 | Rising, but with no show of haste, Lewis called to Cousin and me:"What about this?" |
26631 | Rising, he asked:"Catahecassa led that path? |
26631 | S''pose we''ll have a mess of a fight soon? |
26631 | See any footin''over''cross? |
26631 | Seen any Injun- signs on the way?" |
26631 | Settlers? |
26631 | She defiantly exclaimed:"And why not? |
26631 | She threw out her arms and smiled scornfully and cried:"You hide in the bushes to watch me? |
26631 | So you seen him? |
26631 | Staring wide- eyed at the governor he concluded his outburst by demanding:"What about it, Your Excellency?" |
26631 | Tell me, Basdel, did she suffer much when she died?" |
26631 | That''s the way the cat jumps, eh? |
26631 | The governor hesitated a moment, then asked me:"What is your personal opinion of Doctor Connolly? |
26631 | Then aside,"Good God, he ai n''t took to killing whites, has he?" |
26631 | Then gloomily:"But why could n''t I''a''took it? |
26631 | Then he asked:"You did not kill him?" |
26631 | Then he fiercely whispered:"How''d you git these from the devils?" |
26631 | Then in sudden terror,"Are the Indians back here in the mountains?" |
26631 | Then with an effort to be calm he began:"Land? |
26631 | They sure ran away night before last, but how far did they go? |
26631 | Trade? |
26631 | Traveling far? |
26631 | Turning to Black Hoof, Cornstalk asked:"How long before you roast this white man?" |
26631 | Uncle Dick, whom I had left whetting his knife on the stones of the Davis fireplace, gave a cackling laugh and answered:"Believe it? |
26631 | Want to milk him for military information, eh? |
26631 | Were we put on earth to slave and make fortunes for fools not yet born? |
26631 | What about Miss Dale?" |
26631 | What about his influence over the Indians? |
26631 | What good is this land over here if you ca n''t get fur from it? |
26631 | What good would they have done? |
26631 | What has he to offer her? |
26631 | What if Ward were the creature Cousin pictured him? |
26631 | What if he goes a second time and is gone another three years? |
26631 | What is it?" |
26631 | What other charges are there in your arraignment?" |
26631 | What will they do with me?" |
26631 | What you goin''to do with this varmint?" |
26631 | When will you learn that you can not stop Indian wars until you''ve killed every Indian this side the mountains? |
26631 | When will you learn, Morris?" |
26631 | Who be they?" |
26631 | Who knows what I could have done? |
26631 | Why did you let them go?" |
26631 | Why does n''t the House of Burgesses send it to the border?" |
26631 | Why not? |
26631 | Why should n''t the Indians insist we live as they do? |
26631 | Why should they be civilized? |
26631 | Will he head riflemen to battle, or stay at the forts?" |
26631 | Will not give me any hope?" |
26631 | Will you go with me to the Scioto villages?" |
26631 | With a stare that strongly reminded me of her father she slowly said:"In trade? |
26631 | Would Your Excellency prefer that he make a verbal report to me and that I reduce it to writing for your consideration?" |
26631 | You fill your ears against Catahecassa''s words? |
26631 | You going to keep on shooting?" |
26631 | You have business with me, my man?" |
26631 | You now admit you were foolish to think that?" |
26631 | You would never torture the daughter of the Pack- Horse- Man?" |
26631 | Young Cousin flashed into my mind, and I asked:"Do you know of a white woman-- she would be nineteen years old now-- named Cousin? |
33189 | Do I then always think, even in sleep? |
33189 | No one can feel my individual pain; every one can see the truth which I contemplate-- why is it so? 33189 What were a God that only impelled the world from without?" |
33189 | What,he asks,"would become of the power of that imaginary infinite if it could create nothing? |
33189 | When they divided man, how many did they make him? 33189 [ 21] But if we know external things only through their idea in God, how do we know ourselves? |
33189 | [ 36] What can be called his own? 33189 (?). 33189 1521? 33189 And the great question of ethics is, How far can man partake in this liberty? 33189 Because in June 1568 that version, forged, was in the Scots collection of the Casket Letters? 33189 But again, even if we allow to Descartes that God is the unity of thought and being, we must still ask what kind of unity? 33189 But if the intelligence in itself is but a mode of one of the attributes, how can it be itself the source of their distinction? 33189 CASTELLO, GIOVANNI BATTISTA( 1500?-1569? 33189 CASTILLO SOLÓRZANO, ALONSO DE( 1584?-1647? 33189 Can the passions be annihilated, or can they be spiritualized? 33189 Did Malebranche realize what he was saying when he declared that God wasbeing in general,"but not any particular being? |
33189 | He can not know clearly and distinctly either himself or anything else; how then can he know his own good or determine himself by the idea of it? |
33189 | How can anything be prior to the first principle of knowledge? |
33189 | How then, they argued, could God''s truthfulness be our security for a principle which we must use in order to prove the being of God? |
33189 | If the priest must be satisfied with little, why be at the trouble of offering more? |
33189 | In selling my goods, is it enough not to disguise their shortcomings, or ought I candidly to admit them? |
33189 | In_ The Ordinary_( 1635?) |
33189 | Is it a mere generic unity, reached by abstraction, and therefore leaving out all the distinguishing characteristics of the particulars under it? |
33189 | Is it also through the idea of us in God? |
33189 | Is it ever right to tell a lie? |
33189 | Is reason able to crush this intruder, or to turn it into a servant? |
33189 | It may be asked why, after being with Wood on the 11th of June, did Lennox still rely on Moray''s version of Mary''s letter? |
33189 | May a lawyer defend a client whom he knows to be guilty? |
33189 | Of this he( Darnley) denies half, and above all that he( the brother?) |
33189 | Or is it a concrete unity to which the particular elements are subordinated, but in which they are nevertheless included? |
33189 | Or was it possible to patch up a compromise between them? |
33189 | Ought one to swallow up the other-- and, if so, which should prevail? |
33189 | Rabbat Umma,"the great mother"; Baalat haedrat,"mistress of the sanctuary"; Ashtoreth( Astarte), Illat, Sakon, Tsaphon, Sid, Aris(? |
33189 | Still more outspoken is the Savoyard vicar in the_ Émile_( 1762) of Jean Jacques Rousseau:"Whence do I get my rules of action? |
33189 | The drama that has made Castro''s reputation is_ Las Mocedades del Cid_( 1599? |
33189 | What could they possibly do but cling to their priest with a"blind and unexpressed faith"? |
33189 | What then is the point where the subjective consciousness passes out into the objective, from which it seemed at first absolutely excluded? |
33189 | What was his mouth? |
33189 | When Carnot''s arrest was demanded in May 1795, a deputy cried"Will you dare to lay hands on the man who has organized victory?" |
33189 | Why am I assured of my own existence? |
33189 | Wood was to ask,"if the French originals are found to tally with the Scots translations, will that be reckoned good evidence?" |
33189 | a forged interpolation, based on another document, not by Mary? |
33189 | in Scots, did Lennox follow Moray''s erroneous version of July 1567? |
33189 | what are called his thighs and feet? |
33189 | what his arms? |
33189 | xiii., 1900, and"Ist Otocyon die Ausgangsform des Hundegeschlechts oder nicht?" |
14910 | ''Seeing their faith?'' 14910 About how many?" |
14910 | Ah, Captain Raymond, have you forgotten that consistency is a jewel? |
14910 | Ah, but was n''t I? |
14910 | Ah, my dear, have you forgotten that circumstances alter cases? |
14910 | Ah, what subject is that upon which you are so well informed, Chester? |
14910 | Ah, who shall say that I am not the complimented one, Max? |
14910 | Ah? |
14910 | All alone? |
14910 | Am I also under orders to retire, sir? |
14910 | Am I sick? 14910 Americans too, papa?" |
14910 | And are her guns real, papa? 14910 And he will send his Holy Spirit to help us-- if we ask him to?" |
14910 | And how about her guns, sir? 14910 And how long will we stay there?" |
14910 | And if we do n''t, we''ll have a meeting here on our own deck as we have on some other Sundays; wo n''t we, papa? |
14910 | And what does that other part,''by whose stripes ye are healed,''mean, papa? |
14910 | And what has my little girl, my dear eldest daughter, to say to her father to- night? |
14910 | And what is a moat? |
14910 | And who may they be? |
14910 | And who? 14910 And you did n''t know how cross and tyrannical he was?" |
14910 | And you have n''t seen everything in it yet? |
14910 | And you have no objection to me personally, sir? |
14910 | And you, Cousin Ronald? |
14910 | And, oh, papa, what big ship is that? |
14910 | Anything more, my child? |
14910 | Are they heathen folks, papa? |
14910 | Are you and Frank new arrivals? |
14910 | Are you just from Pleasant Plains? |
14910 | Are you tired hearing it, father, dear? |
14910 | Are you very, very tired, Gracie? |
14910 | At home? |
14910 | But Harold, can you take us to the others? 14910 But did n''t the rest of the English try to help those folks in that fort at Detroit, papa?" |
14910 | But how can we know it, papa? 14910 But oh, could n''t they have saved her?" |
14910 | But suppose you delay a little and let some of us accompany you? |
14910 | But what does anybody want with such little bits of ships? |
14910 | But what is her height, grandpa? |
14910 | But where are Ella and the boy? |
14910 | But why did n''t you bring them along? |
14910 | But you are still as proud as ever of being an American, and as proud of your Stripes and Stars? |
14910 | But, papa----"Well, daughter, what is it? |
14910 | Can it be possible you mean to insinuate that I am the associate of beggars and thieves? |
14910 | Can they run very fast? |
14910 | Could n''t we have an ostrich farm? |
14910 | Cousin Annis,said Violet,"would you not be willing to make one of our party? |
14910 | Cousin Ronald,said Walter,"ca n''t you make some fun for us to- morrow with your ventriloquism?" |
14910 | Did they give it up then, grandma? |
14910 | Do n''t folks eat ostriches, papa? |
14910 | Do n''t they eat anything but meat, papa? |
14910 | Do not you agree with us, captain? |
14910 | Do they bring it to him? |
14910 | Do they have nests to lay their eggs in, like our chickens? |
14910 | Do they ring it when it''s at its home in Philadelphia, papa? |
14910 | Do you know its story, Elsie? 14910 Do you really think so, mamma? |
14910 | Do you think it will pay, captain? |
14910 | Do you want to join the others on the deck? |
14910 | Do you? 14910 Does that mean, ready to dispense with my father''s society? |
14910 | Early in the morning, grandma? |
14910 | Father, may I ride over the grounds before alighting? |
14910 | Go where, grandpa? |
14910 | Grandma, why did he pray when he was God and could do everything? |
14910 | Had n''t he afterward something to do with a change in our flag, Grandma Elsie? |
14910 | Has anyone seen the evening paper or the morning one either? |
14910 | Has this been a happy and enjoyable day to you, daughter? |
14910 | Have I not told you many times that my wife does what she pleases? 14910 Have what over?" |
14910 | Have you been in the Electric Building yet? |
14910 | Have you something to say to your father? |
14910 | He does it at sunrise too, does n''t he? |
14910 | How do you s''pose it got out? |
14910 | How many are there, papa? |
14910 | How many would like to go? |
14910 | How was it? 14910 How would this one answer?" |
14910 | How would you all like to go by water? |
14910 | How, Uncle Wal? |
14910 | How, grandma? 14910 Hungry, too, papa''s boy, are n''t you?" |
14910 | I am at liberty to go everywhere, as of old? |
14910 | I have n''t lost the first place in my little girl''s heart yet? |
14910 | I must have a ride in that,said Walter emphatically,"and mamma, you will go with me, will you not?" |
14910 | I presume you will all be ready to start out early, as usual? |
14910 | I suppose she must have cost a good deal? |
14910 | I suppose this is salt water they are all in? |
14910 | I was just thinking,--please do n''t be vexed with me,--but was n''t Mamma Vi only nineteen when you married her? |
14910 | I will, papa, and are not you going too? 14910 I''m not at all sleepy, papa; ca n''t I sit here for a while?" |
14910 | In what part of the building is it, Harold? |
14910 | Is it Jesus who says,''Surely I come quickly, grandma? |
14910 | Is it a very expensive entertainment? |
14910 | Is it quite safe? |
14910 | Is it sure to wake and sing every half- hour in the night, uncle? |
14910 | Is my little girl unhappy, about-- anything? 14910 Is n''t it wicked to kill folks, grandma?" |
14910 | Is n''t this a lovely day? 14910 Is that the State coat- of- arms above the pediment over the front doors, papa?" |
14910 | Is that the reason why they brought it here, papa? |
14910 | Is that what they are good for, papa? |
14910 | Is there a moat about it, Uncle Harold? |
14910 | Is there anything I can do or furnish to make you more so? |
14910 | It''s right nice- lookin'', is n''t it? |
14910 | Lest I should have too much pleasure in carrying it out? |
14910 | Let me hear it, son? |
14910 | May I hope you will show equal favor to the giver? |
14910 | May n''t I go? |
14910 | No, papa,she replied,"can you tell us?" |
14910 | Nor me either, mamma? |
14910 | Not a real ship, papa? |
14910 | Now where shall we go next? |
14910 | Oh, does n''t it sometimes seem as if you could hardly wait for the time when you will be there with all the dear ones gone before? 14910 Oh, papa, is that it over there where that arch is with all those pillars on each side of it?" |
14910 | Oh, papa, what is it? |
14910 | Oh, papa, what is that woman doing? |
14910 | Oh, papa, what is that? |
14910 | Oh, sir, can I not persuade you to revoke that decision and let me at least learn from her own lips whether or not she cares for me? |
14910 | Oh, what is it, Uncle Walter? |
14910 | Oh, what is that? |
14910 | Papa dear, what is the matter? 14910 Papa, did n''t you say she was n''t a real ship?" |
14910 | Papa, is it solid gold? |
14910 | Papa, may n''t I keep close at your side, going wherever you go? |
14910 | Papa,asked little Elsie,"how long ago did people live in those houses so high up among the rocks?" |
14910 | Papa,she asked,"can I go presently to the Court of Honor with the others-- and you? |
14910 | Papa,she said humbly,"have you quite forgiven my crossness to- night when you refused to let me go ashore? |
14910 | Pennsylvania''s in particular, my dear? |
14910 | Please ca n''t we take a ride now? |
14910 | Pleased, papa? 14910 Right about what?" |
14910 | Scuttled? 14910 Shall we dine first and then look at the exhibits?" |
14910 | Shall we go now to the Electrical Building? |
14910 | Shall we make any move in the matter to- night, my dear? |
14910 | Shall we visit the Turkish village to- day? |
14910 | So there are two, are there? |
14910 | So you are a ventriloquist, sir? |
14910 | Some what, son? |
14910 | Thank you, sir,she replied;"but are you sure I might not prove a hindrance and burden?" |
14910 | That means a great many men killed, grandma? |
14910 | That''s the name of this year is n''t it, papa? |
14910 | The tired little ones will be left in their bed of course? |
14910 | Then it will take about all of the next day to get to Mackinaw, wo n''t it, papa? |
14910 | Then you will stay on? |
14910 | There is a German village connected with it, is there not? |
14910 | They supplied the Indians also, did they not, my dear? |
14910 | They were good and brave men to do it; were n''t they, papa? |
14910 | To warn vessels to keep off shoals? |
14910 | Unhappy, father? 14910 Was it in Spain they made them, papa?" |
14910 | Was it, when you are the girl that always thinks of everybody else? |
14910 | We love each other, do n''t we, papa? |
14910 | We will go to church to- morrow, I suppose, papa? |
14910 | Well, Lu, did you get leave to go? |
14910 | Well, captain,said Grandma Elsie, looking up smilingly into his face as he drew near,"did you catch the rogues?" |
14910 | Were n''t the Americans glad when they heard about it, grandma? 14910 What are caravels, papa?" |
14910 | What building''s that? |
14910 | What do they eat, papa? |
14910 | What do they eat, papa? |
14910 | What do you say to the plan, Grandpa and Grandma Dinsmore, and mother? |
14910 | What does that mean? |
14910 | What for, grandma? |
14910 | What is blarney, papa? |
14910 | What is righteousness, papa? |
14910 | What will there be worth looking at before we reach the Peristyle? |
14910 | What work have you two been about to- day? |
14910 | What''s the price? |
14910 | Where are the curtains, papa? |
14910 | Where are they, papa? |
14910 | Where are we going to- day, papa? |
14910 | Where are you going? |
14910 | Where else did you go? |
14910 | Where have you been since we left you, Lu? |
14910 | Where is it? |
14910 | Where next? |
14910 | Where now? |
14910 | Where now? |
14910 | Where shall we betake ourselves, Miss Annis? |
14910 | Who are you? 14910 Who cares to look at such a thing as that?" |
14910 | Who is that man? 14910 Who was she, papa? |
14910 | Why did Jesus say to the man''Son, thy sins be forgiven thee,''papa? |
14910 | Why so, daughter? |
14910 | Why, daughter, are you there? |
14910 | Why, how do you do, cousin? 14910 Why? |
14910 | Will we go over there, to the Court of Honor, to- morrow, papa? |
14910 | Will you take a boat ride with me, Lucilla? |
14910 | Without waiting for an invitation, eh? |
14910 | Yes, it is a pleasant way of gaining knowledge; pleasanter than learning lessons and reciting them to papa; is it not, daughter? |
14910 | Yes, it was Jesus our Saviour who said it; and do you know whom he meant by the Son of man? |
14910 | Yes; and do n''t you see the name there up over the door? |
14910 | You gave some, papa? 14910 You have hardly been in America ever since I saw you last?" |
14910 | You have no objection to me personally, I trust, sir? |
14910 | You mean the captain does not allow it? |
14910 | You think so, do you, sir? 14910 You want to kiss the Blarney Stone, do you?" |
14910 | You will be almost sorry when the time comes for returning home? |
14910 | You would be looking about for such a sweet young creature and trying to win her heart? |
14910 | Ah, Annis, how can you have the heart to disappoint him so?" |
14910 | And Jesus knew their thoughts, for he asked,''Why reason ye these things in your hearts?''" |
14910 | And has not the first suggestion come from her more than once?" |
14910 | And he said unto them, Where is your faith? |
14910 | And you, mother, would like it, would you not?" |
14910 | Are n''t you pleased with our purchases?" |
14910 | Are you feeling better now? |
14910 | But oh, papa, was n''t it lovely to see the Court of Honor light up to- night? |
14910 | But what are you looking so searchingly at me for, Gracie?" |
14910 | But what-- who----?" |
14910 | But why should I be suspected more than anyone else in this company of friends and relatives?" |
14910 | But wo n''t you take mamma and Elsie and all the rest, and me too?" |
14910 | But would n''t you like to go and see it all?" |
14910 | Ca n''t I, papa?" |
14910 | Ca n''t I?" |
14910 | Ca n''t we go, papa?" |
14910 | Can you not do the same?" |
14910 | Do you see? |
14910 | Do you think it was?" |
14910 | Do you want Grace and me to go to bed as soon as you and the others are gone?" |
14910 | Does my little son know who said these words?" |
14910 | Does n''t that mean that to believe on Jesus will take us to heaven at last-- when we die?" |
14910 | Goin''in, Elmiry?" |
14910 | Grandpa, do you know her size?" |
14910 | How did they show their faith, Lucilla?" |
14910 | How long do you?" |
14910 | How long will you stay?" |
14910 | I wonder what is going to be done here to celebrate it?" |
14910 | Is he quite tame? |
14910 | Is it a live thing? |
14910 | Is it that you fear to trust your happiness to my keeping?" |
14910 | Is she not magnificent?" |
14910 | Is there any danger at all?" |
14910 | Lilburn?" |
14910 | Lucilla, can you tell me what is the fruit of the Spirit?" |
14910 | May I ask what it is?" |
14910 | May I say mine now?" |
14910 | Might n''t they go off and shoot us?" |
14910 | Miss Annis, do you think I-- I could ever make myself a place in your heart? |
14910 | Now, do you remember what he did after the disciples and the people were gone?" |
14910 | Oh, have I done anything to vex or trouble you?" |
14910 | Oh, what is that?" |
14910 | One of England''s finest battleships, was she not?" |
14910 | Papa, are you never troubled with fears that you might be mistaken in thinking yourself a Christian? |
14910 | Papa, were they all killed?" |
14910 | Say, capting, are you mean enough to let us fellows go hungry when you have a vessel full o''good things for eatin''? |
14910 | Shall we compose a fourth party, and see what we can find to amuse and interest us?" |
14910 | Shall we take it?" |
14910 | She was awakened by a gentle tap on the door, then Violet''s voice asking:"Can I come in for one moment, Cousin Annis?" |
14910 | She went first to her mother''s state- room, and the door being opened in answer to her gentle rap,"Are you quite comfortable, mamma, dear?" |
14910 | So he will give it to me; wo n''t he?" |
14910 | That over Grandma Elsie asked,"Shall we not, now we are here, go into the Government Building and look at the military exhibit?" |
14910 | The Scribes sitting there understood it to be so, and said in their hearts,''Why doth this man thus speak blasphemies? |
14910 | The captain mentioned that fact, then asked:"Do you know, Grace, how long that fort was in building?" |
14910 | The evening is the best time for a sight of its wonders, I presume?" |
14910 | The girl noticed it and grew more frightened, turning a trifle paler and asking:"Is there any danger?" |
14910 | Then, turning to the elder Mr. Lilburn:"Cousin Ronald,"he asked,"do you think you would know them if you were to see them?" |
14910 | There at the Master''s feet, seeing him and bearing his image-- like him; for we shall see him as he is?" |
14910 | They did not catch the reply, but he went on with his questions:"Will he bite? |
14910 | To say nothing of a pocket full o''tin?" |
14910 | Uncle Harold and Uncle Herbert, wo n''t you go and help papa fight those bad men? |
14910 | Violet, my dear, how does that programme suit you?" |
14910 | Walter did not seem to notice, however, but went on:"Are the upper floors open to visitors, sir? |
14910 | What have you to propose in regard to our movements for the day, captain?" |
14910 | What is its name?" |
14910 | What was the reason?" |
14910 | What''s that, grandma?" |
14910 | What''s the way to do it?" |
14910 | Who can forgive sins but God only?'' |
14910 | Wo n''t you be afraid of them?" |
14910 | Would n''t it be fun, Mamma Vi, to have a wedding here on the yacht?" |
14910 | Would n''t you, daughter?" |
14910 | Would you like to do so?" |
14910 | Would you like to take a ride on one?" |
14910 | You are not disappointed in the Fair so far?" |
14910 | am I going blind?" |
14910 | and are there refreshments served there, or in any other part of the building?" |
14910 | and did n''t they praise Captain Reid?" |
14910 | and how did you come aboard the vessel?" |
14910 | and wanting her father to comfort her?" |
14910 | and what could have been more beautiful than the view from the Ferris Wheel?" |
14910 | and what did they put her boat here for?" |
14910 | are they real?" |
14910 | cried little Elsie,"are all those great men there? |
14910 | did I faint, papa?" |
14910 | did you want me to do anything?" |
14910 | do n''t you know that I love_ you_ ten thousand times better than anybody else in the whole wide world? |
14910 | for I suppose you are going?" |
14910 | he asked presently,"or would you rather go at once to your bed and rest? |
14910 | here in your arms and perfectly certain of your dear love?" |
14910 | she exclaimed in half reproachful tones,"how can you be troubled with any such idea as that? |
14910 | that old log building?" |
14910 | was n''t it?" |
14910 | we are at the top of the wheel, and is not the view magnificent?" |
14910 | what was the difficulty?" |
14910 | where now, friends?" |
34844 | And when will you return to Nikumi and Mary? |
34844 | And you will leave your wild life of the prairies to go back to the tame existence of rural English life? 34844 But why need I do it?" |
34844 | I can not tell; I hope before many moons; will you grieve to have me go Nikumi? |
34844 | Take the child--where, and for what? |
34844 | Take the child,her child and his? |
34844 | What are you going to do with Nikumi and Mary? |
34844 | What has become of the Nebraska wind of those days? 34844 What have you got?" |
34844 | After looking at these ghastly certificates of prowess in Indian warfare I said to the possessor:"Do you still like to go into fights with the Sioux?" |
34844 | And Nikumi? |
34844 | And with only three or four frightened, irresponsible people to save her, perhaps from a similar or worse fate? |
34844 | As soon as the lad left, one Indian went to the window and asked"Where boy go?" |
34844 | Could Gale have seen her would he have relented and left the child to her? |
34844 | Going away again as he had come to her many seasons ago? |
34844 | Has it been the history of the union of the stronger and weaker races that the stronger have given up their desires? |
34844 | He did n''t like my screaming but followed me into the sitting room and upon seeing mother lying down said,"White lady sick?" |
34844 | How long would the hoppers remain? |
34844 | How should she take it up again? |
34844 | I asked,"What are you doing here?" |
34844 | I do not worry about myself, then why do you for me? |
34844 | I was scared, but I managed to gasp,"Sioux?" |
34844 | If this be true, I wish you would show me these trophies of your courage and victories? |
34844 | Is there none to hear their cry? |
34844 | Just as he was about to start, his employer said to him:"Hunter, where''s your coat?" |
34844 | My heart sank within me as I thought but did not say,''How can I ever live in a place like this?''" |
34844 | North?" |
34844 | Oh, where are the students of scientific research and domestic economy? |
34844 | Or do you wait in silence, race outrun, The march of ages in their onward flow? |
34844 | The delectable mountains were always ahead of us-- would we ever reach them? |
34844 | The thought recurred to me so often, why is it men are so cruel to each other-- wolfish in nature, seeking to destroy their own kind? |
34844 | Was he going to leave and sail down the great river to the St. Louis whence came all traders and the soldiers on the boats? |
34844 | What rights had she compared with this English gentleman who had taken her from her tribe, and now would cast her back again and take away her child? |
34844 | What will the next fifty years bring? |
34844 | When do your boats go down again?" |
34844 | Where are the seas of rosin- weed, with their yellow summer parasols, which covered the prairie in those days? |
34844 | Would she be an Indian or an English maiden? |
34844 | Would the old progenitors return? |
34844 | Would they deposit their eggs to hatch the following spring and thus perpetuate their species? |
34844 | You will go there to that land?" |
34844 | you teach school?" |
33037 | And did n''t yeou never have nothin''more to do with whalin''? |
33037 | And what happened after that? |
33037 | And who do you think would have won in that event? |
33037 | But do n''t, will you, Edith? 33037 But where can we camp?" |
33037 | But your eggs? |
33037 | Did I ever tell you about going whaling on shore? |
33037 | Do n''t you know that there''s always a lot of risk in anything you undertake, and you''ve got to take the chances? 33037 Do you remark anything different about my appearance?" |
33037 | Frank, what is baby crying about? |
33037 | Git a new hoss an''waggin, hey? 33037 How do you do, Aunt Betsey? |
33037 | Is it the tender? |
33037 | James,asked the school- teacher,"what do you do with your odd moments after school?" |
33037 | Like Merlin being able to tell what was going to happen next week? |
33037 | Looks cheerful, does n''t it? |
33037 | Now who is that? |
33037 | Oh, sir,said Betty, reining in Daisy,"can thee tell me where I can find General Washington?" |
33037 | Said what? 33037 What can that be?" |
33037 | What do you here, child? |
33037 | What shall I do with these children? |
33037 | What were you doing, you naughty children? |
33037 | What_ is_ the matter? |
33037 | Where are you going in such hot haste? |
33037 | Who were he? |
33037 | Why have n''t we dug places like this before? |
33037 | Why, what''s the matter? |
33037 | Why? |
33037 | Yes, mother,said Betty;"but will thee not come home early? |
33037 | You do n''t believe it, eh? 33037 After coffee, Green''s patience became exhausted, and he said,Well, sir, what did you think of it?" |
33037 | An''the bull? |
33037 | And her family, who are_ they_?" |
33037 | Besides, we Americans hardly want to wear badges bearing a figure of royalty, do we? |
33037 | Could she save them? |
33037 | Cynthia controlled herself, and replied, with gravity,"Did it grow there?" |
33037 | Did the whole building sway? |
33037 | Did you never hear of Amagansett, Long Island? |
33037 | Do members wish to give us some? |
33037 | Do n''t say anything to papa about Jack''s scheme, will you? |
33037 | Do you keep the back numbers, so that you can refer to them? |
33037 | Is there any subject on which you would like to have information? |
33037 | No one would ever know it, would they? |
33037 | Now where shall we get the designs? |
33037 | Now, Cynthia, do n''t forget your hair, will you? |
33037 | Oh, Serge, ca n''t we do anything for him? |
33037 | Or about auctions of rare stamps? |
33037 | Or about the different stamps issued in the Confederate States during the great civil war? |
33037 | Or any other subject? |
33037 | Shall I go meet papa?" |
33037 | Shall we talk about the United States stamps? |
33037 | She''s very well dressed, but from whence did she come? |
33037 | So I hove the colt to, an''I axes her,''Wot''s up, mate?'' |
33037 | Well, what do you think of it?" |
33037 | What Shall Our Badges Be? |
33037 | What can he do? |
33037 | What do you wish?" |
33037 | What was that? |
33037 | What was the reason? |
33037 | What would her basket be like when she next saw it? |
33037 | What? |
33037 | Why not have some in aid of the School Fund? |
33037 | Why not use the rose in the centre-- the rose is historic-- and vary the inscription around it? |
33037 | Will he or she write us? |
33037 | Will some one please write to me? |
33037 | Wo n''t you be sure to brush your hair and put on a fresh neck- tie or something? |
33037 | asked a dignified hen;"That chicken in white and gray? |
15117 | ''Does you feel willin''to swar to de trufe of your insertion, ole dame?'' 15117 ''How shall I woo her? |
15117 | ''How shall I woo her? 15117 ''Old dame,''says the ossifer( for so dey calls him), as pleasant as a mornin''in May,''has you a young gal locked up here as you knows ob? |
15117 | After all, what can that invalid and her child be to you in any case? 15117 Am I not permitted to breathe the external air-- to exercise? |
15117 | And a little good wine, too, occasionally-- eh, madame? |
15117 | And do you believe me, Dinah, now that I have promised so solemnly to pay these rewards? |
15117 | And do you really love this child? |
15117 | And how long is this close immurement to continue? |
15117 | And the other-- where is he? |
15117 | And vat can your motif be? 15117 And what is your idea of the way to read Shakespeare, Bertie dear?" |
15117 | And whence did he derive his authority? |
15117 | And who gave you the flowers, Ernie? |
15117 | And who, let me ask, is this Paladin of chivalry? |
15117 | Are we in the mansion of a decayed queen, or the log- hut of a wayside innkeeper? |
15117 | Are you a fairy, madame? |
15117 | But Mrs. Raymond-- where is she? 15117 But give me something of Praed''s in return,"he said, rallying suddenly;"is there not a pretty little thing called''How shall I woo her?''" |
15117 | But his earthly hope-- it was that I alluded to; what chance for him? 15117 But how did she get out, Miss Harz?" |
15117 | But how shall we know where to find your friends when we get to port? |
15117 | But that was only a measure of safety for yourself; you surely do not mean to take sides with my persecutors? |
15117 | But what has all this to do with the name of the little girl next door? 15117 But what has startled you, poor thing, since we left the Repository? |
15117 | But what in the world ails you-- has Dunmore, the disconsolate, been making love again? 15117 But why did you not meet me at Milledgeville?" |
15117 | But, Captain Ambrose-- he did not tell you so? |
15117 | By- the- way, talking of magnetism, do you know, Miss Harz, I think you are the most universally magnetic woman I ever saw? 15117 Called for by whom?" |
15117 | Captain Van Dorne, do you mean to say there is no such passenger in your ship''s list as Basil Bainrothe? |
15117 | Certainly, Dinah-- the Bible tells us so; but what is the name of the pretty little girl of whom you speak? 15117 Could have loved? |
15117 | Could you not take him a message from me, Dinah? 15117 Danton, how can you so grieve your mistress?" |
15117 | Did he think he was driving a curricle? 15117 Did n''t you hear Clayton say so?" |
15117 | Did the bad man hurt Mirry? |
15117 | Did the fire occur in that way? |
15117 | Did you leave the other passengers at table? |
15117 | Did you speak with him, Dinah? |
15117 | Did you, or did you not, meet this person at Colonel La Vigne''s? 15117 Do n''t ask me-- just go on, low, very low; how did you hear all this?" |
15117 | Do you know that gentleman, Marion? |
15117 | Do you never see a newspaper, Mrs. Clayton, and, if so, can you not indulge me with a glimpse of one? 15117 Do you pretend that Bryant is not a poet in the grain, and that the wondrous boy, Willis, was not also''to the manner born?'' |
15117 | Do you pretend to doubt it? |
15117 | Do you see that dark object lying beyond( our eyes mechanically followed his),"so still on the water?" |
15117 | Do you still see an iceberg, Mr. Garth? 15117 Do you suppose he is less near to God than you or I-- to Christ the all- merciful?" |
15117 | Do you think his bed was soft under the war- horses? |
15117 | Does he love music-- poetry? |
15117 | Does n''t that describe me as I am, Miriam? |
15117 | Forgive you? |
15117 | Had we not better wait? 15117 Have we not proof to the contrary, Major Favraud?" |
15117 | Hope? 15117 How long before this ultimatum is proposed to me, which Mr. Gregory seemed to anticipate, and with which you, no doubt, are acquainted?" |
15117 | How often must I remind you, Caleb Fink,said the owner of the emporium,"that your sphere is circumscribed to your duties? |
15117 | I am sorry to have startled you so,she said, hurriedly,"but where is Dinah, Miss Monfort, and how did she get out?" |
15117 | I think my birthday approaches; can you tell me the day of the month? 15117 If I give you this, will you promise to deliver my message to McDermot faithfully?" |
15117 | Is dat ring of yours good guinea gole, honey? |
15117 | Is it true vat I hear,he asked, pausing at some distance,"dat you vant to have dat leetle hompback chilt for a companion, Miss Monfort?" |
15117 | Is she not magnificent? |
15117 | Is that the style Major Favraud? |
15117 | Is there a ship in the distance, that you gaze so earnestly? |
15117 | Is your little boy ill, madam? |
15117 | It may be some time, miss; would you like a cup of hot coffee, you and this gentleman? 15117 Lady got cake in pocket, give Ernie some?" |
15117 | Make tea? |
15117 | Most certainly, and very tenderly too; is he not my sweetest consolation in this dreary life? |
15117 | Mr. Burress,I said( I had retained his name with its remarkable prefix),"will you not lock the gate outside? |
15117 | Not if he is a Jackson Democrat? |
15117 | Not taking on about that silly cup, I hope-- no; what can it be then, a megrim? 15117 Now, tell me about McDermot, Dinah, what sort of a look has he? |
15117 | Of whom are you afraid, poor young lady? 15117 Sabra,"I whispered,"what became of the young girl, Ada Lee, and the deformed child? |
15117 | So she assured you we were both prisoners by night, did she? 15117 So you will not give me''How shall I woo her?'' |
15117 | Suppose we dress as sea- nymphs,said Honoria Pyne;"enact a masque for old Neptune''s benefit? |
15117 | Tell me about Angy, Ernie-- had she wings? |
15117 | The baby-- where is he? 15117 To grow old in servitude,"he would say,"what sadder fate can befall any being, or more entitle him or her to forbearance and respect? |
15117 | Vat ansair shall I bear to Mr. Bainrothe from his vard? |
15117 | Was it the lightning? |
15117 | What Mirry cry for-- is God mad with Mirry? |
15117 | What are these people crawling about the deck for? 15117 What are you waiting for, Captain Van Dorne?" |
15117 | What brought this stranger to my pillow? 15117 What if they remove him?" |
15117 | What is it you object to, Miriam? |
15117 | What is the use of bewailing the inevitable? |
15117 | What makes you suppose Miss Monfort wants to hear your chattering, old magpie that you are? |
15117 | What name shall I give? 15117 What proof? |
15117 | What would you have me say, dear? 15117 What, indeed?" |
15117 | When shall he come to you, and speak for himself? 15117 Where do you leave Mr. Webster, John Quincy Adams, General Jackson himself, in such a category, madame?" |
15117 | Who was that speaking? |
15117 | Why not? 15117 Will Ernie let the wicked man kill Mirry?" |
15117 | Will not Bridget Maloney do as well? |
15117 | Will you be so good as to apprise him in person of my earnest wish? 15117 Would she never stop-- never give one loop- hole for doubt to enter?" |
15117 | Yes-- what is it? 15117 Yet that voice-- how could I be mistaken?" |
15117 | You are bettair, then? |
15117 | You are very considerate,he said, dryly, after we had gone a few yards in profound silence,"but had I not better return for a lantern?" |
15117 | You do not-- you cannot-- meditate personal violence, self- murder? |
15117 | You has n''t anoder ob dem gole- pieces anywhar, like dat you gib me befo'', has you? 15117 You know them, then?" |
15117 | You need no more leetle pill? 15117 You remember the French song which I was always fond of humming,''Où est on si bien qu''au sein de sa famille?'' |
15117 | You reside here, then? |
15117 | *****"Despair shall give me strength-- where is the door? |
15117 | --"for by this tender title I am permitted to address you at last"( by whom?) |
15117 | --Eh, Clayton?" |
15117 | A little alum sprinkled over its red- gold ground would do wonders in the way of effect-- would be gorgeous-- wouldn''t it, now, Miss Harz?" |
15117 | Afraid of an encounter? |
15117 | After all, is there any despot equal to the stomach and its requisitions? |
15117 | After all, might he not be honest, even if a tool of Bainrothe''s? |
15117 | All this is shockingly egotistical; but the question is, who that has a spark of individuality is otherwise? |
15117 | And did he lie in wait for me on the way?" |
15117 | And if we discern them, shall we not adore God''s angels? |
15117 | And what are men at such a season? |
15117 | And, later, had I not pondered over the wisdom of his preservation? |
15117 | Are there not beings who seem, indeed, to lack the great essential for salvation-- a soul to be saved? |
15117 | Are you quite sure of dat?" |
15117 | At such an hour as this, what matters the quality of food?" |
15117 | Beauseincourt, and all its shadows, had I not put behind me? |
15117 | Because she was disappointed once, is that a reason? |
15117 | But shall I tell her I have heard, Though sweet her song may be, A voice where every whispered word_ Was more than song to me_? |
15117 | But shall I tell her eyes more bright, Though bright her own may beam, Will fling a deeper spell to- night_ Upon me in my dream_?''" |
15117 | But, perhaps you had an escort to the corner?" |
15117 | But, perhaps"--lingering a moment--"you would be so good as to suffer Mr. Caleb to show me the short way you spoke of? |
15117 | By- the- by, what name shall we give our''treasure- trove?''" |
15117 | Ca n''t you let her know this? |
15117 | Clayton?" |
15117 | Could I doubt for one moment to whom he applied that celestial title? |
15117 | Could I not compel them to concentration? |
15117 | Could I resist this state of things? |
15117 | Could I sustain it and retain my reason? |
15117 | Delay, I scarce could hope for, and, even if granted, how could it avail me in the end? |
15117 | Did any one ever see the like before? |
15117 | Did he know of my immurement? |
15117 | Did you ever see it, Miss Lamarque, you who see every thing? |
15117 | Do n''t you hear Mrs. Clayton groaning? |
15117 | Do n''t you mark the flag flying at the mast- head? |
15117 | Do we not right, then, to confine and enslave devils while they abide with us, or, if we can, to destroy them utterly? |
15117 | Do you feel better for my laying on of hands? |
15117 | Do you really apprehend danger for us now?" |
15117 | Do you understand me?" |
15117 | Do you understand this, Dinah? |
15117 | Does n''t I know you loss all your trunks on de''Scusco, an''was n''t you a pore gal, teachin''white folks''s chilluns fur a livin''before? |
15117 | Does she never come here? |
15117 | Does the quality called presence of mind find root in the same source that impels us to apt quotation?--"What if the lion in his rage I meet? |
15117 | Does you hear de cherubs squallin''Wat''s settin''on de gate? |
15117 | Does you hear de chickens crowin''? |
15117 | Does you hear de prophets callin''? |
15117 | Does you hear de rain a- fallin''? |
15117 | Does you hear de win''a blowin''? |
15117 | Does you see da niggars hoein''? |
15117 | Does you see it, honey?" |
15117 | Does you think dar is such tings, sure enough, Mirry?" |
15117 | Englehart?" |
15117 | Englehart?" |
15117 | Garth?" |
15117 | Garth?" |
15117 | Gregory?" |
15117 | Had I not suffered sufficiently? |
15117 | Had Wentworth spoken, then? |
15117 | Had he been there, indeed, in spiritual presence? |
15117 | Had he heard me? |
15117 | Had the ship''s doctor no name, then, that they never mentioned it, and that he spoke in a demon''s voice? |
15117 | Has Captain Falconer declared himself too soon? |
15117 | Have you ever crossed the waters, Miss Miriam? |
15117 | Have you sufficient light?" |
15117 | Hear Barry Cornwall-- how he stirs the blood I What trumpet like to Campbell I What mortal voice like to Shelley''s? |
15117 | Heh? |
15117 | How far are such responsible? |
15117 | How much would dat watch and chain be worth, honey?" |
15117 | How often must I warn you?" |
15117 | I asked, after studying his countenance for a moment,"or, are you again desirous to try the nerves of your female passengers? |
15117 | I asked;"the captain, was he there?" |
15117 | I had thought from your face you were stronger; besides, the pumps are doing good work in the hold: who knows what may come of it, who knows?" |
15117 | I have done nothing so very wicked, I hope, as to exclude me from my Father''s face forever-- have you? |
15117 | I questioned;"you are at home in this house, whosesoever it may be?" |
15117 | I reiterated louder; and I smiled at the idea that suggested itself--"have reptiles souls?" |
15117 | I saw no more-- I would not witness more-- for had I not learned already all that I asked or ought to know? |
15117 | I tells you all; his bref mos knocked me down, but I did n''t see no pipe?" |
15117 | I think you, too, studied a little Latin, Miriam?" |
15117 | I wonder wat my ole man''ll say ef he ebber sees me comin''back agin wid a bag full ob money? |
15117 | I would have said in the strange, calm bitterness that possessed my soul:"What value has life to you and your deformed one? |
15117 | If He do n''t care, who need care?--An''t I right, old mammy?" |
15117 | If he were sublime, do you suppose all the world would read him or go to see his plays? |
15117 | If you prefer courtesy to comfort, you shall be gratified; but what''s the use of ceremony with Gregory? |
15117 | In power of thought, beauty of expression, what comparison is there? |
15117 | Is all hope over, or was it only a dream?" |
15117 | Is he large or small, light or dark, and does he smoke a pipe?" |
15117 | Is it not splendid, Marion?" |
15117 | Is it not, indeed, all_ couleur de rose_? |
15117 | Is my health to be unconsidered?" |
15117 | Is n''t it bad enough to feel so?" |
15117 | Is n''t it strange, the influence those little cottony women get over their husbands? |
15117 | Is n''t this a strange, quaint volume, to set before a king? |
15117 | Is not that word a very comprehensive one? |
15117 | Love''s toil, I know, is little cost; Love''s perjury is light sin; But souls that lose what I have lost, What have they left to win?''" |
15117 | Mine was in store, but how could he dream of this? |
15117 | Miss Harz?" |
15117 | My trunk-- will you be so kind as to unlock it and give me out the tray-- that picture? |
15117 | Nice fellows, are they not?" |
15117 | No? |
15117 | O friends, have you forgotten me?" |
15117 | Poor, widowed, sickly, and despised, why should you wish to live? |
15117 | Read''Thanatopsis,''or are you acquainted with it already? |
15117 | See how skillfully I avoided that fallen branch-- suppose I were to be spiteful, and upset you against this stump?" |
15117 | See, I have brought you von lettair; now vat will you do to reward me?" |
15117 | Shall I keep on with Bertie, now that the theme has possession of me, and go back to the others when she is finally dismissed? |
15117 | She is coming to herself fast, and what will she think of such expressions? |
15117 | She is well, I hope?" |
15117 | Suppose Miriam Monfort neither comes in person nor sends her order for its restoration-- what, then, is to become of this treasure- chest of hers?" |
15117 | That is n''t exactly Scripture, but near enough, do n''t you think so?" |
15117 | That watch was very little compared to what I possess outside of these prison- walls, and these possessions--""Whar is dey, honey? |
15117 | The lady above- stairs is indeed magnificent; but, Miriam, where is Bertie?" |
15117 | The lady of his choice( or heart?) |
15117 | There is such a thing as training one''s features, is n''t there, as well as one''s setters? |
15117 | Three hours-- were they not enough? |
15117 | Was I betrayed? |
15117 | Was I not on my way to him in whose presence alone I lived my true life? |
15117 | Was it his beloved presence, his dear hand, that were to be made the prize of my silence and submission? |
15117 | Was it his hand that had left that hand about my brow-- that surging in my brain-- that weight upon my heart? |
15117 | Was it not strange that up to this very moment no suspicion had clouded my horizon since I woke in that sumptuous room? |
15117 | Was the bitter pill of humiliation I was now swallowing to be gilded thus? |
15117 | Was there ever waste like that since Cleopatra dissolved her pearl in vinegar?" |
15117 | Wat does dat mean, honey?" |
15117 | Well, whose business was that but God''s? |
15117 | Were such musical bells duplicated in adjacent cities? |
15117 | What becomes of his promises? |
15117 | What can have occurred to impress you thus? |
15117 | What could I do? |
15117 | What court poet of his day, Major Favraud, compared with Robert Burns for feeling, fire, and pathos? |
15117 | What did that little vigilant creature ever fail to remark? |
15117 | What does this tariff promise? |
15117 | What full orchestra surpassed Coleridge for harmony and brilliancy of effect? |
15117 | What house is this in which I find myself a prisoner? |
15117 | What keeps you there so long?" |
15117 | What life- long hardships does this condition not impose? |
15117 | What more remained? |
15117 | What power had I to execute it, even if uttered? |
15117 | What queen, bethink you, whose likeness you have seen? |
15117 | What was there to be done? |
15117 | When did you see her last? |
15117 | When we reach New York, you shall know every thing: or is it, indeed, to that place this ship is bound?" |
15117 | Where is Captain Van Dorne? |
15117 | Where will the loss fall crushingly? |
15117 | Where will the profit rest? |
15117 | Where, then, was the place of my captivity situated? |
15117 | Which shall it be, a chally or barege?" |
15117 | Whither? |
15117 | Who and what was she? |
15117 | Who are you, to prevent me? |
15117 | Who charms like Wordsworth? |
15117 | Who ever sung such siren strains as Moore, a simple Irishman of low degree? |
15117 | Who has dared to delegate to you what has no existence as far as I am concerned?" |
15117 | Who is this young lady?" |
15117 | Who knows more than I on this subtle subject? |
15117 | Who paints panoramas like Southey? |
15117 | Who sent these flowers, by- the- by, Mrs. Clayton? |
15117 | Who shall gainsay me? |
15117 | Who, then, shall penetrate the mysteries of divine intention? |
15117 | Who_ was_ that man?" |
15117 | Whom does she resemble, Wardour? |
15117 | Why did I triumph in the strength of guile that desperation gave me, rather than sink abashed and penitent beneath it? |
15117 | Why encumber me?" |
15117 | Why have you been forced on me at all? |
15117 | Why is it that, in times like these, such conceits beset us, such comparisons arise? |
15117 | Why should I hate you, Mrs. Clayton? |
15117 | Why was not the fate of Ananias or Sapphira mine after that false utterance? |
15117 | Why, what possesses you to- day, Miss Miriam?" |
15117 | Will the raven never come back? |
15117 | Will you have some food now? |
15117 | Would Caleb send them on our track, or would the better part of valor come to his aid and save me from their clutches? |
15117 | Would He forsake us now? |
15117 | Would he come? |
15117 | Would n''t you like one for a pet, Miss Harz?" |
15117 | You dare to hope this?" |
15117 | You do n''t keer nothing about seeing of it, do you, now?" |
15117 | You do n''t think it amounts to that, do you? |
15117 | You have heard of Hercules Prang?" |
15117 | You remember the knights of fable?" |
15117 | You will sit down again, Miriam, will you not?" |
15117 | a small volcanic island? |
15117 | a whale? |
15117 | a wreck? |
15117 | and Mabel-- do you know my little sister?" |
15117 | and do you hesitate, on account of Miss Moore? |
15117 | and how do you like my lecture delivered_ extempore_?" |
15117 | and what feeling of his morbid fancy was there that my hand could not smooth away, when once entwined in his? |
15117 | as John Gilpin said, or some one of him-- which was it?" |
15117 | darest thou kill Caius Marius?" |
15117 | did they mean to turn the tables, then, and destroy me by anticipating my evidence? |
15117 | had I indeed become the sport of fiends? |
15117 | has it come to this?" |
15117 | have you nothing to say to this strange lady?" |
15117 | or do they belong to the magnificence of this idealized hotel?" |
15117 | there was not even a familiar dog to bark and determine the vexed question,"Is this I?" |
15117 | what am I talking about? |
15117 | what are you muttering about-- don''t you hear Mrs. Raymond knocking? |
15117 | what can the wretch mean?) |
15117 | what put such a strange fancy into your head? |
15117 | what will Ernie do for Mirry?" |
15117 | who but our Creator can judge of our deserts, or measure our power to bear? |
15117 | you make calembourgs, my good doctor.--What do you call them, Favraud? |
30829 | And what is there to fear? 30829 Any jobs here, Tony?" |
30829 | But can you tell me, boys,asked Uncle Benny,"who will be President in the year 1900?" |
30829 | But do poor boys ever work their way up? |
30829 | But how are we to make a beginning? |
30829 | But how should that enable you to determine the direction of the river? |
30829 | But shure yez are not afeerd o''them, Munday? |
30829 | But the Gapo? |
30829 | Da Gapoo? |
30829 | Dear me, Uncle Benny,replied Tony,"how should we know?" |
30829 | Did you not tell the boys to slam the door as hard as they could? |
30829 | Do you think he is as poor as we are, Uncle Benny? |
30829 | Does he live about here? |
30829 | Have n''t you heard? |
30829 | Have you ever measured it, Paul? |
30829 | How can you tell that, Munday? |
30829 | How far is it to my father''s? |
30829 | How many have we here? |
30829 | How tell, patron? 30829 How war I to git at the water o''that river, that flowed so tauntin''ly jest out o''reach? |
30829 | Is it dark in there, Tommy? |
30829 | No, what is it? |
30829 | O yes, I knew it,--but what President do you mean? |
30829 | Phwat is it, Munday? |
30829 | So you think the river is there? |
30829 | Some what? |
30829 | The Gapo? |
30829 | The Gapo? |
30829 | The flooded forest? |
30829 | The_ echente?_ What is that? |
30829 | The_ echente?_ What is that? |
30829 | The_ vasante_? |
30829 | To- morrow? 30829 Tommy,"said she softly, when little Sarah slept,"can you tell me what w- a- t- e- r spells?" |
30829 | Wal, what do ye suppose I did nixt? |
30829 | Wal, ye do n''t suppose I kim down from the tree? |
30829 | Well, what of it? |
30829 | Well, which would be best,meditated Margaret, who had a way of spending other people''s money as well as her own,--"turkeys or tickets?" |
30829 | Were n''t you afraid, Paul? |
30829 | What be dat? |
30829 | What in the world are you up to, Paul? |
30829 | What is it, Munday? |
30829 | What is it? |
30829 | What is the use of this alarm? |
30829 | What is up? |
30829 | What will become of us? |
30829 | When that time kum, about whar shed I be? 30829 Who is he?" |
30829 | Why do n''t somebody kill him? |
30829 | Why not? |
30829 | Wo n''t you? 30829 You do n''t mean to say you ate it raw?" |
30829 | A job that needs doing as badly as this, should be done at once; it''s one thing less to think of, do n''t you know that? |
30829 | And how was it all this time with David himself? |
30829 | As Uncle Benny came into the barn, Tony called out,"Uncle Benny, the President''s elected,--did you know it?" |
30829 | Besides, did n''t you want to do some jobs?" |
30829 | Besides, the pass itself permits her to bring necessary baggage, and is not a baby six months old necessary baggage?" |
30829 | But shall we never, never see them again? |
30829 | But what treasures of parchment might not have been quilted into any one of those old brocaded petticoats? |
30829 | But what was the profit of this? |
30829 | But who is there that does not himself feel inwardly gratified at conferring a new pleasure on a child? |
30829 | But who is to do that job of putting a stopper over this hole in the trough, you or I?" |
30829 | Did I hurt anybody?" |
30829 | Do n''t you know what it is, uncle?" |
30829 | Do n''t you see that broken gutter from the wood- shed delivers the rain right into their sleeping- place, and you know what rains we have had lately? |
30829 | Do you see the split in that board? |
30829 | F- a- t- h, what does that spell?" |
30829 | How could that be with an old forester like you?" |
30829 | How tell day from night, the moon from the sun, fire from water? |
30829 | How then do you support yourselves?" |
30829 | I do not fear for thee, though wroth The tempest rushes through the sky; For are we not God''s children both, Thou, little sandpiper, and I? |
30829 | Is that your opinion, Munday?" |
30829 | No doubt it was; but how were they to reach it? |
30829 | Nothing like the present time,--will you remember that? |
30829 | O what is the matter? |
30829 | Presuming on our intimacy, I asked,"How do you manage to live? |
30829 | Should Tommy have a hat and Sarah a hood? |
30829 | So he said again,--"Can you tell me where my father and mother live?" |
30829 | So he was sailing on, and the question would come up, Whither? |
30829 | Stump?" |
30829 | Tears, why will you glitter? |
30829 | To what warm shelter canst thou fly? |
30829 | What are they?" |
30829 | What could it be? |
30829 | What did he want there? |
30829 | What is it, Dick?" |
30829 | What is that which no man wants, but which, if a man has it, he would most unwillingly part with? |
30829 | What is the cause?" |
30829 | What of that?" |
30829 | What proof can you give us that the river lies in that direction?" |
30829 | What use have they been to us all these years, except to make gowns out of cobwebs and dinners out of dew? |
30829 | Where lay the river? |
30829 | Where was the river? |
30829 | Who of my young friends have read the sorrowful story of"Enoch Arden,"so sweetly and simply told by the great English poet? |
30829 | Why are flatterers sometimes mistaken for truth- tellers? |
30829 | Why does a scolding woman keep people at a distance? |
30829 | Why is an easy office like a good dinner eaten by an invalid? |
30829 | Why not here? |
30829 | Why should soldiers never meddle with nut- crackers? |
30829 | You know the month? |
30829 | You think we may have a difficulty in finding our way back to the channel of the river?" |
30829 | and who knew the unrevealed wealth of that trunk of yellowed papers, that had brought only the sum of ten dollars in the rag- man''s scales? |
30829 | exclaimed the Paraense,"what are you all frightened at? |
30829 | how do you do?" |
30829 | it war you, ye say?" |
30829 | said the farmer, angrily;"making fun of me?" |
30829 | should it buy a quarter of a ton of coal? |
30829 | should the mother have a shawl? |
30829 | still in the tree or worse; but whar was my purvision to kum from? |
30829 | who wud supply me wi''fish, an''flesh, an''fowl, as the eagles he d done? |
13455 | A map of what? |
13455 | Ahead? 13455 Ai nt got no use fer them critters, eh?" |
13455 | And if I do n''t please to call you Mister? |
13455 | And if we refuse? |
13455 | And let Baxter get ahead of us? |
13455 | And the man, did they call him Grinder-- Jasper Grinder? |
13455 | And what did he say? |
13455 | And what is it? |
13455 | And what of that ghost? |
13455 | And will you stand by, Jasper Grinder, and see that done? |
13455 | Are n''t you sleepy? |
13455 | Are these points very far apart? |
13455 | Are we, Tom? |
13455 | Are you alone? |
13455 | Are you going back to school after the holidays? |
13455 | Are you going to leave us tied up? |
13455 | Are you in there? |
13455 | Are you ready? |
13455 | Are you sure, Sam, that you are quite over your cold? |
13455 | Are you telling me the truth? |
13455 | At what? |
13455 | Baxter, where are you bound? |
13455 | Brainard, do you know? |
13455 | But can you spare the time? |
13455 | But had n''t you better wait till after dinner before ye tackle it? |
13455 | But how are you going to get to the dormitory? |
13455 | But how shall we turn? |
13455 | But it was a close call, was n''t it? |
13455 | But what are you going to do next? |
13455 | But where are the others? |
13455 | But where can we go to? |
13455 | But which way shall we go? |
13455 | But-- but must I stay here alone? |
13455 | By the way, have you seen anything of Dan Baxter and his party? |
13455 | Ca n''t we? |
13455 | Can I go along? |
13455 | Can it be a wolf? |
13455 | Can you ever remember the time when you was n''t without an appetite, Tom? |
13455 | Can you make out what they are? |
13455 | Can you open it? 13455 Dick, what shall we do next?" |
13455 | Did Snuggers leave him in Cedarville? |
13455 | Did he come out of the fit all right? |
13455 | Did n''t I win one of the silver medals? |
13455 | Did n''t the bear follow you? |
13455 | Did this Goupert leave any relatives? |
13455 | Did you aid them in escaping from the stone cell and the storeroom? |
13455 | Did you ever hunt for the money? |
13455 | Did you hear anything from Master Tubbs? |
13455 | Did you hear anything? |
13455 | Did you hear that shot, Tom? |
13455 | Did you hear that? |
13455 | Did you put him in the stone cell? |
13455 | Did you see the handwriting on the letters? |
13455 | Do n''t you know it is disgraceful to fight? |
13455 | Do n''t you remember how he used to bother Dora and the Laning girls? |
13455 | Do n''t you remember the tramp who stole the watch, and the rows with Josiah Crabtree and with Arnold Baxter and Dan? |
13455 | Do n''t you remember those matches we had last year? |
13455 | Do n''t you think we might strike the river without going back? |
13455 | Do n''t you want something to eat? |
13455 | Do you advise going up there? |
13455 | Do you know that you are playing a high game here, keeping us prisoners? |
13455 | Do you know the spot where Bear Pond empties into Perch River? |
13455 | Do you mean we''ll have to remain here? |
13455 | Do you suppose Dick and Mr. Barrow met them? |
13455 | Do you think he would have sneaked off with the turkey? 13455 Do you think he''d bother them now?" |
13455 | Do you think he''ll dare to bother us again, Dick? |
13455 | Do you think there is a storm coming? |
13455 | Do you want to start in this cold weather? |
13455 | Do your directions start from that p''int? |
13455 | Excuse me, Mr. Grinder, but wo n''t you let Sam out of the stone cell? |
13455 | Feelin''kind o''hungry, ai nt you? |
13455 | Fighting, eh? 13455 Found a map in that old brass- lined box, eh?" |
13455 | Gone? |
13455 | Had n''t we better get out as soon as we can? |
13455 | Has he punished Tubbs? |
13455 | Has he said anything about our going away? |
13455 | Has n''t Baxter a map, too? |
13455 | Have n''t you boys had adventures enough? |
13455 | Have you got another map? |
13455 | Have you got him? |
13455 | Have you seen them since I placed them there? |
13455 | Hear what? |
13455 | Honor bright? |
13455 | How about it if Nellie and Grace were n''t here? |
13455 | How are we to know which trail to follow? |
13455 | How are you Harry? 13455 How are you this fine and frosty morning?" |
13455 | How did you get here? |
13455 | How did you make out? |
13455 | How is the sleighing? |
13455 | How many are there with him? |
13455 | How shall we fire? |
13455 | How so? |
13455 | Hullo, who are you? |
13455 | I do n''t know-- Dan Baxter? |
13455 | I do n''t see anything of a sharp- pointed rock, do you? 13455 I say, what''s it all about?" |
13455 | I thought he did n''t dare to show himself? |
13455 | I wonder how Nellie and Grace Laning like this? |
13455 | I wonder if we ca n''t turn the rock over? |
13455 | I wonder what ever possessed that old Goupert to come here? |
13455 | I''m sure Mrs. Stanhope will let you stay here; wo n''t you? |
13455 | I? 13455 If we got to Oak Run at three in the morning, what would we do? |
13455 | Indian remedy, what''s that? |
13455 | Is he very ill, Rover? 13455 Is he-- he dead?" |
13455 | Is it morning yet? |
13455 | Is n''t it worth something to be saved from Baxter''s clutches? 13455 Is that all?" |
13455 | Is that you, Sam? |
13455 | Is that you, Snuggers? |
13455 | Is the key of this door on a hook outside? |
13455 | Is this Bill Harney a good sort? |
13455 | Is your dad going to try to break jail again? |
13455 | It beats all where they went to, does n''t it? |
13455 | It came from up the river, did n''t it? |
13455 | It was n''t Baxter? |
13455 | Master Thomas Rover, do you know anything of your brother Richard? |
13455 | Mr. Barrow, how long do you reckon this storm will last? |
13455 | Mr. Grinder, may I ask what you have done with Sam? |
13455 | Mr. Grinder, where is the Baxter crowd? |
13455 | Never what? |
13455 | No, what? |
13455 | Nobody? |
13455 | Now the all- important question is, which way next? |
13455 | Now what? |
13455 | Oh, ai nt you mistaken there, Dick? 13455 Oh, you are cooking something, are n''t you?" |
13455 | Parkham? |
13455 | Really, sir, did you say''gone''? |
13455 | Really? |
13455 | Reckon all of you are ready for it, eh? |
13455 | Remember what I said? 13455 Rover, can you do it?" |
13455 | Rover, will you be silent, or must I get the cane? |
13455 | Said anything? 13455 Sam, did you see it?" |
13455 | Say, ai nt it dangerous? |
13455 | See here, what are you giving me? |
13455 | Shall I go along? |
13455 | Shall we carry him? |
13455 | Shall we run? |
13455 | Smells good, do n''t it? |
13455 | Snowed in? |
13455 | Struck by lightning? |
13455 | Supposing that brother comes up, with John Barrow? 13455 Then what shall we call you?" |
13455 | Then you know the crowd? |
13455 | Then you work for the company? |
13455 | Then you would n''t stay here? |
13455 | Think they''ve got a better map nor yours? |
13455 | Together? |
13455 | Tom, is it really you? |
13455 | Tubblets? |
13455 | Was he alone? |
13455 | Water? 13455 We could have a boss good time, eh?" |
13455 | We started due southwest, did n''t we? |
13455 | Well, Rover, what does all this mean? |
13455 | Well, how did you make out? |
13455 | Well, what do you want to do with''em? |
13455 | Well, what might it be? |
13455 | Well, which do you suppose was the largest years ago? |
13455 | What are we to do with him? |
13455 | What are you going to do about it? |
13455 | What are you going to do with me? |
13455 | What business is that of yours? |
13455 | What did you desert us for, Grinder? |
13455 | What do they say about the matter? |
13455 | What do you mean? |
13455 | What do you propose doing next? |
13455 | What do you propose? |
13455 | What do you see? |
13455 | What do you suppose that was? |
13455 | What do you want here, Baxter? |
13455 | What do you want here? |
13455 | What do you want to know for? |
13455 | What do you want to know? |
13455 | What for, sir? |
13455 | What is the treasure worth? |
13455 | What plan? |
13455 | What promise? |
13455 | What shall we do next? |
13455 | What shall we do with our things? |
13455 | What shall we do? |
13455 | What should bring them together? |
13455 | What sort of a yelping is that? |
13455 | What was he doing? |
13455 | What''s going on in there? |
13455 | What''s the next directions on the paper? |
13455 | What''s the next directions? |
13455 | What''s the row? |
13455 | What''s up now? 13455 What''s wanted?" |
13455 | What, the cave? |
13455 | What? |
13455 | When do you want to start? |
13455 | Where are your brothers? |
13455 | Where did it come from? |
13455 | Where did they go to? |
13455 | Where did you come from? |
13455 | Where did you get a map of that treasure? 13455 Where did you see them last?" |
13455 | Where do you go next? |
13455 | Where do you want us to go? |
13455 | Where in the world have you been? |
13455 | Where is it? |
13455 | Where is the pain mostly? |
13455 | Where''s the tree? |
13455 | Which is the largest branch? |
13455 | Which way did they take? |
13455 | Who calls? |
13455 | Who did you think you were following? |
13455 | Who fired at him? 13455 Who is that calling?" |
13455 | Who is with you? |
13455 | Who rolled over the buttertub? |
13455 | Who was Goupert? |
13455 | Who''s that? |
13455 | Who-- what''s happened? |
13455 | Why ca n''t we follow the stream up? |
13455 | Why did I not bring it up with me? |
13455 | Why did n''t you call me? |
13455 | Why not? |
13455 | Why, what do you know about that? |
13455 | Why? |
13455 | Will anybody have to stand watch? |
13455 | Will you give us a good meal if we do tell you? |
13455 | Will you go on horseback? |
13455 | Will you keep quiet? |
13455 | Will you, Dick? |
13455 | Wo n''t I? 13455 Wo n''t you? |
13455 | Would n''t Dan Baxter be surprised, if he knew we were so close? |
13455 | You are quite sure it has never been removed? |
13455 | You have n''t seen or heard anything of Tom or Sam? |
13455 | You''re down on my friend Baxter, ai nt you? |
13455 | A cave, or something like that?" |
13455 | All ready?" |
13455 | Am I to say all that whenever I want to address you?" |
13455 | And as I ca n''t do anything for you, will you kindly inform me if you''ve seen anything of Jack Ness around here, with our turnout?" |
13455 | And who do you suppose was with him? |
13455 | Are you in possession of this camp? |
13455 | Are you willing, father?" |
13455 | Are your hands as tight as ever?" |
13455 | Barrow?" |
13455 | Barrow?" |
13455 | Boys, what does this mean?" |
13455 | But in the meantime can you give Sam some supper? |
13455 | But where is Sam?" |
13455 | By the way, have you seen Captain Putnam?" |
13455 | Do n''t you suppose I know why you came?" |
13455 | Do you expect us to believe that?" |
13455 | Do you know what happened after you and your brothers ran away?" |
13455 | Do you mean to say Baxter made you prisoners?" |
13455 | Do you want me to turn into ice? |
13455 | Eh, Harney?" |
13455 | Eh, Sam?" |
13455 | Ever tried the old Indian remedy for it?" |
13455 | Fremley?" |
13455 | Has the captain got back?" |
13455 | Have they found that treasure yet?" |
13455 | Hickley, what have you to say?" |
13455 | How are you making out?" |
13455 | How did you guess it?" |
13455 | How did you make out with Tubbs in the closet?" |
13455 | How do you like the snow?" |
13455 | How often, must you be told that such disgraceful conduct is not allowed here? |
13455 | I guess-- Hullo, what''s up out there?" |
13455 | I presume you know what sort of a fellow Baxter is?" |
13455 | In the cave on that island?" |
13455 | In the meantime, what of affairs in the dormitory? |
13455 | Is n''t there some place around here where we might hide the prisoners? |
13455 | Is that you?" |
13455 | Is there anything in this load good to eat?" |
13455 | Oh, Rover, wo n''t you please ask Mr. Grinder to let me out? |
13455 | Rather a cold ride, eh? |
13455 | Snuggers did you leave the door unlocked?" |
13455 | So you really came up on that account?" |
13455 | That they somehow passed us?" |
13455 | The question is, Do you know what has become of Samuel Rover and William Tubbs? |
13455 | Then you did aid them to escape?" |
13455 | Then you wo n''t try the cure? |
13455 | There, Sam Rover, how do you like that?" |
13455 | Was all going as quietly as Tom had anticipated? |
13455 | We do n''t want to expose ourselves, do we?" |
13455 | What are you in such a hurry for?" |
13455 | What can this mean?" |
13455 | What did happen?" |
13455 | What do you want?" |
13455 | What have you to say, Griggs?" |
13455 | What shall we do-- go back to camp?" |
13455 | Where are the Rovers?" |
13455 | Where are you?" |
13455 | Where can they be?" |
13455 | Where is Dick?" |
13455 | Where is the bear?" |
13455 | Who is it?" |
13455 | Will you promise to keep it entirely to yourself?" |
13455 | Wonder what the stuff is worth?" |
13455 | Wonder what time it is?" |
13455 | Wonder where the ammunition is?" |
13455 | You remember all about that, do n''t you?" |
13455 | he asked, and then, seeing the other Rovers, added:"Been following me, I suppose?" |
13455 | never heard of the old reliable Indian remedy? |
13455 | or Do you know what they have done? |
13455 | what''s up?" |
13455 | who''s washing my face with snow?" |
29374 | ''What was it, Ed, that happened you? |
29374 | A trappin''partner, Shad? 29374 A trip up th''country?" |
29374 | A trip with you, sir? |
29374 | A-- kid? |
29374 | Am I awake or is it just a dream? 29374 An''what you wantin''me t''say t''Bessie, now? |
29374 | An''what, now, be an Injun doin''out there this time o''night? 29374 An''your mother would be worryin''about you; now, would n''t she?" |
29374 | Any fur this trip? |
29374 | Any fur? |
29374 | Be it''Toobridge''or''Tumbridge,''sir? |
29374 | Be that you, Bob? |
29374 | Be you comin''far, an''be you goin''back wi''th''ship? |
29374 | Be you sartin'', now, you seen something? |
29374 | Be you sure, now, th''lads is dead? |
29374 | Be you thinkin'', now, you can manage th''tilts? |
29374 | But how about Ungava Bob? 29374 But how do you get air enough to breathe?" |
29374 | But suppose they do n''t come around this way and do n''t find us? |
29374 | But suppose we do n''t get off this island before the others come to look for us? 29374 But that was the capital you were to begin trading on?" |
29374 | But there were another time-- I''ll tell you o''this, Shad, an''Dick do n''t mind? |
29374 | But what do you think of trying to cross, and make a landing down there where the rock slopes? |
29374 | Ca n''t we take the morning off to visit them? |
29374 | Ca n''t you go back, now, with me an''Bill, t''help us up with our outfits? 29374 Ca n''t you remember, now? |
29374 | Did you hear where''bouts they was huntin''? |
29374 | Did you land him? |
29374 | Do you know, Bob, there has not been a night since she died that I have not dreamed of Manikawan? 29374 Do you think that these things just happened, Bob? |
29374 | Do you think they would be willing to let me go with them until their return here, if I gave them some tobacco? |
29374 | Don''t you know me now, Shad? |
29374 | Forgettin''a purpose? |
29374 | Get them in the shop? |
29374 | Have you quite recovered from your injury? 29374 He must have had some rattling adventures?" |
29374 | How are Manikawan and her mother? |
29374 | How is Manikawan, Bob? 29374 How many of the men of the South were there?" |
29374 | How much was there? |
29374 | How old a man is this Ungava Bob, and is that his real name, or is''Ungava''a title? |
29374 | I left un there, did n''t I, Shad? |
29374 | In th''first tilt above th''river? |
29374 | In th''nu''th''ard or s''uth''ard? |
29374 | In what way? |
29374 | Is it really you, Bob? |
29374 | Is it well with White Brother of the Snow and his friend? |
29374 | Is n''t there danger of scurvy if we have nothing but salt pork to eat? |
29374 | Is she a little sister? |
29374 | Micmac? 29374 Mookoomahn?" |
29374 | No rapids to- day? |
29374 | Not Ungava Bob? |
29374 | Now I''m wonderin'',said Dick, as they arose,"what she''s goin''back for? |
29374 | Now, how about gettin''grub? |
29374 | Now, what devilment were she up to? 29374 T''see me, sir?" |
29374 | Then it is just a choice between drowning and starving? 29374 Well, Bob,"Shad asked finally,"have you decided to go with me for a trip into the country?" |
29374 | Well, what do you think of it, Bob? |
29374 | Well? |
29374 | Were it night, now? |
29374 | Were she as pretty as Bessie, now? |
29374 | Were th''strain at th''paddle too much? 29374 Were they goin''right back home?" |
29374 | Were you ever noticin''how bad luck, when she strikes a man''s trail, follows him like a pack o''hungry wolves? 29374 What are we to do, then? |
29374 | What birds do you get? |
29374 | What did she say? |
29374 | What happened to the little girl-- his sister? |
29374 | What money did you lose, Bob? 29374 What speech were th''Injun maid tryin''t''get rid of, now?" |
29374 | What was done to the half- breed Indian-- Micmac John, I think you called him? |
29374 | What was the matter with those Indians, anyway? 29374 What were it, now? |
29374 | What were she up to, now? |
29374 | What you doin'', Bill, with your a dicky, now? |
29374 | What you havin'', this cruise, Bill? |
29374 | What you think of un? |
29374 | What you think? |
29374 | What''s she doin''there, now? 29374 What''s that, now?" |
29374 | When was you havin''trouble with Injuns, now? |
29374 | Where is he? 29374 Where the evil spirits dwell?" |
29374 | Where''s Shad? |
29374 | Who is Douglas Campbell? |
29374 | Who were they? |
29374 | Who? 29374 Why, Shad, what''s th''matter now?" |
29374 | You an''who? |
29374 | You gettin''any, Bill? |
29374 | You''ve said a good many times that things do n''t happen by chance, but are brought about by the direction of the Lord; have n''t you, Bob? |
29374 | ?, Tenn. |
29374 | An''where''s Bob an''Shad?" |
29374 | An''you comes all th''way from Boston, now?" |
29374 | And when will that be?" |
29374 | And, after all, did Manikawan not worship the same God that you and I worship? |
29374 | Are you angels from heaven, or really you?" |
29374 | Be they in th''tilt?" |
29374 | But dare any say He did not welcome her to His Father''s house? |
29374 | But where did you drop from? |
29374 | But why wern''t you shootin''at th''Injuns from th''canoe when they opens on you? |
29374 | Come, Bob, what do you say?" |
29374 | Did you make un out, Dick?" |
29374 | Did you see the light of the Eternal City shining through its gates when they were opened to receive you?" |
29374 | Do n''t you think that this combination of incidents points out to us our life work? |
29374 | Do n''t you think they suggest that we are to unite our talents and so use them that we shall not only help ourselves but help others? |
29374 | Do you hear my bones rattle when I move? |
29374 | Do you really think I may be able to engage him to guide me on a two or three weeks''trip?" |
29374 | Does you hear me?" |
29374 | FINANCE COMMITTEE???? |
29374 | FINANCE COMMITTEE???? |
29374 | FINANCE COMMITTEE???? |
29374 | FINANCE COMMITTEE???? |
29374 | Foolish, was n''t it, to get frightened after it was all over? |
29374 | Have you found the atuk?" |
29374 | Here he drew from his pocket a stick of very black and very strong- looking tobacco, and holding it toward Shad, asked:"Does you smoke, sir?" |
29374 | How now be we goin''t''pay un?" |
29374 | How should he find them now? |
29374 | How''d you find th''folks at th''Bay, Ed?" |
29374 | How''d you like t''go, Bill? |
29374 | How''d you make un, Dick?" |
29374 | It is pretty awful, is n''t it? |
29374 | It was not White Brother of the Snow sent to the torment of evil spirits?" |
29374 | Look after her, wo n''t you? |
29374 | Maybe now, she''s lookin''t''meet us t''help her?" |
29374 | Me lyin''?" |
29374 | Mrs. Gray and Emily cried a little, and often Emily would say:"I wonders where Bob is now, Mother, an''what he''s doin''?" |
29374 | National Scout Commissioner, DANIEL CARTER BEARD,???? |
29374 | National Scout Commissioner, DANIEL CARTER BEARD,???? |
29374 | National Scout Commissioner, DANIEL CARTER BEARD,???? |
29374 | National Scout Commissioner, DANIEL CARTER BEARD,???? |
29374 | Or were they brought about by Divine direction? |
29374 | Shall I put your things ashore?" |
29374 | She was still standing where Ed had left her, and Dick asked kindly in Indian:"What message does the maiden bring to her white brothers?" |
29374 | Suddenly Shad broke the silence and Bob''s thoughts with the question:"How would you like me for a partner, Bob?" |
29374 | Take my hand and forgive me, wo n''t you?" |
29374 | Tell she about th''Injun lass an''th''fine deerskin coat she''s givin''you?" |
29374 | Then she recognised Tom Black''s voice, and heard Bessie asking:"Where''s Emily?" |
29374 | Unless they gets scairt out by th''ha''nts in th''water--""The what?" |
29374 | Vice- President, B. L. DULANY,??? |
29374 | Vice- President, B. L. DULANY,??? |
29374 | Vice- President, B. L. DULANY,??? |
29374 | Vice- President, DAVID STARR JORDAN,???? |
29374 | Vice- President, DAVID STARR JORDAN,???? |
29374 | Vice- President, DAVID STARR JORDAN,???? |
29374 | Vice- President, DAVID STARR JORDAN,???? |
29374 | Vice- President, MILTON A. McRAE,???? |
29374 | Vice- President, MILTON A. McRAE,???? |
29374 | Vice- President, MILTON A. McRAE,???? |
29374 | Vice- President, MILTON A. McRAE,???? |
29374 | WHITE, Chicago, Ill. Chief Scout, ERNEST THOMPSON SETON,???? |
29374 | WHITE, Chicago, Ill. Chief Scout, ERNEST THOMPSON SETON,???? |
29374 | WHITE, Chicago, Ill. Chief Scout, ERNEST THOMPSON SETON,???? |
29374 | WHITE, Chicago, Ill. Chief Scout, ERNEST THOMPSON SETON,???? |
29374 | What are we going to do about it?" |
29374 | What d''you think, Dick?" |
29374 | What do you say?" |
29374 | What do you think of it?" |
29374 | What is your name? |
29374 | What kind of a fellow did the steward take him for, anyway?" |
29374 | What then?" |
29374 | What were it like?" |
29374 | What would the fellows say now, if they were to see him-- the fellows who had known him in that former, happier life? |
29374 | Where''s Shad?" |
29374 | Where''s Shad?" |
29374 | Will Manikawan minister to his friend as she would to him? |
29374 | Will she see that no harm comes to him?" |
29374 | Will there be a chance of my meeting them?" |
29374 | You''ve really come? |
29374 | he laughed, after breakfast,"I wonder what the fellows at home would say if they should see me now, playing the part of Robinson Crusoe?" |
35973 | Have you seen any Indians? |
35973 | Sergeant, have you got any money? |
35973 | Does anybody know? |
35973 | He replied:"Ca n''t you stick a knife in it?" |
35973 | How about the wives of the army officers of that day, who shared with their husbands the dangers and hardships of frontier life? |
35973 | How long had it been in its resting place? |
35973 | How much more ignorant was he than the most of us? |
35973 | I had made a number of casts when a voice from somewhere called out"What luck?" |
35973 | I made some remark about the weather which seemed to meet his approval but directly he asked me:"About how much money do you think you will need?" |
35973 | I said to him:"Well, do you believe it now?" |
35973 | The captain said:"Sergeant, have ye got any money?" |
35973 | The last morning he was there I said,"Well Colonel, how is it this morning, prairie chicken or steak, or both?" |
35973 | The question may occur to some of my readers how could all your household goods be carried in one wagon? |
35973 | They may not be of great importance now, but how was it forty or fifty years ago? |
35973 | What guardian angel accompanied him and kept him from harm? |
35973 | What kind of a God is it who would accept such an atonment or approve of its offering? |
35973 | What motive had he? |
35973 | What race of people buried their dead that way? |
35973 | What would have happened if I had waited? |
35973 | What, cut loaf sugar? |
35973 | When I asked,"Why, Charlotte, what is the matter?" |
35973 | When I got close enough I said,"Spencer, how are you going to get a fire?" |
35973 | When did this lava flow occur? |
35973 | Why Sandy, I said, we got ten pounds of each kind on Saturday, which kind do you want? |
35973 | Why did he do it? |
35973 | Would the turkeys have killed the snake, or the snake some of the turkeys, or would the turkeys have gotten tired of the game and quit? |
20899 | And who may those twain outcasts be Whose favor ye have won? |
20899 | What is more indisputable than reality? 20899 Would you,"asked a Unionist of a Democrat,"refuse the aid of a negro, if you were assailed and your life threatened by an assassin?" |
20899 | ''''I do, to_ you!_''''''To me,_ me_, ME?'' |
20899 | ''''Sh- sh- shade of S- s- saint Ann- on- a- muss, w- w- what k- kind of oi- oil was it?'' |
20899 | ''A sensible man like ye arn''t a gwine ter waste good powder on sech a muskrat sort of a thing as this is, is ye? |
20899 | ''Ai n''t it a good place, sir? |
20899 | ''Am I? |
20899 | ''Americans?'' |
20899 | ''And as for affairs of the heart?'' |
20899 | ''And forget,''said Caper, among the violets of Pæstum, the poor flowers of the Borghese? |
20899 | ''And why not to Flora?'' |
20899 | ''And you know him, and no mistake?'' |
20899 | ''Are you asking me those hard questions? |
20899 | ''Are you going to embark in the roast chestnut trade?'' |
20899 | ''Are you really going away?'' |
20899 | ''Boy,''I said to the yellow man,''how much whiskey hev ye drunk ter day? |
20899 | ''But the delicate house women and the children, can they bear it?'' |
20899 | ''But,''said he, descanting on this subject to Rocjean,''how can the Romans fight for their firesides, when they have n''t any?'' |
20899 | ''Buy''n ony nigs, Kirke?'' |
20899 | ''Ca n''t you draw me her portrait?'' |
20899 | ''Can I do better than stay in it?'' |
20899 | ''Do ye mean so, raally, Mr. Kirke? |
20899 | ''Do you believe it, Scheffer? |
20899 | ''Do you remember all about her--_all_?'' |
20899 | ''Do you take me for a dunce? |
20899 | ''Do you think so?'' |
20899 | ''Do you, father?'' |
20899 | ''Going to France?'' |
20899 | ''Hallo, Hill, is that you? |
20899 | ''Have you far to go?'' |
20899 | ''Have you got a room at home where you can work?'' |
20899 | ''How can you afford to travel, then?'' |
20899 | ''How did I speak?'' |
20899 | ''How did you enjoy yourself up in that hawk''s nest?'' |
20899 | ''How does he stand with the trade?'' |
20899 | ''How in the world did you do it, Paul?'' |
20899 | ''How long are you going to stay here?'' |
20899 | ''How''s times?'' |
20899 | ''How_ in_ with him?'' |
20899 | ''I have got tickets for the theatre: what do you say?'' |
20899 | ''I see he''s excited,''I replied;''but why is he so interested in this woman?'' |
20899 | ''I thought the pledge did n''t hold when you were away from home?'' |
20899 | ''India rubber soles?'' |
20899 | ''Is he going to travel?'' |
20899 | ''Is he not to be trusted?'' |
20899 | ''Is he rich?'' |
20899 | ''Is that you, father?'' |
20899 | ''Latin?'' |
20899 | ''My Cromwell? |
20899 | ''No? |
20899 | ''Now, do you want anything more of me?'' |
20899 | ''Oh, Sarah, why had you to leave me?'' |
20899 | ''Oh, no? |
20899 | ''Orris& Tweed? |
20899 | ''Payable in York, interest and exchange?'' |
20899 | ''Scheffer''s father signed for Oliver Cromwell; but what of that? |
20899 | ''That is, when you say camel, you mean jackass?'' |
20899 | ''That shrine is abandoned hereafter: where shall my new one be?'' |
20899 | ''Then you pick the negroes up round the country, and send them to a rendezvous, where you put them in jail till you make up your number?'' |
20899 | ''Then you think August a born trader?'' |
20899 | ''This is Mr. Joslin, I presume?'' |
20899 | ''To teach him, Josephine?'' |
20899 | ''Well, Major, then?'' |
20899 | ''Well, my young friend,''said the merchant,''what do you think of New York? |
20899 | ''Well, old fellow, what are you doing here?'' |
20899 | ''Well, what do you say to another glass? |
20899 | ''Well, youngster, what''s all this? |
20899 | ''Well?'' |
20899 | ''Well?'' |
20899 | ''Whar d''ye live?'' |
20899 | ''What are they? |
20899 | ''What can I do for you?'' |
20899 | ''What can I do for you?'' |
20899 | ''What can you do?'' |
20899 | ''What d''ye mean? |
20899 | ''What did he say?'' |
20899 | ''What did you do then?'' |
20899 | ''What do you mean?'' |
20899 | ''What do you want to leave Burns for?'' |
20899 | ''What do you want?'' |
20899 | ''What have I to do with all this, Paul?'' |
20899 | ''What next?'' |
20899 | ''What will you study?'' |
20899 | ''What, fur the hull, or the''ooman alone?'' |
20899 | ''What, then, brave fellow?'' |
20899 | ''What?'' |
20899 | ''Where did you get that love of a shawl?'' |
20899 | ''Where have you met me, my good fellow? |
20899 | ''Where? |
20899 | ''Who says that?'' |
20899 | ''Why do n''t you send them on by stage? |
20899 | ''Why do you speak in that way?'' |
20899 | ''Why is it that I so often wish I was rid of that fellow, when he serves me so effectually?'' |
20899 | ''Why not? |
20899 | ''Why, what are_ you_ working for?'' |
20899 | ''Why? |
20899 | ''Why_ would n''t_ she promise Harry? |
20899 | ''Will a hundred profit satisfy you?'' |
20899 | ''With Cromwell?'' |
20899 | ''Would you trust her with him?'' |
20899 | ''Ye doan''t mind, do ye, gal?'' |
20899 | ''Yes, I know; but where is she-- let me see her?'' |
20899 | ''Yes, I knows--''iled''em inside and out, haint ye?'' |
20899 | ''Yes, I see,''I said;''but you spoke of two little girls; where is the other?'' |
20899 | ''You a Newton boy?'' |
20899 | ''You do n''t belong in the mill, then?'' |
20899 | ''You do n''t call that drinking with a fellow, do you?'' |
20899 | ''You know what a reader his mother was? |
20899 | ''You''ve been coming possum over Joslin; is n''t it so?'' |
20899 | ''Young or old?'' |
20899 | A dollar and a half a day: did you understand that?'' |
20899 | And, Sarah, wo n''t you see that we have a very nice breakfast? |
20899 | Are you trying to deceive me? |
20899 | Arn''t the young''uns his''n? |
20899 | But at last, laying the paper away, and going up to Mitchell, he asked:''What will you have, this morning?'' |
20899 | But come, what do you say; are they Preston''s or not?'' |
20899 | But did n''t ye b''long ter him-- ye knows what I means-- till he got so d----d camp- meetin''pious five year ago?'' |
20899 | But do things often, I wonder?'' |
20899 | But do you? |
20899 | But how do you manage so large a gang? |
20899 | But instead of thanks, these words escaped him in a tumult:''Scheffer, have you heard the news from Cromwell?'' |
20899 | But what is the nature of this influence? |
20899 | But would you believe it? |
20899 | Can this be the same man? |
20899 | Cold? |
20899 | Compare their progress and condition in America and Liberia, and what friend of the race or of humanity can desire to retain them among us? |
20899 | Could she thank the culture that gave her a position for which nature and habits like his were all unfit? |
20899 | Could she thank the teaching that had brought her to see in her womanhood something beyond the reach of a man like Scheffer? |
20899 | Dare you grasp it without blanching, without blushing? |
20899 | Did Hill do the polite thing by you?'' |
20899 | Did Mr. Meeker get off?'' |
20899 | Did he that?'' |
20899 | Did n''t ye b''long ter the Squire till he got so d----d pious five year ago?'' |
20899 | Do n''t mind a few dollars: you understand? |
20899 | Do n''t you want a clerk yourself?'' |
20899 | Do they come as"a kindly largess to the soil they grew on,"or do they scatter mischief where they fall? |
20899 | Do ye take, Lark?'' |
20899 | Do you get along with your books so fast you do n''t know what to do with your time? |
20899 | Do you know the house of Orris& Tweed, auctioneers?'' |
20899 | Do you know what that struggle is? |
20899 | Do you know, Scheffer, you''ve had more to do with me, a vast deal, than you ever supposed? |
20899 | Do you mean I should speak to Harry?'' |
20899 | Do you seek, thirst for Truth, O reader? |
20899 | Do you suppose she ever loved a lad when she was a child?'' |
20899 | Doan''t ye see the Squire''s eyes and forrerd thar?'' |
20899 | Does it assume to originate and establish principles in government and morals? |
20899 | Does it not sort of harden you-- blunt your better feelings, to be always buying and selling people that do not want to be bought and sold?'' |
20899 | Does it work, August?'' |
20899 | Eh? |
20899 | Equal to Burnsville, eh? |
20899 | Especially, when millions will vote for emancipation, if connected with voluntary colonization, why continue to oppose it? |
20899 | Even admit that it indicated the emperor''s personal rejection of the old and adoption of the newer faith, what of that? |
20899 | F. P. Stanton, 730 Was He Successful? |
20899 | Five years, did you say?'' |
20899 | Fugitives from the kindest masters, and ungrateful for all the blessings of slavery, why should they not be brought back in chains? |
20899 | Had the changing world rolled in between them? |
20899 | Haint ye come it over me slick? |
20899 | Half of Paul''s words were unheard; but enough had struck through sense to spirit, and he said:''Do you want to be shod for the next five years? |
20899 | Has it the sanction of enlightened conscience, or of the divine law as revealed in the Old and New Testaments? |
20899 | Have you any of those boots I asked for?'' |
20899 | Have you any tools to work with, my son?'' |
20899 | His eyes met hers, and she said:''What is it, Paul? |
20899 | How do you like it?'' |
20899 | How does it affect the character and welfare of the community in which its unregulated and unlimited authority prevails? |
20899 | How much do you want? |
20899 | How much fur thet gal-- cash down? |
20899 | How, for instance, did the sightless imaginer ever conceive that red must be like the sound of the trumpet? |
20899 | I put the ribands on''em; and,''sides, ye see them boys, thar?'' |
20899 | I''ve done little yet to satisfy a man; got a few prizes; what do you suppose I care for them?'' |
20899 | Is it not a little worse on the man himself? |
20899 | Is n''t he a picture? |
20899 | Is n''t it kind of him? |
20899 | Is slavery right or wrong? |
20899 | Is this Kirke a Scotchman? |
20899 | It''s a secret, then, this business?'' |
20899 | ME?'' |
20899 | Man and woman, if they looked at each other now, must it be across a great gulf? |
20899 | Mr. Kirke? |
20899 | None of these will do; are they all you have?'' |
20899 | Now who has done the greatest deed Which History has ever known, And who, in Freedom''s direst need, Became her bravest champion? |
20899 | Now, to this pair of lady economists, what is''Stewart''s''but a mere locality, as impersonal as Paris or Brussels, or any other mart of finery? |
20899 | P''raps ye mean ter say I lie?'' |
20899 | Returning then to the young man, he said:''And now you, Mr. Gustavus Adolphus Pocahontas Powhatan Gaston, s''pose_ you_ clar out, too?'' |
20899 | S''pose I doan''t take it, what then?'' |
20899 | She has actually gone and done it, Scheffer.... Worth money, eh? |
20899 | Should he not convince her that it rested on a foundation looser than the sand? |
20899 | So in Hafiz:''Can cheeks where living roses blow, Where nature spreads her richest dyes, Require the borrowed gloss of Art?'' |
20899 | Something has happened, Josephine; what is it?'' |
20899 | Still, half embarrassed, Mitchell persisted:''Where is she, though?'' |
20899 | Such hard work as this will be?'' |
20899 | Such questions may be multiplied indefinitely; but to what end? |
20899 | Suddenly he exclaimed,''Wern''t you at Newton Academy?'' |
20899 | Tell me now, do you want any money?'' |
20899 | That''s what the handsome girls are for, to marry off to rich men, is n''t it?'' |
20899 | Then Scheffer looked up, and, without rising, asked:''How long have you to study before you graduate?'' |
20899 | Then why look so solemn? |
20899 | Then you do a large business?'' |
20899 | This was the temptation, and this his resistance: If Harry had gone, leaving anywhere, in any woman''s heart, a hope in him, should he not dispel it? |
20899 | Turning then to Preston, he exclaimed:''Why, Squire, how ar ye?'' |
20899 | WAS HE SUCCESSFUL? |
20899 | Was ever retribution more signal? |
20899 | Was the copy of the letter found in an intercepted despatch from Mr. Mason to Jefferson Davis? |
20899 | We have been among angels-- shall we not eat like the elect? |
20899 | What are their descendants now? |
20899 | What are words? |
20899 | What availed a symbol more or less on the imperial banner? |
20899 | What could cause it? |
20899 | What d''ye say ter him?'' |
20899 | What did I see? |
20899 | What did he care whether the day was fair or foul-- whether the roads were good or bad? |
20899 | What did you mean?'' |
20899 | What do you want of tools? |
20899 | What does England for any one of its toiling millions who rejects this munificent offer? |
20899 | What has gone wrong with you?'' |
20899 | What have you done?'' |
20899 | What in the world do you suppose_ he_ is going to do?'' |
20899 | What is to be done with the slaves when they are emancipated? |
20899 | What matters that the Proclamation might or should be different, since we have practical concern only with the Proclamation as it is? |
20899 | What novels are so successful as those in which the writer has truthfully mirrored the heart or the home? |
20899 | What sent that hearse along just then and there? |
20899 | What the devil are you then?'' |
20899 | What will you have?'' |
20899 | What ye got?'' |
20899 | What''ll one o''them young bloods want o''them? |
20899 | What''ll ye give fur the boy?'' |
20899 | What''s the price?'' |
20899 | What''s your price?'' |
20899 | When they were all supplied, the trader said to me:''Now, what d''ye say, Kirke? |
20899 | Where animals of such sagacity, courage, power, and majesty are found, why should not man be great also? |
20899 | Wherefore? |
20899 | Which was the worse-- that coarse, hardened man, or the institution which had made him what he was? |
20899 | Who a whole continent set free? |
20899 | Who cares? |
20899 | Who does not_ know_ that this man at heart sympathizes with the rebellion, and deprecates the War for the Union as unnecessary and ruinous? |
20899 | Who killed the curse and broke the ban Which made a lie of liberty? |
20899 | Who shall be trusted to invent them? |
20899 | Why be only noticeable from the force of your language as compared with the feebleness of what you have to say? |
20899 | Why call them olive complexions? |
20899 | Why chain Pegasus to an ox cart, or make your Valenciennes lace into horse blankets? |
20899 | Why did he not declare all slaves emancipated? |
20899 | Why hide Psyche under a hogshead?'' |
20899 | Why intimate that certain States should( or might) be excepted from its operation? |
20899 | Why is it, Sarah, that lately I feel more solitary than usual?'' |
20899 | Why not appeal to God for His blessing on the cause henceforward inseparably identified with that of Right and Liberty? |
20899 | Why not declare the slaves liberated because of the essential, inevitable wrong of holding them in bondage? |
20899 | Why not make such legal manumission operative at once? |
20899 | Why use up the sublime to express the ridiculous? |
20899 | Why, then, is it, that the non- slaveholding masses there support the institution? |
20899 | Will you behave rationally or not?'' |
20899 | Will you please to examine it? |
20899 | Would n''t you like it?'' |
20899 | Would not everybody else abide by the religion of his own choice, whatever that might be? |
20899 | Yankees in this business?'' |
20899 | Yer not Mr. Kirke, of Randall, Kirke& Co.? |
20899 | You are in the retail line, I presume?'' |
20899 | You are wiser than we; so tell me, Scheffer, did anything ever happen in old times that binds her yet? |
20899 | You do not buy and sell them all, yourself, do you?'' |
20899 | You do not forget her?'' |
20899 | You see, do n''t you, the tools were never used before? |
20899 | You used to be with Jessup, did n''t you?'' |
20899 | _ Did_ she not know? |
20899 | _ I_?'' |
20899 | _ Was_ he offended? |
20899 | and he laughed his brutal laugh, as, chucking Phyllis again under the chin, he asked,''Doan''t he, gal?'' |
20899 | and, how much do they cost?'' |
20899 | comes a tough bouquet, and hits milady on that bonnet--''better go to the hotel?'' |
20899 | do they ever think of playing fire engine, and thus warming themselves in a wholesome manner? |
20899 | forever hoist the banner of the Blues over the gay gardens of every earthly paradise? |
20899 | said Harry,''How do you manage it, August? |
20899 | to ME? |
20899 | where did you get hold of that?'' |
20899 | within thirty miles of this city I have seen enough timber lying rotting on the ground, to half warm the Eternal City? |
20899 | wollen sie nur?_''and in return for a double handful of_ confetti_ flung into a carriage full of German artists ahead of him,''bang!'' |
32402 | But has it not always been this way? |
32402 | Can you tell me what became of the man who galloped by here just ahead of us? |
32402 | Do you mean the man on a black horse with a white star in its forehead? |
32402 | Do you wish to fight? |
32402 | For what, my dear friend? |
32402 | Have you surrendered? |
32402 | If that is the case,said Morse,"why could not words and sentences be sent in the same way?" |
32402 | That boat move? 32402 Where did all these black men come from?" |
32402 | Why ca n''t we? |
32402 | Why, general, you are not alone? |
32402 | Yes; do you not know of it? |
32402 | And is it not better to read the true tale of how this was done than stories of the work of fairies and magicians? |
32402 | And what thought has this brought into your mind? |
32402 | But what could they do? |
32402 | CHAPTER III THREE EARLY HEROES WHAT do you think of Captain John Smith, the hero of Virginia? |
32402 | CHAPTER IX A HERO OF THE COLONIES DO you not think there are a great many interesting stories in American history? |
32402 | CHAPTER VII ROYAL GOVERNORS AND LOYAL CAPTAINS DO any of my young readers know what is meant by a Charter? |
32402 | CHAPTER XV THE VOYAGE OF OUR SHIP OF STATE HAVE any of my young readers ever been to Europe? |
32402 | Did any of my readers ever try that? |
32402 | Did any of my young readers ever see a Quaker? |
32402 | Do any of you know why, or who the Cavaliers were? |
32402 | Do you know what a revolution is? |
32402 | Do you know what this meant? |
32402 | Do you not think I am right in saying that the world has grown better as well as richer? |
32402 | Do you not think a general ought to have two good legs when he has to run as often as Santa Anna had? |
32402 | Do you not think it looked like a one- sided fight? |
32402 | Do you not think that Captain Wadsworth was a bold and daring man, and one who knew just what to do in times of trouble? |
32402 | Do you not think that Roger Williams was as brave a man as John Smith or Miles Standish, and as much of a hero? |
32402 | Do you not think the North had a right to feel very much out of heart by this time? |
32402 | Do you not think these fishermen were wiser than the Spaniards, who went everywhere seeking for gold, and finding very little of it? |
32402 | Do you not think this a very pretty story? |
32402 | Do you not think this was very cruel and unjust? |
32402 | Do you not want to know something about these oldest Americans? |
32402 | Do you not wish to know what became of it? |
32402 | Do you remember the story of Canonicus and the snake skin, and that of Miles Standish and the chiefs? |
32402 | Do you think those were"good old times"? |
32402 | Do you think you would have enjoyed that? |
32402 | Do you understand any better now? |
32402 | Do you want to know who this young traveler was? |
32402 | Does not this seem like magic? |
32402 | Have any of you heard of the wonderful battle between the"Monitor"and the"Merrimac"? |
32402 | Have you ever seen one of them? |
32402 | Have you ever thought that the United States, as an independent nation, was born in Philadelphia? |
32402 | He might sink or burn-- but give up the ship? |
32402 | How many do you think we will have when the youngest readers of this book get to be old men and women? |
32402 | How many of you have seen the lid of a kettle of boiling water keeping up its clatter as the steam lifts it and puffs out into the air? |
32402 | How many of you would have worked as hard as he did to get an education? |
32402 | Is it not all very wonderful? |
32402 | Is not that a great gain to mankind? |
32402 | Is not this as wonderful as the most marvelous fairy tale? |
32402 | It was a terrible thing to do, was it not? |
32402 | It was not good for much, was it? |
32402 | Shall I tell you the whole story of this war? |
32402 | Some of you may ask, what became of the old people of the country-- the Indians, who were spread all over the West? |
32402 | That is a pretty long step, is n''t it? |
32402 | The frigate"President"met the British sloop- of- war"Little Belt,"and hailed it, the captain calling through his trumpet,"What ship is that?" |
32402 | Then she said:"Why do n''t you speak for yourself, John?" |
32402 | This is not so very hard to understand, is it? |
32402 | This seems very absurd, does it not? |
32402 | Was he not a man to dream of, a true hero? |
32402 | Was it not a difficult position for so young a man? |
32402 | Was not that a funny notion? |
32402 | Was not that a great and glorious deed? |
32402 | Was not this very cruel? |
32402 | Was not this very harsh and unjust? |
32402 | Was this not America? |
32402 | What did they do? |
32402 | What do any of my young readers know about the Delaware River? |
32402 | What do you know about these Indians? |
32402 | What do you think the brave Perry did then? |
32402 | What do you think the people did? |
32402 | What were these things? |
32402 | What were they to do? |
32402 | What will we see? |
32402 | What would you have done if you had been in Balboa''s place, and wanted gold to pay your debts? |
32402 | When it reached there, on May 24th, the first message sent was one which Miss Ellsworth had chosen from the Bible,"What hath God wrought?" |
32402 | Where was Cornwallis during this time? |
32402 | While all this was going on, what was becoming of the native people of the country, the Indians? |
32402 | Who knows but that he was told there of what the Northmen had done? |
32402 | Who shall be President? |
32402 | Why? |
32402 | Would you care to be told what took place afterwards? |
32402 | he said, in great astonishment;"the passage of my bill?" |
37122 | From the tracks at my lake,said he, as he strode up to the fire,"there are two bull moose around here-- a large and a small one; which did you get?" |
37122 | Shall I load the other barrel or trust to only one? |
37122 | So long as it lasts my lifetime, what matter? |
37122 | What recks it them? |
37122 | And, after all, is there anything more disagreeable than a man who is always right? |
37122 | His"usually harmless fusillade of tourists"reminds one of Paddy''s remark to his master:"Did I hit the deer, Pat?" |
37122 | How many pairs of boots were hung over the shoulders? |
37122 | Should they risk life and limb for a sheep? |
37122 | The Mexican is a poor shot, but what can you expect? |
37122 | The bear approached us, when I said to the clerk,"Had not we better get behind the timber? |
37122 | Was it really the custom to wear boots on the shoulders? |
37122 | We waited some time and at last I whispered to Chabot,"Muckwa?" |
37122 | What had become of the other wolves and where were most of the hounds? |
37122 | What more could a peasant desire? |
37122 | What was that? |
37122 | Where is the hunter who has not had his full share of disappointments when all prospects seemed favorable? |
37122 | With our glasses we had mapped a course which seemed not impossible; was it not better to meet our king face to face than to steal on him from behind? |
37122 | With these provided his happiness is secured; how can he be called poor? |
20911 | ''Tis a fine horse, Monsieur, is it not? |
20911 | Ah, why begrudge the marquis his meed of admiration, if he likes it? |
20911 | And can I not see you again? 20911 And leave you?" |
20911 | And so you can read, Uncle? 20911 And this is the village of St. Louis, sir?" |
20911 | And this is the village of St. Louis, sir? |
20911 | And what did I say? |
20911 | And what did she say, Mademoiselle? |
20911 | And what is the bean- cake, pray, Mademoiselle? |
20911 | And why should he be diplomatic with me? |
20911 | Are we off? |
20911 | Brother William, do you hear that? |
20911 | But he is in exile, and almost as much under the First Consul''s ban as Cadoudal himself; how can he help you? |
20911 | But when and how are you to get to Paris? 20911 But where have you been living, sir,"she asked, with mock severity,"that you know nothing of what has been going on in the great world? |
20911 | But why start immediately? |
20911 | But will not the negro maid Clotilde betray you also? |
20911 | But would you not rather have the whole of Louisiana? 20911 By whom is the land cultivated in Louisiana?" |
20911 | Can you tell me how to find the Mansion House, Uncle? |
20911 | Can you tell me something of the President, sir? 20911 Can you tell me who all these people are and where they are going?" |
20911 | Did I sigh? |
20911 | Did what, Cæsar? |
20911 | Did you breed him yourself? |
20911 | Did you know me? |
20911 | Did you overhear what the Chevalier Le Moyne was saying to me in the glen? |
20911 | Did you see him? |
20911 | Did you see that England is preparing for war? 20911 Do you go up to the Capitol to listen to the debates?" |
20911 | Do you know me, sweetheart? |
20911 | Do you know when? |
20911 | Does Mademoiselle Pelagie know all this? |
20911 | Does Monsieur Talleyrand want Mr. Livingston to offer him a bribe? 20911 Does love always beget love?" |
20911 | Does she know her rank and prospects? 20911 Fire, Monsieur,"he said:"Why do you wait to let others share the glory?" |
20911 | For me? 20911 Had Spain the right to make this cession to France without our consent? |
20911 | Have her estates been restored, do you know? |
20911 | How came you here? |
20911 | How did it happen? |
20911 | How did you reply to her, Mademoiselle? |
20911 | How does it happen that the French, who are incapable of succeeding in a continental colony, have always made great progress in the West Indies? |
20911 | How have I touched your constitution? |
20911 | I am not either now, am I? 20911 I have been looking for you for many days; why have you deserted the Champs- Élysées?" |
20911 | I may call you Pelagie, may I not? |
20911 | I shall have to ask you, as you asked me in Washington-- how did you get here? |
20911 | I wonder what her cousin will say about it? 20911 If mademoiselle has not forgotten an old acquaintance, will she permit me respectfully to salute her?" |
20911 | If you think they need me? |
20911 | Is it not as beautiful as your Pennsylvania lakes? |
20911 | Is it still to be Mademoiselle? |
20911 | Is it that St. Louis will one day be American? |
20911 | Is it you, Monsieur? |
20911 | Is my Leon alive? |
20911 | Is the President such a stickler, then, for form and ceremony? 20911 It is good- by, then, Mademoiselle?" |
20911 | Know whom, madam? |
20911 | Mademoiselle Chouteau,I said,"may I have the pleasure of walking home with you?" |
20911 | Mademoiselle la Comtesse,he said in tones whose suavity were in marked contrast to the coldness of his last speech,"will you not be seated? |
20911 | Mademoiselle, do you remember on La Belle Rivière the wager you would not let me make? |
20911 | Mademoiselle, may I put you on her back? |
20911 | Mademoiselle, they do not use force? |
20911 | Mademoiselle,I said timidly,"why can not we have a dance here? |
20911 | Mademoiselle,I said, and doffed my hat,"is it permitted to see the palace to- day?" |
20911 | Mademoiselle,I said,"do you know that to- day you are no longer a proud lady of France, but a simple American maiden?" |
20911 | Mademoiselle,I said,"have you observed that Yorke has been making himself very agreeable to Clotilde?" |
20911 | Monsieur le Prince,I said,"I recognized you from the hunter of Mademoiselle la Comtesse; will not perhaps others also?" |
20911 | Monsieur, what does it mean? |
20911 | Monsieur, you have been a generous foe; will you permit that I clasp your hand? |
20911 | Monsieur,she said softly, in her pretty English,"why do you call me Comtesse? |
20911 | Mought yo''be a stranger in Washington, sah? |
20911 | My man is waiting for me with our horses in the Court d''Honneur; will you permit me to ride a little way with you? |
20911 | Of our plan as to Louisiana-- don''t you know? |
20911 | Of what were you thinking, Mademoiselle? |
20911 | Pelagie,he said,"what does this mean? |
20911 | Perhaps you saw, too, that in the American Congress Mr. Ross proposed that the President should raise fifty thousand troops and capture New Orleans? |
20911 | Qu''as- tu, m''ami? |
20911 | Shall I tell you what it is? |
20911 | Shall we go? |
20911 | So you think Mr. Talleyrand wanted a bribe from Mr. Livingston? 20911 That is folly, is it not?" |
20911 | Then I suppose the love dies? |
20911 | Then how did you find your way to my closet? |
20911 | Then to- morrow at two I hope to find you at home,I said, and then added quickly--"unless you are going to the Senate again?" |
20911 | Then why did not Josef offer himself as your escort? |
20911 | Then you forgive me? |
20911 | Then your mistress intends to follow the chase? |
20911 | Was there ever such a speech? |
20911 | Well? |
20911 | What do you think about me, Citizen Lucien? 20911 What has brought my brother from his island on the bosom of the Great Father of Waters?" |
20911 | What is the course,he began,"which we have to pursue? |
20911 | What was that? |
20911 | When did you arrive in Paris? |
20911 | Where are your mistress and mademoiselle? |
20911 | Where is he? |
20911 | Who''s coming, Scipio? 20911 Whom do you fear him to be?" |
20911 | Why do you keep your eyes turned upon the woods, monsieur? 20911 Why do you persist in calling me''your ladyship''? |
20911 | Why do you think it will be on the Mississippi this morning, uncle? |
20911 | Why, madame,I said,"what have you done with your mirror?" |
20911 | Will Monsieur give me the address of that horse- dealer? |
20911 | Will the Comtesse de Baloit permit me to present the Marquis de Casa Yrujo, who will take her out to dinner? |
20911 | Will you go to Paris before you sail? |
20911 | Will you not stay and help us, monsieur? |
20911 | Will you race with me, mademoiselle, to yonder tree? |
20911 | Would it be permitted an old friend to call at the house of the French minister on the Comtesse de Baloit? |
20911 | Would you break his heart, madam? 20911 Would you like to be detailed on some special service to your king and queen?" |
20911 | Yes; do you know them? |
20911 | Yo''dunno whar they''s gwine? 20911 You are not held a prisoner?" |
20911 | You are sure? |
20911 | You declared,said Joseph, his voice also rising,"you would get along without the assent of the Chambers; did you not?" |
20911 | You know her, then? |
20911 | You mean the young Duc d''Enghien? 20911 ( My heart gave so great a thump when Mr. Livingston said that, I feared they might hear it-- for would not the Comtesse de Baloit be with him?) 20911 A voice at my elbow said:Monsieur is sad?--or lonely, perhaps?" |
20911 | Ah, Monsieur, can you ever forgive me?" |
20911 | Ah, but had I not? |
20911 | Am I not to see you again?" |
20911 | Am I wrong?" |
20911 | And I, what did I do? |
20911 | And do tell me,"she added eagerly:"is she so great a lady? |
20911 | And is it true he is such a sloven in dress as they say he is?" |
20911 | And now what think you''tis best to do?" |
20911 | And shall I be present at the conference?" |
20911 | And were the two millions of dollars given to Mr. Jefferson for such base purposes?" |
20911 | And where are your manners? |
20911 | And who taught you?" |
20911 | Are they not advancing to greatness with a giant''s stride? |
20911 | Are you acquainted in Washington?" |
20911 | Are you angry now?" |
20911 | As I turned from her, a voice in my ear said imperiously:"Well, sir, and have you no word for your old friend, Fanny Cadwalader?" |
20911 | As to his being a sloven in dress, is that what they say about him? |
20911 | Bonaparte was in the act of speaking to Joseph:"Well, brother, have you spoken to Lucien?" |
20911 | But mademoiselle answered quickly:"Would you be so good, Monsieur? |
20911 | But what shall be the prize?" |
20911 | But will you permit me to ask you one important question? |
20911 | By what trick of fate had I been thrust into the very midst of this conference at which I had so longed to be present? |
20911 | CHAPTER III I MEET AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE"I am his Highness''s dog at Kew; Pray tell me, sir, whose dog are you?" |
20911 | CHAPTER VI WHIPPOORWILLS"Is this that haughty, gallant, gay Lothario?" |
20911 | CHAPTER XXX THE ROSE OF ST. LOUIS"What''s in a name? |
20911 | Can gravity itself refrain itself from laughter at the figure which my honorable colleague would wish us to make on the theater of the world? |
20911 | Can not Mademoiselle think of a way?" |
20911 | Can they be the subject of a contract of sale or exchange?" |
20911 | Can we restore fortifications that are in ruins, and construct a long chain of forts upon a frontier of four hundred leagues? |
20911 | Can you not see that he does not necessarily seem to me so black as he does to you and my guardian? |
20911 | Citizen Minister,"looking at my uncle,"what is your opinion?" |
20911 | Cloud with me this afternoon? |
20911 | Could it be possible that he was intimating that a consideration would be necessary to make it more decided? |
20911 | Could it be possible that the great Bonaparte might turn the rest of his speech from jest to earnest? |
20911 | Could that be Mademoiselle Pelagie? |
20911 | Could the Comtesse de Baloit be jealous? |
20911 | Could the Consul''s plea for me have been so distasteful to her? |
20911 | Could you be taken suddenly ill?" |
20911 | Did ever such simple words have so dire a sound? |
20911 | Did she not seem a few minutes ago almost willing to become the wife of an American gentleman? |
20911 | Did you not intend to join me at the Théâtre Français? |
20911 | Do n''t you suppose I know what people say of me? |
20911 | Do you admire him? |
20911 | Do you follow me?" |
20911 | Do you hear?" |
20911 | Do you not think his crime is atoned for?" |
20911 | Do you think you are still at the Club of St. Maximin? |
20911 | Do you want to accept this offer of the First Consul''s?" |
20911 | Does he meet me with his sword like an honorable gentleman? |
20911 | Does she know it herself?" |
20911 | From the First Consul?" |
20911 | Had I forgotten how beautiful she was? |
20911 | Had I not heard that her cousin would marry her into one of the royal families of Europe? |
20911 | Had not every moment since I had first known her been a fluctuation between hope and despair? |
20911 | Had she forsaken me and left me to my fate? |
20911 | Had you desired to escort some one else home?" |
20911 | Has any one been saying so to you?" |
20911 | Have we a right to abandon what the Germans call the_ souls_? |
20911 | Have you any idea how high you are aspiring? |
20911 | Have you forgotten?" |
20911 | Have you seen them?" |
20911 | Have you taken him for a horse? |
20911 | He dresses as well as I do: would you call that being a sloven?" |
20911 | He is magnificent, is he not? |
20911 | His eyes flashed fire as he listened, and when I said to him,"Would you like to make one of our guard on our way home?" |
20911 | How came the posts to be detained after the definitive treaty with Great Britain? |
20911 | How can I ever thank you enough for your care of my poor Leon? |
20911 | How could I have made such an egregious blunder as to address the first citizen of the republic by a royal title? |
20911 | How long will this obstruction continue? |
20911 | I bent low and whispered to my partner:"Mademoiselle, do you think you could invent a pretext by which we could both be excused from the dance? |
20911 | I had told the First Consul she had not given me any reason to hope; but had she not? |
20911 | I knew enough of surgery to know that I must apply a tight bandage above the wound; but where should I find a bandage? |
20911 | I saw her go suddenly white, but in a moment she spoke very calmly, and in French:"Do you go back to America, Monsieur?" |
20911 | I shall have to get my uncle''s permission; may I defer my answer until I have an opportunity to consult him?" |
20911 | I suppose you have brought that accursed mare with you?" |
20911 | I turned in my saddle:"What is it, Cæsar?" |
20911 | If I could not make my exit through the dressing- room, why not through the other apartment, from which my closet was separated only by a curtain? |
20911 | If I should ask you for the first dance to- morrow night, would you give it to me willingly?" |
20911 | Is it anything you can tell me?" |
20911 | Is it permitted to speak of them to her?" |
20911 | Is it to go immediately to war without asking for redress? |
20911 | Is that a sufficient excuse for behaving like a spoiled child?" |
20911 | Is there no fair lady to whose honor your young men would drink? |
20911 | It is the black maid of the Comtesse de Baloit, is it not? |
20911 | May I inquire whether mademoiselle has accepted the chevalier''s offer of escort?" |
20911 | Much, sir, as I revere his memory, acknowledging him among the fathers of his country, was this the fact? |
20911 | Must I confess to eavesdropping? |
20911 | My captain answered me:"Yes, my lad, yonder is St. Louis, and this is De Soto''s river; what dost think of it?" |
20911 | Now what is the meaning of this, think you?" |
20911 | Or a donkey? |
20911 | Or are we personages of so small importance that our movements are not chronicled in America?" |
20911 | Or have we tamely forgotten them? |
20911 | Or, since I was going direct to mademoiselle''s house, would I be expected to accompany her? |
20911 | Shall I never see you again?" |
20911 | Shall she, like another Phaëthon, madly ascend the chariot of Empire, and spread desolation and horror over the world? |
20911 | Shall we be able with inferior naval forces to defend Louisiana against that power? |
20911 | Shall we have one more?" |
20911 | Shall we not follow the leading feature of our nation''s policy? |
20911 | Shall we wantonly court destruction and violate all the maxims of policy which ought to govern infant and free republics? |
20911 | Shall we, then, not negotiate? |
20911 | Suppose I offer him a position on my staff and make a Frenchman of him, and then let the Citizeness de Baloit choose between you? |
20911 | Suppose harm were intended his general? |
20911 | That both naval and military preparations are going forward with extraordinary rapidity?" |
20911 | The Consul interrupted me here, but I thought his tones a little less harsh than before:"Did your uncle know of your intention to enter the palace?" |
20911 | The second, then?" |
20911 | Their first exclamations of horror were followed by a hail of questions:"Who has done this?" |
20911 | Then suddenly mademoiselle spoke up:"Mon Capitaine, if monsieur is going just where I must go, why do not I and Clotilde go with him?" |
20911 | Then why do you not call me Mademoiselle?" |
20911 | This was the last evening I should ever spend with mademoiselle in this world; why should I not enjoy it to the full? |
20911 | Was I not one now in fact, if not in name? |
20911 | Was he not insulted?--was not the nation insulted under his administration? |
20911 | Was it indeed all a bit of enchantment? |
20911 | Was it intended to use in buying up"such creatures,"I said scornfully to myself,"as Talleyrand"? |
20911 | Was it my duty to offer myself as escort to any of the maidens? |
20911 | Was it wrong?" |
20911 | We have heard so many rumors about her; what is the truth?" |
20911 | Well, I had never cherished any hopes; had I not told both my uncle François and the First Consul so? |
20911 | Were those not insults? |
20911 | What are our hopes? |
20911 | What are we to understand by this right given by God and nature? |
20911 | What availed my beautiful plum- colored velvets and lavender satin, lace, and buckles, if I only succeeded in being an awkward hobbledehoy? |
20911 | What could I do? |
20911 | What did Talleyrand mean by repeating over and over, and in such significant phrase, that his answer must be"evasive"? |
20911 | What did one do, I wondered, with a weeping maiden? |
20911 | What did the First Consul want of you last evening?" |
20911 | What do you think would be suitable punishment for such a crime? |
20911 | What does he here, Narcisse?" |
20911 | What does it matter if she sometimes vents her irritation with herself upon me, whom she regards as but a boy? |
20911 | What further Mr. Cocke said I do not know, for at that moment Mr. Lewis whispered to me:"Do you know the lady in the gallery opposite? |
20911 | What had become of my little guide? |
20911 | What had changed her mood? |
20911 | What has led you to think that Mr. Talleyrand desires a bribe from Mr. Livingston? |
20911 | What has the nephew of Monsieur Marbois to do with this matter?" |
20911 | What may we then expect? |
20911 | What shall be the stakes?" |
20911 | What will be its direction if, at the Isthmus of Panama, a simple canal should be opened to connect the one ocean with the other? |
20911 | What would any man have done whose heart was running over with love for the most adorable maiden in the world, and her sweet face so near? |
20911 | What would you give for the whole?" |
20911 | What, in the meantime, will become of your Southern and Western States? |
20911 | Where are your means of sending garrisons thither? |
20911 | Where were you last night, and where was my brother Joseph? |
20911 | Who is sending you notes by Red Jean?" |
20911 | Who shot him, Clotilde? |
20911 | Whom would you like to take?" |
20911 | Why have they not told me? |
20911 | Why need mademoiselle go back to Paris? |
20911 | Why not expel the wrong- doers? |
20911 | Why not seize, then, what is so essential to us as a nation? |
20911 | Why should not the rest be true-- that he had been sent by my friends to bring me back to Paris? |
20911 | Will he think himself authorized to open it? |
20911 | Will she look at me? |
20911 | Will you help us to carry the dog of La Petite to the house, where we can put him in a warm bed? |
20911 | Will you send for Clotilde and tell her that I want her?" |
20911 | Will you take Fatima and keep her for me? |
20911 | Will you tell us the contents of that note, ma chère?" |
20911 | With the Livingstons?" |
20911 | Would he, perhaps, now that he had made me his aide, trust her to me as willingly as to the chevalier? |
20911 | Would my father miss me too sadly? |
20911 | Would that please Monsieur?" |
20911 | Would the great Washington have permitted such an insult had he still been with us? |
20911 | Would you have Monsieur Fouché throw us both into prison? |
20911 | Would you like to go with me?" |
20911 | Would you mind telling me what he said that led you to think so?" |
20911 | Would you not consider it as an aggression? |
20911 | Would your government like to buy it from us?" |
20911 | Yet, sir, did Washington go to war? |
20911 | Yet,"with a grimace,"what can I? |
20911 | You may have heard of him?" |
20911 | You refuse?" |
20911 | You will not let any harm come to him through my betrayal?" |
20911 | or was it that the fine Parisian hat and dress had added the transcendent touch? |
20911 | or was it the haughty Faubourg St. Germain scorning the parvenue of the Tuileries? |
20911 | what shall I do?" |
35208 | And that? |
35208 | And that? |
35208 | Are ye looking at my wolverenes? |
35208 | Are you speaking to me? |
35208 | Broke down, eh? |
35208 | But how do you find your way? |
35208 | But what is that stuff? 35208 Can I put your clothing on the floor and make use of that bench?" |
35208 | Close? |
35208 | Could it be the bantam? |
35208 | Do you believe? |
35208 | Do you know how oyster- shells got on top of the Rocky Mountains? 35208 Do you know that they are the Scotchmen''s totems? |
35208 | High wine? 35208 Me get los''? |
35208 | Now who has done dose t''ing? |
35208 | Scoundrel, do you tell me so? |
35208 | Sir,said the artist,"what do you suppose has become of my overcoat? |
35208 | Thistles? |
35208 | Vot kind of wa- a- y to do- o somet''ing is dat? |
35208 | What is that? |
35208 | Why did you destroy our fort, you rascal? |
35208 | Wo n''t they steal the fish? |
35208 | You do n''t know where these Indians came from, eh? |
35208 | ''May I have the bench?'' |
35208 | ''Oh, my gun?'' |
35208 | ''Where is your gun?'' |
35208 | A good job? |
35208 | Alcohol?" |
35208 | And what is the end? |
35208 | Are you fond of it?" |
35208 | Can you explain dis and dat to one hive of de bees? |
35208 | Chief? |
35208 | Did ye never hear of that? |
35208 | Do you hunt? |
35208 | Do you know why women prefer artificial teeth to those which God has given them? |
35208 | Grant?" |
35208 | How''s the razor?" |
35208 | If Mr. Frenchman, who kept the store, had come from behind his counter, English fashion, and had said:"Come, come; what d''you want? |
35208 | No? |
35208 | Not in Canada, do you say? |
35208 | Waving his hand in an insolent way to the Governor, Boucher called out,"What do you want?" |
35208 | What do I mean? |
35208 | What do you do? |
35208 | What was the use? |
35208 | What would I do? |
35208 | What you do dere, you t''ief?" |
35208 | Who den? |
35208 | You do n''t, eh? |
35208 | You do n''t, eh? |
35208 | You haf done dose t''ing, Mistaire Begg? |
35208 | [ Illustration: MAKING THE SNOW- SHOE]"What do_ you_ want?" |
35208 | [ Illustration: PIERRE, FROM LIFE]"Do you never get lost?" |
35208 | said he,''will ye look at the size of that man-- to be airning his living wid a little pincil?'' |
37656 | Would we take two thousand miles of Canada in the same way? 37656 And why not? 37656 Has she a_ right_ to take offense? 37656 Why not march up to''fifty- four forty''as courageously as we march upon the Rio Grande? 37656 Why not treat Great Britain and Mexico alike? 37656 and must not the other, the sad and real sequel, speedily follow? 37806 Have we not the Kammergericht at Berlin?" |
37806 | Not at any price? |
37806 | English generally has_ au_( now often reduced to_ a_) for Old French_ ã_--_vaunt_(_ vanter_,_ vanitare_),_ tawny_(_ tanné_(?) |
37806 | In 1529 he produced a free version(_ Klagbrief der armen Dürftigen in England_) of the famous_ Supplycacyon of the Beggers_, written abroad( 1528?) |
37806 | said the king''s agent;"could not the king take it from you for nothing, if he chose?" |
36559 | Elkswatawa, N- tha- thah( my brother), why do you seek my life? 36559 A native orator, speaking of the good qualities of his people, said:Are we brave and valiant? |
36559 | Are our women beautiful? |
36559 | Are we strong? |
36559 | But art thou hungry?" |
36559 | Did the Great Spirit manifest displeasure? |
36559 | Had bad spirits entered the brain of Pa- che- ta, whose noble deeds would ever after be celebrated by the nation? |
36559 | Had he taken refuge in the mountains of the West and left his helpless daughter at the mercy of the enemy? |
36559 | Is it a matter of surprise that he should oppose, with ceaseless energy, the encroachment of the white man? |
36559 | Might it not be more just to explain that daily baths in the river, in a cold climate, were the causes of mortality? |
36559 | That his talents should be unsparingly used in the hopeless endeavor to stay the westward progress of civilization? |
36559 | The Pottawatomie, disclosing a great wound in his side, said:"Did n''t you shoot an owl at your house, last night? |
36559 | The Shawnees said:"Can you show us anything better than we have-- good wives, good children, good dogs and plenty of deer?" |
36559 | The fourth night something touched him and said:"What are you doing here?" |
36559 | The gentle voice said:"Why does he who is the kernel of the snail look terrified? |
36559 | The question now obtruded itself,"What should be done with Maune ´?" |
36559 | Was all hope lost? |
36559 | What was the cause of that cruel, crafty expression? |
36559 | Whence came these legends and traditions? |
36559 | Where was the Kansas chief? |
36559 | Why is he faint and weary?" |
36559 | Will you pity my age and helplessness and release him to me?" |
25998 | About to take another night swim in the Ohio, Indians or no Indians? |
25998 | Ah, they come from all the tribes, do they not? |
25998 | Ai n''t it fine, Henry? |
25998 | Ai n''t it likely that the people in the fort will help us? |
25998 | All been quiet, Henry? |
25998 | All the tribes are here, are they not? |
25998 | An''do we attack? |
25998 | An''you, Paul? |
25998 | An''you, Tom? |
25998 | And why could n''t we raise them guns? |
25998 | And with plenty of Teghsto? |
25998 | And you live by fishing, you say? |
25998 | And you, Drouillard? |
25998 | Are the others well? |
25998 | Are you all here, boys? |
25998 | Are you hit, Sol? |
25998 | Are you out uv your head? |
25998 | Are you ready? |
25998 | At the expense of your own kind? |
25998 | At this rate can we last all the way? |
25998 | Braxton,he said, and his tone was mild and persuasive,"why are you so bitter against this boy Ware and his comrades?" |
25998 | Broke? |
25998 | But how to do it? |
25998 | But how? |
25998 | But what good is a map ef it do n''t take you anywhar? |
25998 | Can we force it now? 25998 Can you make out what it is?" |
25998 | Can you make''em out clearly, Sol? |
25998 | Did you ever see a feller love cookin''ez he does? 25998 Did you overtake him?" |
25998 | Did you shoot? |
25998 | Do you call that the footprint of a man? |
25998 | Do you know any of them? |
25998 | Do you know who he is? |
25998 | Do you really think so? |
25998 | Do you reckon that Jim wuz hit hard? |
25998 | Do you see anything on either side, Henry? |
25998 | Do you see it? |
25998 | Do you still give your promise? |
25998 | Do you think that all the nations and all the chiefs of the great valley are assembling here merely for failure? 25998 Do you think we ought to try the signal for the others now, Sol?" |
25998 | Do you think you can reach them with a bullet, Seth Cole? |
25998 | Do you wish to remain on the_ Independence_,he said,"or would you prefer another place in the fleet?" |
25998 | Ees eet possible that they are friends? |
25998 | Got anything to eat left? |
25998 | Have our warriors been kind to you? |
25998 | Have you seen signs of deer or buffalo near? |
25998 | Heard anything? |
25998 | Henry, what''s all this about the getherin''at the mouth o''the Lickin''? |
25998 | How can we fight those cannons? |
25998 | How did you escape, Henry? |
25998 | How do you know it? |
25998 | How far away would you say that bonfire is? |
25998 | How in the name of Neptune do you ever expect to get back again, my young friend? |
25998 | How long has it been since the boy Henry Ware left us? |
25998 | How many men have we on foot, and fit to fight? |
25998 | How you like ball game? |
25998 | How? |
25998 | I''ve heard that these same Indians with whom you''re so thick burned your step- father at the stake? |
25998 | If it has a chance? 25998 Illinois, Ottawas, Miamis, Shawnees, and Delawares?" |
25998 | In what way? |
25998 | Is death sweet to you, just when you are becoming a great warrior? 25998 Is it bad, Tom?" |
25998 | Is it you, Ware; is it you, young sir? |
25998 | Is the fishing good? |
25998 | It is merely a withdrawal for another and better opportunity, is it not? |
25998 | It is n''t so pleasant to be trussed up in that fashion, is it? |
25998 | Let the promise go another day? |
25998 | Me? |
25998 | Nor heard anything? |
25998 | Now which way do you figger that he would go? |
25998 | Now, Chief, would you tell me what Yungenah means? |
25998 | Now, Paul,said Henry,"what were you trying to do?" |
25998 | Now, ai n''t that Paul all over? |
25998 | Now, ai n''t that old Long Jim through an''through? |
25998 | Now, ai n''t this snug? |
25998 | Now, what in the name of Neptune do you make of it, young sir? |
25998 | Now, what in thunder did Paul do it fur? |
25998 | Now, what under the moon is that? |
25998 | Now, what under the sun do you mean, Henry? |
25998 | Now,said Long Jim,"how are you goin''to tell what Paul wuz thinkin''when he wuz comin''''long here?" |
25998 | Of an attack by whom? |
25998 | Ohezu-- do you mean the Ohio? |
25998 | One of you? 25998 Put it out?" |
25998 | Ready, Seth? |
25998 | S''pose,said Shif''less Sol,"them woods should be full o''warriors, every one o''them waitin''to take a shot at us ez soon ez we came in range? |
25998 | See anything that looks hostile in there, Henry? |
25998 | Seth Cole? |
25998 | Shall we ever get through? |
25998 | Simon Girty,called Henry in the language of the Shawnees, which he spoke well,"do you know me?" |
25998 | Since when, Girty,he asked,"have the Wyandots become old women? |
25998 | Sink it? |
25998 | So that is Captain Pipe, is it? |
25998 | So they are to begin to- morrow, are they? |
25998 | Sootae( Beaver)? |
25998 | Stars? |
25998 | Teghsto? |
25998 | Them two shots that hit in the water close to us wuz fired at you, wuzn''t they? |
25998 | Then the feather indicates the presence of hostile Indians? |
25998 | They wo n''t burn unless the fire is nursed? |
25998 | Was that where you caught the bullet? |
25998 | Well, how''s your arm, Raccoon? |
25998 | Well, what do you think of us? |
25998 | Were you fishin''when you saw me? |
25998 | What are they? |
25998 | What are you doing? |
25998 | What can he want? |
25998 | What could canoes do against a fort on a hill? |
25998 | What damage did they do to us last night? |
25998 | What did you say, sir? |
25998 | What do you expect there? |
25998 | What do you say, gentlemen? |
25998 | What do you think of it, Lyon? |
25998 | What do you think of it, Sol? |
25998 | What do you think of the landing? |
25998 | What does Simon Girty want with us? |
25998 | What does the great Timmendiquas, head chief of the Wyandots, think of the things that we have done? |
25998 | What have you seen? |
25998 | What is it, Henry? |
25998 | What is it, Jim? |
25998 | What is it, Sol? |
25998 | What is it? 25998 What is it?" |
25998 | What is it? |
25998 | What is that? 25998 What is that?" |
25998 | What is the matter, Henry? |
25998 | What is your offer, Chief? |
25998 | What kind of a noise? |
25998 | What was it? |
25998 | What were you saying to them? |
25998 | What''s the matter, Sol? |
25998 | What''s your notion, Henry? |
25998 | What''s your opinion about the place where we''ll find Tom, if we find him at all? |
25998 | Where are the others? |
25998 | Where do they get them? |
25998 | Where have you been camping? |
25998 | Who are you? |
25998 | Who is that by the side of Captain Pipe? |
25998 | Who is the best marksman you have? |
25998 | Who is this that taunts us? |
25998 | Why are you disappointed? |
25998 | Why do you look so often and with so much anxiety toward the Ohio? |
25998 | Why do you talk to me about Timmendiquas? |
25998 | Why not buffalo? |
25998 | Why should n''t I be a great man among the Indians? |
25998 | Will you call Seth Cole? |
25998 | Would n''t that make your mouth water? 25998 Yandawezue?" |
25998 | Yes, how? |
25998 | You believe you heard a sound that was neither the thunder nor the wind? |
25998 | You can not change? |
25998 | You cook at night? |
25998 | You found nothing, of course? |
25998 | You have come with the great white force up Yandawezue? |
25998 | You know just where them boats were when you sunk''em? |
25998 | You like to be out in the forest with Whoraminta? |
25998 | You mean, then,said Girty,"that we''re to have your scalps?" |
25998 | You no like being captive, held in lodge, with arms tied? |
25998 | You reached Fort Prescott, o''course? |
25998 | You saw Timmendiquas? |
25998 | You want volunteers, I suppose? |
25998 | You''re sure that no one saw us? |
25998 | Yuingeh( Duck)? |
25998 | Yungenah( Dog)? |
25998 | Yungenah? |
25998 | ''Is your name Hyde?'' |
25998 | ''Solomon Hyde?'' |
25998 | ''The one they call Shif''less Sol?'' |
25998 | After all, what did he have to offer but a stray feather, carried by the wind? |
25998 | Ai n''t that so, Sol? |
25998 | Are not these causes enough for hatred?" |
25998 | Are you shore we come along this way, Henry? |
25998 | Boone?" |
25998 | Boone?" |
25998 | Boone?" |
25998 | But how? |
25998 | But would any one live to come back? |
25998 | Ca n''t you think of the English word for it?" |
25998 | Cole?" |
25998 | Could any spectacle be more tremendous than the one we behold to- night?" |
25998 | Could he have been mistaken in his surmise, and could it have been Shif''less Sol and Tom Ross or perhaps Long Jim who had fired the timely bullets? |
25998 | Could it really be they? |
25998 | Could we have deceived ourselves into hearing what we wanted to hear? |
25998 | Did any of us ever before have a chance to help at the taking of such a treasure?" |
25998 | Did n''t that owl hoot sharp and short fur an owl? |
25998 | Did others start?" |
25998 | Did the Injuns make you a present o''that before you ran away?" |
25998 | Do n''t you hear it, louder than before?" |
25998 | Do n''t you see I''m white?" |
25998 | Do you hear anything?" |
25998 | Do you think the great chief, Timmendiquas, will draw off?" |
25998 | Do you think you will be strong enough to start in the morning?" |
25998 | Do you think, Mr. Ware, that having had a taste of our mettle, they have withdrawn?" |
25998 | For what else but his life? |
25998 | Had his four faithful comrades taken his advice and stayed with the fleet, or were they now in the forest seeking him? |
25998 | Have we not already held back the white man''s fleet?" |
25998 | Have you put any men in the top of the blockhouse?" |
25998 | He decided upon a bold policy and called loudly:"Who is there?" |
25998 | He is the one whom you hate the most, is he not?" |
25998 | Henry''s sympathies were with her, but could the Dove evade all the warriors? |
25998 | How are you, Henry?" |
25998 | How can any one believe a traitor? |
25998 | How can your Indian allies believe that the man who murders his own people would not murder them when the time came?" |
25998 | How could a white man fight thus against his own people, even to using the torch and the stake upon them? |
25998 | How could anything come out of that darkness and storm and through the Indian host? |
25998 | How could that happen?" |
25998 | How did it come about, Sol?" |
25998 | How many men have you got?" |
25998 | If the boy is what he is, what will the man be?" |
25998 | In the name of Neptune, how did you do it?" |
25998 | Is it not so, Tom, and you, Sol?" |
25998 | Is n''t that so, boys, and is n''t it fine?" |
25998 | Is such a thing possible?" |
25998 | Is this the Henry Ware that we''ve knowed so long?" |
25998 | Long Jim sprang to his feet in astonishment, and uttered the involuntary question:"Give up what?" |
25998 | Major Braithwaite himself shuddered, but he replied in a strong voice:"And what is the alternative that you offer us?" |
25998 | Not comin''back? |
25998 | Now what in the name of Neptune can they want?" |
25998 | Now what''ll he do?" |
25998 | Now which way, Simon, do you think the camp of the Indians will be?" |
25998 | Now, what did you hear among the Wyandots?" |
25998 | Now, which way did he go?" |
25998 | Or was it some phantasy that Manitou had sent to bewilder him? |
25998 | Since when have they become both weak and ignorant?" |
25998 | So what have I to complain of?" |
25998 | Stop, do you smell that?" |
25998 | The Major noticed his manner and asked:"Is it anything alarming?" |
25998 | They could reply to rifles with rifles, but how were they to defend themselves from cannon which from a safe range could batter them to pieces? |
25998 | They rested a while longer, and then Henry asked:"Sol, do you think that we can find Tom Ross?" |
25998 | Those stakes are green wood, are they not?" |
25998 | Truly, what had he to fear? |
25998 | Warriors of the allied tribes, is it not so?" |
25998 | Warriors, will you go home like women or stay with your chiefs and fight?" |
25998 | Was it alive? |
25998 | Was it imagination about the cannon? |
25998 | Was it really a human head with human eyes looking into his own? |
25998 | Was so much blood to be shed, so much suffering to be endured for nothing? |
25998 | What did you mean? |
25998 | What did you say his Injun name wuz?" |
25998 | What do you mean by those words?" |
25998 | What do you say about yours, Major?" |
25998 | What do you say, Seth?" |
25998 | What do you say, Simon?" |
25998 | What do you say, Sol?" |
25998 | What do you think is likely to happen here? |
25998 | What do you think of it, Seth?" |
25998 | What do you think?" |
25998 | What does it matter ef you do n''t git anywhar? |
25998 | What have we to fear?" |
25998 | What if we should capture it? |
25998 | What right hev you, Jim Hart, to tickle my nose with sech smells, an''then refuse to give to me the cause o''it? |
25998 | What was that? |
25998 | What will the wooden walls in Kentucky be to us when we get those big guns?" |
25998 | Where were they now? |
25998 | Who had fired the bullets? |
25998 | Who in the west, white or red, that had not heard of Simon Girty? |
25998 | Why?" |
25998 | Will you lead it?" |
25998 | Will you tell me your name?" |
25998 | Would bad fortune turn to good? |
25998 | Would n''t that be hurryin''to meet trouble a leetle too fast?" |
25998 | You do not mean to tell me that the others have all been killed?" |
25998 | You understand?" |
32161 | Anything else? 32161 Are you looking for the tongs? |
32161 | Breakfast? |
32161 | But what would we do with the hole it left? |
32161 | Ca n''t you see? |
32161 | Can I help you? |
32161 | Clear? |
32161 | Cobber? |
32161 | Considering it yourself? |
32161 | Did it work? |
32161 | Did n''t you come in half an hour ago? |
32161 | Did you notice the fare to Mars? 32161 Did you notice the pictures they showed us? |
32161 | Do n''t you understand? |
32161 | Do you feel right? 32161 Do you think I''m going to trust myself to that machine?" |
32161 | Do you wish to remain longer? |
32161 | Doumya Filone was the assistant? |
32161 | Have there been others? |
32161 | How do I do that? |
32161 | How''s the patient? |
32161 | I do n''t want specific information, but how can you make robbery pay off these days? |
32161 | I was critical? |
32161 | Is n''t there anything sooner? |
32161 | Is that all? |
32161 | Is that the one that monitors the circuit in my body? |
32161 | Is that why you came to Venus? |
32161 | Is there anything I can do for you? |
32161 | It had to be you, did n''t it? |
32161 | Mind if I look at the setup? |
32161 | Mind telling me? 32161 Mink?" |
32161 | None of my business, except in a professional way, but who do I leave out? |
32161 | Now, who''s got money? 32161 Sales? |
32161 | Sounds good, but have we got him? |
32161 | Thadeus Jadiver, consulting engineer? |
32161 | The other kind is just a cosmetic, is n''t it? |
32161 | Then what did you mean when you said you''d help? |
32161 | Think so? |
32161 | Too much competition? |
32161 | What about the moons of Jupiter? |
32161 | What am I in for? |
32161 | What are those instructions? |
32161 | What can we do? 32161 What do you want?" |
32161 | What good is it? |
32161 | What happened to them? |
32161 | What happened? |
32161 | What happened? |
32161 | What is this bargain? |
32161 | What kind of faces? 32161 What places, for instance?" |
32161 | What''s a combo job? |
32161 | What''s the hurry? |
32161 | What''s this wonderful offer? |
32161 | What? |
32161 | Where are my clothes? |
32161 | Where do you want me to stand? |
32161 | Where is it-- Alpha Centauri? |
32161 | White ducks? |
32161 | Who can you trust? 32161 Why are you here?" |
32161 | Why did n''t you tell me this in the beginning? |
32161 | Why do n''t you leave me alone? 32161 Why do n''t you like robots? |
32161 | Why? |
32161 | Would you have listened when I first contacted you? |
32161 | You designed most of it back on Earth, remember? |
32161 | You played football? |
32161 | You promised, but what can you do? |
32161 | You were? |
32161 | ***** Would Jadiver have listened? |
32161 | And do you want anything else?" |
32161 | And the raw material--"Who did choose me?" |
32161 | And was it the police? |
32161 | And you know why the pictures were like that? |
32161 | Are you sure of your equilibrium?" |
32161 | Can I help you?" |
32161 | Can I help you?" |
32161 | Could they see what Jadiver was doing? |
32161 | Did it also sleep when he did? |
32161 | Did it really itch that bad, or was it an unconscious excuse to see the doctor? |
32161 | Did she really expect it to be effective, or did she have something else in mind? |
32161 | Did you stop to think why?" |
32161 | Do you have anything that leaves a face feeling like skin?" |
32161 | How close are we?" |
32161 | How many?" |
32161 | How much of that applied to him, to the body it was concealed in? |
32161 | However, if it was an emergency--? |
32161 | If you go to a doctor good enough to find a gadget that small, what is he? |
32161 | Is there an alarm system which would indicate that something was wrong?" |
32161 | Mars? |
32161 | New or replacement?" |
32161 | Not only how far but also what kind of data did the circuit transmit? |
32161 | Remember?" |
32161 | Shall I make the arrangements?" |
32161 | Shampoo?" |
32161 | She had left the screen for some time-- for what purpose? |
32161 | Soft faces, hard faces, space faces? |
32161 | That''s right, is n''t it?" |
32161 | The purpose? |
32161 | The woman asked doubtfully,"Could you?" |
32161 | Then what? |
32161 | Was she an automaton that reacted in response to a button? |
32161 | Was she calling elsewhere for instructions? |
32161 | What about raccoon? |
32161 | What did anyone use a circuit for? |
32161 | What did they want? |
32161 | What else? |
32161 | When do I begin?" |
32161 | Where do I work?" |
32161 | Who was it? |
32161 | Why not? |
32161 | Why should it be strange I can do the same with humans?" |
32161 | Why should n''t the bodies be beautiful, considering how they''re made? |
32161 | Why? |
38457 | 300,000| Mozambique|? |
38457 | 35,000 Natal| 21,150| 416,219| Pietermaritzburg| 14,231 Nubia|? |
38457 | 35,000|? |
20472 | A picnic, boy? 20472 Ah, airships?" |
20472 | And can I trust to you to take good care of my four girls? 20472 And what is your father''s business, my child?" |
20472 | And where were you? |
20472 | And who is Anne Pierson? |
20472 | And who may that be, my dear? |
20472 | And you will all be in before dark? |
20472 | Anne Pierson? |
20472 | Anne, did she say anything about it in her note? |
20472 | Anne, my child,exclaimed Grace, who always seemed much older than the others,"how late do you study at night? |
20472 | Anne, you funny child, do n''t you see we are all waiting impatiently? |
20472 | Anne,pursued David, as they strolled down River Street together,"when I make my flying machine will you be afraid to take a sail with me?" |
20472 | Anne,she said aloud,"I think you know my friends, do n''t you-- Jessica Bright and Nora O''Malley? |
20472 | Are they very beautiful? |
20472 | Are we expected to learn lessons we have never been taught and has that horrid Miriam been studying ahead? |
20472 | Are we still going to try to save her? |
20472 | Are you agreed on Hippopotamus, my adopted daughters? |
20472 | Are you happy, Anne, in your beautiful pink dress? |
20472 | Aunt Rose,cried a voice outside,"are n''t you glad to see me?" |
20472 | Be you laughing or crying, miss? |
20472 | But being a member of a respectable family and about to enter college, you have to sleep in a bed under cover? |
20472 | But do n''t you think we had better see Miss Mary Pierson before we do anything? |
20472 | But then, were there ever before such nice girls as my four adopted daughters? |
20472 | But what is she to do? |
20472 | But what''s this you say about the freshman class? 20472 But who gave us away?" |
20472 | By the way, Anne, where is the doll? |
20472 | By the way, David, you did n''t happen to overhear the password, did you? |
20472 | By the way,she asked presently, when she had calmed herself,"who was it that found the letter?" |
20472 | By the way,went on Mrs. Gray,"do you know any girl who would like to come up and read to me twice a week, and write my notes for me? |
20472 | Ca n''t we hide behind the seats? |
20472 | Ca n''t we set the police on him? |
20472 | Ca n''t your inventive brain devise a scheme of revenge? |
20472 | Could n''t you squeeze us into the carriage, mother? |
20472 | David Nesbit,cried Grace,"where have you been all this time? |
20472 | David, are you much hurt? |
20472 | Did anyone drop a hint to the sophomores of our secret meeting place? |
20472 | Did it hurt it when it fell? |
20472 | Did n''t Miriam tell you about it? |
20472 | Did n''t Miss Leece mention it? 20472 Did n''t you get my telegram? |
20472 | Do n''t you agree with me that it''s a great find? |
20472 | Do n''t you know? |
20472 | Do n''t you like nutting parties, Miriam? |
20472 | Do n''t you think it''s time somebody put me on? |
20472 | Do n''t you think this is a thrilling sight, Anne? |
20472 | Do n''t you want to come along and see the fun? |
20472 | Do you know that I am greatly in your debt, my child? |
20472 | Do you know that suspension or expulsion are the punishments for such behavior? |
20472 | Do you like it? |
20472 | Do you mean to say you have never been coasting, Anne? |
20472 | Do you play football? |
20472 | Do you think I''d stay? |
20472 | Do you think we can stand him for a week? |
20472 | Fine or superfine? |
20472 | Gives you one? |
20472 | Grace Harlowe, do you think I did it on purpose? |
20472 | Grace, was that your voice? |
20472 | Grace,whispered Jessica, taking advantage of the talk of the others not to be overheard,"did you notice Miriam when Miss Thompson began her speech?" |
20472 | Have you an idea? |
20472 | Have you been long in Oakdale? |
20472 | Have you ever ridden in an airship? |
20472 | Have you never seen that green silk before? |
20472 | Have you nothing to say? |
20472 | Hiding behind the ladies, hey? |
20472 | How about one of the gallery doors? |
20472 | How can I help being happy? |
20472 | How did those clever children ever do it? |
20472 | How did you leave your cousins in England, Tom? |
20472 | How do you do, my dear? |
20472 | How do you do, my dears? |
20472 | How do you do? |
20472 | How do you like this, girls? |
20472 | How shall I ever thank you, dear friends? |
20472 | How''s this for a winter picnic? |
20472 | Hurry up, Anne, are n''t you curious to see what it is? |
20472 | If I tell, you wo n''t give me away, will you? |
20472 | If you want any help,offered David as he left Grace at her front door,"you know where to come for it, do n''t you?" |
20472 | If you were not the originator, who was? |
20472 | In spite of what her brother is doing for us to- night? |
20472 | Indeed? |
20472 | Is anything the matter? |
20472 | Is everyone here? |
20472 | Is it big or little? |
20472 | Is it granted, little Lady Gray? |
20472 | Is n''t it a wonderful old house? |
20472 | Is n''t it sweet? |
20472 | Is n''t it? |
20472 | Is that any of your business, young man? |
20472 | Is that really an invitation? |
20472 | Is there a play at the Opera House to- night? |
20472 | Is there any sport in the world that can touch it? |
20472 | Is this yours, Anne? |
20472 | It has not been done so far,admitted Miss Thompson,"but why is Anne so bent on winning the prize? |
20472 | It is Miss Leece, is it, who is trumping up all this business? 20472 Lots more fun than throwing balls at dummies at the county fair, was n''t it, fellows?" |
20472 | May I walk with you? |
20472 | Might I do it? |
20472 | Miriam? 20472 Miss Nesbit,"said the teacher,"will you demonstrate this problem?" |
20472 | Miss Pierson, Do You Recognize This Figure? |
20472 | Mr. Gleason,she demanded of the clerk in charge,"could you tell me what perfume this is?" |
20472 | Must I go back and ask all those storekeepers for more lists? |
20472 | Nora, will you give us your imitations? |
20472 | O Miss Thompson,she cried, making a great effort to keep back her tears,"where did you find it? |
20472 | Oh, Grace,she whispered,"wo n''t you excuse me? |
20472 | Oh, have you never heard? |
20472 | Perhaps you prefer baseball? |
20472 | Pierson, Pierson? |
20472 | Ready for what? |
20472 | Really? |
20472 | Reddy, are you perfectly sure we wo n''t get lost in this place? |
20472 | Reddy, are you sure you''re right? |
20472 | River Street? |
20472 | Shall you fly around Oakdale in it? |
20472 | She''s the captain of the basketball team, is n''t she? |
20472 | So I fooled you, did I, you gray rascals? |
20472 | So you are the gold medal girl, Miriam? 20472 Something about actors, was n''t it?" |
20472 | Suppose I take you home? 20472 Suppose you feed me to them?" |
20472 | Then everybody is n''t invited? |
20472 | There seems to be no difference of opinion on that score,she replied;"but is David the only boy in Oakdale?" |
20472 | This is a young people''s party, I presume? |
20472 | Was n''t it the most fortunate thing in the world? 20472 Was n''t it though?" |
20472 | Well, Grace, my dear,said Miss Thompson, as the young girl entered,"did my note frighten you?" |
20472 | Well, just strictly between us and as man to man, as David is always saying, do n''t you think he is horrid? 20472 Well, what are we going to do?" |
20472 | Well, what difference does it make? |
20472 | Were you not the originator of this outrageous plot, Miss Pierson? |
20472 | What did Miriam Nesbit mean by studying ahead like that? |
20472 | What do you like, then? |
20472 | What do you mean by''hang''her? |
20472 | What do you mean? |
20472 | What do you want? |
20472 | What do you want? |
20472 | What good will that do Anne? |
20472 | What in the world do you suppose he wants with our poor little Anne? |
20472 | What in the world is it? |
20472 | What in the world is the matter? |
20472 | What is it? |
20472 | What is it? |
20472 | What is this trouble between you and Miss Leece, Miss Pierson? |
20472 | What shall I do to her, Anne? 20472 What shall we do?" |
20472 | What shall we do? |
20472 | What was it, dear? |
20472 | What''s the use? |
20472 | What? |
20472 | Where are they going? |
20472 | Where are who going? |
20472 | Where did she learn how? |
20472 | Where did you get this one? |
20472 | Where do I come in? |
20472 | Where do you live, dear? |
20472 | Where is the model? |
20472 | Which way did they go? |
20472 | Who else? |
20472 | Who is old Jean? |
20472 | Who is the girl in front? |
20472 | Who told you so? |
20472 | Who were the people? |
20472 | Who, having once seen it could ever forget it? |
20472 | Who, me? |
20472 | Who? |
20472 | Why are all these strange young women breaking into my premises? |
20472 | Why did n''t I do this long ago? |
20472 | Why did n''t I think of it sooner? 20472 Why did n''t she get out of the way? |
20472 | Why did we stop the song? 20472 Why do n''t we do the same thing?" |
20472 | Why do n''t you give a house party, too? |
20472 | Why do n''t you take a walk and not try to do any studying this afternoon? |
20472 | Why do n''t you take the other side? |
20472 | Why do you ask it at all, then, Tom, dear? |
20472 | Why does n''t she pick up the flower? |
20472 | Why have I not met her? 20472 Why is she the sponsor of the class?" |
20472 | Why, what has happened, Miss Thompson? |
20472 | Why, what on earth does the woman mean? |
20472 | Why? |
20472 | Why? |
20472 | Wo n''t it be fun? |
20472 | Wo n''t you come in? |
20472 | Would it give you any pleasure or help to heal your hurt feelings? |
20472 | Would n''t you rather do this than write an essay or study Latin prose composition? |
20472 | You are a newcomer, are you not? 20472 You are not sure it would trespass on your time too much, Anne?" |
20472 | You do n''t mean to say it was n''t a fair election? |
20472 | You do n''t suppose, for a minute, Anne would be dishonest? 20472 You shall have everything you want,"said Mrs. Gray,"but who will carry the lunch?" |
20472 | You think it was then----? |
20472 | You think you''ll keep me here all night, do you, old hounds? 20472 You will, will you?" |
20472 | A flying machine?" |
20472 | A loose board creaked in the floor, or was it a door which opened and closed softly? |
20472 | A mile? |
20472 | And David? |
20472 | And besides, why should n''t she have come back to the building? |
20472 | And now Anne heard the door open again and Miss Thompson''s voice calling:"Who is there?" |
20472 | And now, my lady- birds, who else shall we invite to the house party?" |
20472 | Anne, if she walks into you to- morrow morning, you can just lay the blame on me, do you hear? |
20472 | Are all my Christmas children here?" |
20472 | Are these little places dressing rooms, Anne?" |
20472 | Are you asleep, child? |
20472 | As she pushed the swinging door, she heard David say:"You low blackguard, what do you mean by stealing your aunt''s silver?" |
20472 | As they paused to admire the beautiful flower beds on the Nesbit lawn Jessica said:"Have you inquired Miriam''s favorite perfume?" |
20472 | Besides, what has she to do with it?" |
20472 | But is n''t he the limit?" |
20472 | But it was-- how long ago? |
20472 | But now, what was to be done? |
20472 | But she_ does_ look sweet, does n''t she?" |
20472 | But where is this wonderful young woman who is outstripping our brilliant Miriam? |
20472 | But who could doubt what the outcome would be? |
20472 | But who had sent the lilies of the valley? |
20472 | But who was it half lying, half sitting on the church steps, shivering with cold? |
20472 | But who would have the heart to hold her father up to ridicule in this way, and to cause her such secret pain and unhappiness? |
20472 | But who would stop to think of trails with a pack of hungry wolves at his heels? |
20472 | But would it have swerved her from her present purpose, even if she had noticed Miss Leece following her? |
20472 | But, since she was Miriam''s guest, what else was there to do? |
20472 | But, young ladies, before we get any further, tell me what you think of the plan?" |
20472 | CHAPTER IV THE BLACK MONKS OF ASIA"Who wants to go nutting?" |
20472 | CHAPTER XVI THE MARIONETTE SHOW Do you remember your first party dress? |
20472 | CHAPTER XXII DANGER AHEAD MY DEAR GRACE: Will you come and see me at my office after school to- day? |
20472 | Ca n''t I do something? |
20472 | Ca n''t you work up a scheme with that to go upon, girls?" |
20472 | Can you guess what has brought us here to- night, all dressed up in our best?" |
20472 | Can you imagine who could have done it?" |
20472 | Could Miriam Nesbit have been so false to her class? |
20472 | Did David suspect anything about his sister? |
20472 | Did n''t we keep it dark?" |
20472 | Did n''t you hear her say so that night? |
20472 | Did you feel a thrill of pleasure when the last hook and eye was fastened and you surveyed yourself in the longest mirror in the house? |
20472 | Did you notice a path which began at the hut and which was evidently Jean''s trail? |
20472 | Did you notice that?" |
20472 | Do n''t we, girls?" |
20472 | Do n''t you think I could leave at a side entrance? |
20472 | Do you know how hard she has worked to win this prize? |
20472 | Do you know,"she continued presently,"that Miss Leece intends to denounce Anne before the faculty to- night? |
20472 | Do you suppose he wants her to barnstorm?" |
20472 | Do you think I want any more than my four nice freshmen to amuse me? |
20472 | Do you think Mrs. Gray would ask you to join those four nice girls in her house after that Miss Leece business? |
20472 | Do you think you could manage it if I helped you?" |
20472 | Do you think, Miss Pierson, that such an escapade as you engaged in last night was entirely respectful or worthy of a pupil of Oakdale High School?" |
20472 | For, is it not better to say farewell rejoicing so that no shadows may darken the memory we shall carry with us during the long months of separation? |
20472 | Give her an electric shock?" |
20472 | Glue it together or mend it with a piece of sticking plaster?" |
20472 | Gray?" |
20472 | Gray?" |
20472 | Gray?" |
20472 | Gray?" |
20472 | Gray?" |
20472 | Gray?" |
20472 | Gray?" |
20472 | Gray?" |
20472 | Had he known then that his sister had lost the prize, or was his faith in Anne so great? |
20472 | Had it all been a dream, their winter picnic, or was old Jean at that very moment really nailing wolf skins to his wall? |
20472 | Had it been put in that particular spot years ago just to save their eight lives now? |
20472 | Had not Miriam''s guest and chum exceeded all bounds of politeness by prying into other people''s affairs? |
20472 | Had she, after all, made a mistake, and was she losing ground in the class? |
20472 | Have you any answer to make to these charges?" |
20472 | Have you forgotten it''s Hallowe''en?" |
20472 | How could she spend a week in a beautiful house, with parties every night and company all the time, and nothing to wear but that hideous black silk? |
20472 | How could you tell?" |
20472 | How did anyone know we were going to have a marionette show? |
20472 | How do you know the wolves wo n''t seize you the moment you open the door? |
20472 | How far from Chicago will they be when Train B passes Train A?''" |
20472 | How it gave a glimpse of the throat and neck, and seemed to sweep the ground all around, although it merely reached your shoe tops? |
20472 | How was it that the boys had not noticed before that the girls were not alone? |
20472 | I saw her, too, but----""But what, Anne?" |
20472 | I should never think of suspecting any of my fine girls of such trickery; and, yet, who else could it have been except one of the freshmen?" |
20472 | I-- I----""You what? |
20472 | In the first place, was n''t it perfectly delightful?" |
20472 | Is it all for glory, do you think?" |
20472 | Is it possible you would try to keep some one else from rising in life, when your own family struggled with poverty years ago?" |
20472 | Is it you, Grace, my dear?" |
20472 | Is n''t she, mother?" |
20472 | Is that it, Jessica?" |
20472 | Is there any girl who would like to earn a little pocket money? |
20472 | Is there no clue whatever to the person who copied the papers?" |
20472 | It was you, was n''t it, who started the fire panic?" |
20472 | Miss Harlowe, what time must she be there?" |
20472 | Moreover, was she not wearing a beautiful dress of pink crepe de Chine? |
20472 | My little girl crying?" |
20472 | Now Anne----""_ Anne?_"interrupted Grace horrified. |
20472 | Now, do you understand?" |
20472 | Now, what perfume is it, and who in the class uses it? |
20472 | Now, what shall it be? |
20472 | Or was it really Anne, this little vision in rose color with glowing cheeks and sparkling eyes? |
20472 | Perhaps to- morrow after church you will take luncheon with me? |
20472 | Shall I take him up?" |
20472 | Shall I?" |
20472 | Should they ever see their four brave friends again? |
20472 | Something told her not to open the box, but how could she help it with dozens of her friends waiting eagerly to see what was in it? |
20472 | Suppose you should get lost?" |
20472 | The Range and Grange Hustlers By FRANK GEE PATCHIN Have you any idea of the excitements, the glories of life on great ranches in the West? |
20472 | Tom Gray Escapes from the Wolves Grace Harlowe''s Plebe Year at High School CHAPTER I THE ACCIDENT OF FRIENDSHIPS"Who is the new girl in the class?" |
20472 | Two or more years, was n''t it?" |
20472 | Was it a premonition that compelled her to return to the schoolroom and search again for it? |
20472 | Was n''t it great?" |
20472 | Was there anyone in the world who could be sending her a box that night? |
20472 | Was there ever a girl in the world who did not want to exchange confidences with her best friends after a party? |
20472 | What do you advise, Anne?" |
20472 | What in the world could Miss Thompson want to discuss with her? |
20472 | What is the latest? |
20472 | What mad notion is this?" |
20472 | What shall we do?" |
20472 | What the crestfallen Miriam kept wondering was:"Wherever did she learn to do it?" |
20472 | What was to be done? |
20472 | Where did the voice come from? |
20472 | Where had they smelled it before? |
20472 | Where''s Anne?" |
20472 | Which girl do you think has the best chance of winning it?" |
20472 | Who are the four nicest boys you know?" |
20472 | Who could have played this cruel trick upon her? |
20472 | Who is in the surprise?" |
20472 | Whoever heard of having every examination paper perfect?" |
20472 | Why did n''t you come last night?" |
20472 | Why did she ever ask down that wretch of a nephew? |
20472 | Why did you run and hide? |
20472 | Why do n''t you open it and see?" |
20472 | Why do you have such things about to destroy people''s clothes?" |
20472 | Why else did they invite her to their ball?" |
20472 | Why?" |
20472 | Will you come and receive with Jessica and Nora and me?" |
20472 | Will you come and see me very soon? |
20472 | Will you forgive me?" |
20472 | Will you show him the way?" |
20472 | Would n''t it be fun?" |
20472 | You may ask why this mystery? |
20472 | You''re at the head of your class, as usual, I suppose?" |
20472 | [ Illustration:"Miss Pierson, Do You Recognize This Figure?"] |
20472 | exclaimed Jessica, who all this time had been looking the doll over carefully,"where have you seen this material before?" |
20472 | next Friday night?" |
37498 | About an hour later Mrs. Craig, looking back, saw only two children and cried out,"Where is the baby?" |
37498 | All alone with her children and servants in the Western wilds, is it any marvel that Lucy Jefferson Lewis should sigh for the happy home of her youth? |
37498 | But who was this primitive race? |
37498 | Ca n''t you let me into the penitentiary and tell Buck Parker whar he can find me when he comes?" |
37498 | Could n''t he have escaped?" |
37498 | He d you saw anything of Buck Parker?" |
37498 | Liles?" |
37498 | Sheriff Parker asked,"How long will it take ye, Jay- bird?" |
37498 | Utterly astounded, Governor Clark asked,"Who is Buck Parker?" |
37498 | What can I do for you?" |
37498 | What do you suppose the sheriff replied? |
37498 | What should be done? |
37498 | When told it was just as"Jay- bird"had said, the governor, in amazement, asked,"Is the man crazy? |
37498 | Whence did they come and what did they accomplish? |
37498 | You go that way; but let me take my gun and walk through the mountains to Frankfort, wo n''t ye? |
18874 | ''You are a doctor''s wife?'' 18874 ''You are a doctor, an operating doctor?'' |
18874 | A fly? |
18874 | A forest is made up of a lot of different kind of trees, is n''t it, just as a school is made up of a lot of boys? 18874 Alone?" |
18874 | An''how was you figurin''on gettin''to the ranch? 18874 An''what happens when you build a fire between granite stones?" |
18874 | An''what were you an''Mickey doin''? |
18874 | An''what would I have had to say? |
18874 | An''wheel- tracks? |
18874 | An''you did n''t find much beetle except just round that one tree? |
18874 | An''you took them out o''the water? |
18874 | An''you''re thirsty none? |
18874 | And are ye goin''to join us in a little promenade through the timber? |
18874 | And could this have been stopped after it got a hold at all? |
18874 | And do wolves attack horses here, too? |
18874 | And how do you do it, Rifle- Eye? |
18874 | And it was--? |
18874 | And there are only six District Foresters? |
18874 | And what did you profess? |
18874 | And what do you call Social Economy? |
18874 | And what happened to the boy? |
18874 | And what have I to do? |
18874 | And what''s that, Rifle- Eye? |
18874 | And why did n''t you camp a couple of miles down? 18874 And you''ve got to look pretty closely through those glasses o''yours, do n''t you?" |
18874 | Any chances? |
18874 | Are there many sheep out here? |
18874 | Are wolves worse than bear? |
18874 | Are you buyin''this horse for your own pleasure or the work o''the Service? 18874 Are you trying to teach me?" |
18874 | Back out? 18874 Better for himself?" |
18874 | But I thought Mr. Merritt said that McGinnis only knew this kind of forest? |
18874 | But I thought,said Wilbur,"that paper- pulp was such a destructive way of using timber?" |
18874 | But can you get help? |
18874 | But did n''t you get run down? |
18874 | But do n''t you understand,the boy said,"that you''re putting the forest in danger, in awful danger of fire? |
18874 | But does n''t it take a lot of wood to make a little paper? |
18874 | But for revenge? |
18874 | But how can you get a tree to grow in a certain way? |
18874 | But how did you kill the old wolf, Ben? |
18874 | But how did you know about it, uncle? |
18874 | But if it''s taken in time? |
18874 | But if you ca n''t put it out? |
18874 | But it''s hardly like that at first, is it? |
18874 | But tell me, Rifle- Eye,said the boy,"what is McGinnis? |
18874 | But up there? |
18874 | But what did he do? |
18874 | But what is it all about? |
18874 | But what started you looking for Burns''s mine? 18874 But where does Rifle- Eye come in?" |
18874 | But who,said Wilbur indignantly,"would do a trick like that?" |
18874 | But why did you go in the den when the mother wolf was there? |
18874 | But will green trees burn so fast? |
18874 | But would n''t it ruin the forest to take it off at that rate? |
18874 | But, Mr. Merritt,began the boy,"your watch? |
18874 | But, supposin'',the old scout began gently,"I told you that the sorrel was the worst you could have, not the best?" |
18874 | By what right do you steal my pasture? |
18874 | C''n you ride? |
18874 | Can the sorrel be saddled without ropin''? |
18874 | Can you throw a rope? |
18874 | Could not something have been done? |
18874 | Did Doctor Davis have to go away in the night? |
18874 | Did n''t you know he was my nephew? |
18874 | Did n''t you put a stop to the feuds at one time? |
18874 | Did ye think this was a city park? |
18874 | Did you find everything going on all right for the pulp- mill? |
18874 | Did you go? |
18874 | Did you have any trouble, Ben? |
18874 | Did you have much chance to talk with him? |
18874 | Do I know him? |
18874 | Do I look as if I''d been a sidewalk for a thousand steers? |
18874 | Do looks always tell? |
18874 | Do n''t want to hire us to drive, do you? |
18874 | Do you not,answered the doctor''s wife, giving question for question,"know the old hunter,''Rifle- Eye Bill''? |
18874 | Do you prefer hogs to people? |
18874 | Do you see the trail? |
18874 | Do you suppose he''d set a fire? |
18874 | Do you suppose that I can buy any of those horses that I want to? |
18874 | Do you suppose,said Wilbur,"that in the days of the cliff- dwellers, and earlier, the''inland empire''was densely populated?" |
18874 | Do you--began the boy excitedly,"do you ride a white mare?" |
18874 | Does he mean a forest fire, Rifle- Eye? |
18874 | Does he work all the time for nothing? |
18874 | Does n''t it take a very high wind to blow down some of these big trees? |
18874 | Does this look as if we had known very long? |
18874 | Evenin'',said Merritt,"where did you get hold of this trail?" |
18874 | Excuse me, Mrs. Davis,said the boy, who had caught something of the Supervisor''s abruptness,"but what brought him here?" |
18874 | For a day or two? |
18874 | Get the old wolf? |
18874 | Got a claim there? |
18874 | Got a watch? |
18874 | Got everything you want? |
18874 | Got him, all right, Bob- Cat, did you? |
18874 | Had some down your way, too, I reckon? |
18874 | Had this been going on long? |
18874 | Handed in his time? |
18874 | Have n''t you got some fireworks for the Fourth, Pussy? |
18874 | Have we got to start again to- night? |
18874 | Have you been down there at all? |
18874 | Have you noticed wheel tracks around here? |
18874 | He could n''t very well get off and make a bow to the beast and have the buffalo drop a curtsey? |
18874 | He''s a game little sport, Rifle- Eye,he added, turning to the tall figure beside him,"why not let him play his hand out? |
18874 | How about Abe Lincoln? |
18874 | How about Aileen? |
18874 | How about Burleigh? |
18874 | How about bear, then, and trapping for skins? |
18874 | How about cattle? |
18874 | How about coyotes? |
18874 | How about it? |
18874 | How about the bark? |
18874 | How am I to arrange about supplies? |
18874 | How big a fire was that, sir? |
18874 | How big is it? |
18874 | How did it end up? |
18874 | How did she come in on it? |
18874 | How did the tree get there? |
18874 | How do they saw''em so thin, I wonder? |
18874 | How far? |
18874 | How is that? |
18874 | How long ago was this? |
18874 | How long has it been''our''service? |
18874 | How many poles do you s''pose are used in a mile? |
18874 | How many trees of that size do you reckon you''ll want? |
18874 | How much lumber did you cut last winter off ground that did n''t belong to you? |
18874 | How old was the youngster, then, Bob- Cat? |
18874 | How was that? |
18874 | How''s the fire? |
18874 | How? 18874 How?" |
18874 | I certainly do wonder,he said aloud,"what it can be? |
18874 | I ought to have got breakfast, sir,said the boy;"why did n''t you leave it for me?" |
18874 | I reckon he was n''t over- pleased with your bein''late? |
18874 | I reckon you''ve some bacon, Susan? |
18874 | I thought at the time that it was n''t, but what could he do? 18874 I''d better take only one, and that a little bigger, had n''t I?" |
18874 | I''m glad the appointment has had time to soak in; it did n''t take long, did it? |
18874 | If I refuse the boy somethin''another man says is all right, does n''t that make it look as ef it was meanness in me? 18874 If a man''s a fool who depends on luck, what kind of a fool is the man who depends on fools''luck? |
18874 | If you ca n''t rope, how do you expect to saddle him? 18874 In one fire?" |
18874 | Is all paper made of spruce? |
18874 | Is it because you are ashamed of what you taught, or of where you taught it? |
18874 | Is n''t it bully? |
18874 | Is there a corral? |
18874 | Is there much of it to do? |
18874 | It was the excitement of the life that appealed to you, was it? |
18874 | Like enough you never heard about Quick- Finger Joe? |
18874 | Locating a mineral claim, are you? |
18874 | Loyle,he said,"what are you breaking your neck at it that way for?" |
18874 | Maybe it''s just to find out whether I can do it? |
18874 | Never sleeps indoors? |
18874 | Not exciting enough? |
18874 | Not when every corner you turn may show you smoke on the horizon? 18874 Now,"he continued,"can you see any trail through there?" |
18874 | Off land not mine? |
18874 | Oh, Bob- Cat,he cried,"are n''t you going to saddle him for me now?" |
18874 | Oh, yeth,the little girl replied, and ran across to her father,"can we thee them now?" |
18874 | Peavey Jo, of course, who else? |
18874 | Persistent? |
18874 | Rain? |
18874 | Shall we look at them now? |
18874 | Sleeping, son? |
18874 | So much the better,said Wilbur,"you did n''t want to find any more, did you?" |
18874 | Son,said Rifle- Eye,"what do you suppose you are ridin''from point to point of the forest for?" |
18874 | Telegraph poles? |
18874 | Then, if you make your eyes heavy and tired for the next mornin'', you''re robbin''the Service of what they got you for-- your eyesight, ai n''t you? 18874 There was some great work in the Gunnison canyon, was there not?" |
18874 | There''s five of ye,he said,"that''s found beetle, is n''t there?" |
18874 | They poison the prairie dogs, do n''t they? |
18874 | They''ll make five or six fine trees some day, wo n''t they? |
18874 | Tons? |
18874 | Trying to make converts already, Loyle? |
18874 | Want to know it all and do it all the first summer, do n''t you? 18874 Was Rifle- Eye mixed up in it?" |
18874 | Was it you located that mine in the Klamath Forest? |
18874 | Was the den just by the Sentinel Pine? |
18874 | Well, Merritt,he said,"what have you got for me this time?" |
18874 | Well,said the cowpuncher,"why not?" |
18874 | Well? |
18874 | Well? |
18874 | Well? |
18874 | Well? |
18874 | What about it? |
18874 | What are those? |
18874 | What are you doing here? |
18874 | What chance would he have had against an angered buffalo alone and on foot? |
18874 | What did I tell ye? 18874 What did he want to kill him for?" |
18874 | What did they call the fly? |
18874 | What did they do to the stranger? |
18874 | What did you do to- day? |
18874 | What do you call that rock? |
18874 | What do you mean, Rifle- Eye? |
18874 | What do you reckon you were lookin''on the ground for? |
18874 | What do you think of him? |
18874 | What does he do while you are away? |
18874 | What finally happened to him? |
18874 | What for? |
18874 | What horses are those? |
18874 | What is a lost mine? |
18874 | What is this? |
18874 | What is your name and address? |
18874 | What is? |
18874 | What kind o''stone do you call that? |
18874 | What shall we do here? |
18874 | What sort of things? |
18874 | What starts these forest fires, sir? |
18874 | What time to- morrow? |
18874 | What was done about the trespass? |
18874 | What were you doin''yesterday, Ben? |
18874 | What would ye do with the ax, ye little villain? |
18874 | What''s going to be done? |
18874 | What''s that? |
18874 | What''s the difference between a yellow pine and a sugar pine? |
18874 | What''s wrong? |
18874 | When you think,said Wilbur,"that every telegraph and telephone pole means a whole tree, there''s some forest been cut down, has n''t there?" |
18874 | Where did you get''em, Ben? |
18874 | Where do you locate these fires? |
18874 | Where''s the skin? |
18874 | Where''s the stump? |
18874 | Where''s the stump? |
18874 | Where? 18874 Where?" |
18874 | Where? |
18874 | Which way? |
18874 | Who found it out? |
18874 | Who set that fire? |
18874 | Who turned those horses into my corral? |
18874 | Why did n''t you propose that the miner should go up to the camp with you? |
18874 | Why go in if wolf not there? |
18874 | Why not? 18874 Why not?" |
18874 | Why, Masseth, how did you get hold of Loyle? |
18874 | Why, what in the world did he do? |
18874 | Why? |
18874 | Why? |
18874 | Why? |
18874 | Why? |
18874 | Why? |
18874 | Will it be a crown- fire, Rifle- Eye? |
18874 | Will the Forest Supervisors be there, too? |
18874 | Will the pulp- mill be above or below the new Edison plant? |
18874 | Will you give me your word you wo n''t set off these? |
18874 | Wo n''t you saddle him for me, Bob- Cat? 18874 Wo n''t you tell me?" |
18874 | Would I be lookin''for it if I had n''t doped it out that it was there? |
18874 | Ye would, eh? 18874 Yes, was n''t it? |
18874 | Yes, where is it? |
18874 | You could bring affidavits, could n''t you? 18874 You do n''t believe in that old yarn, surely?" |
18874 | You do n''t know the trees of the Sierras, I suppose? |
18874 | You do n''t take kindly to the''Oh, Woodman, spare that tree''ideal? |
18874 | You do? |
18874 | You make dis your bizness, hey? |
18874 | You mean as much as me? |
18874 | You mean shooting deer and so forth? |
18874 | You mean,said the Supervisor, flaming,"that those trees were deliberately brought here to infect the forest, trees full of beetles?" |
18874 | You mean,said the mountaineer,"that you an''Mickey were burnin''up brush?" |
18874 | You must have seen great changes? |
18874 | You really think you want him? |
18874 | You say all the same that I am a liar, is it not? |
18874 | You t''ink I keep him in my pocket, hey? |
18874 | You t''ink me beaten, hey? |
18874 | You think I do no more, eh? 18874 You went into the wolf''s den?" |
18874 | You what? |
18874 | You''ve heard about Ben? |
18874 | Your grandfather? |
18874 | AND HOW AM I GOING TO GET THERE?" |
18874 | An''what do you reckon made''em men?" |
18874 | And How am I Going to Get There?" |
18874 | And is there nothing left to tell about them?" |
18874 | Are they fresh?" |
18874 | But how are you going to tell them when standing?" |
18874 | But how did she get at your leg? |
18874 | But what could he do? |
18874 | Can you cruise?" |
18874 | Can you tell how much timber is used, or how many matches are lighted an''thrown away?" |
18874 | Did any o''you find the stumps of them infected trees?" |
18874 | Did n''t you ever go back to the city?" |
18874 | Did you walk on her, or kick her, just for fun?" |
18874 | Do n''t you know you hold us back, and waste our time, too, on almost any job? |
18874 | Does the life of a fireman in a big city fire department strike you as being interesting or exciting?" |
18874 | Glad? |
18874 | Got a match?" |
18874 | Have n''t I had a broken head, and am I not her patient? |
18874 | Have you ever been in a city?" |
18874 | Have you ever noticed, son, that when somethin''pretty bad comes along, there''s always somethin''else comes to sort o''take off the smart? |
18874 | Have you had any experience?" |
18874 | He addresses Joe some like this:"''Which I hears with profound admiration that you''re some frolicsome and speedy on gun- play?'' |
18874 | He is gentle, is n''t he, Bob- Cat?" |
18874 | He is n''t a Guard, is he? |
18874 | He turned to the professor:"How did you get here?" |
18874 | He was proud of his college and of his hobby, and he retorted immediately:"Ashamed? |
18874 | How about chuck?" |
18874 | How about it, boys,"he added turning to the crowd,"do I get fair play?" |
18874 | How did you dodge the steers?" |
18874 | How much was there?" |
18874 | I suppose both of you boys hate a bully? |
18874 | I suppose you know that a forest is a good deal like a school?" |
18874 | I suppose you learned that at the Ranger School, did n''t you?" |
18874 | If a thing''s done, it ai n''t too late ever to try to do something else which will make up for the first, is it?" |
18874 | If you had n''t ha''found anybody, you''d ha''found somebody? |
18874 | Is n''t that big enough for you?" |
18874 | Me, I forget? |
18874 | Me? |
18874 | Merritt?" |
18874 | Merritt?" |
18874 | Merritt?" |
18874 | Merritt?" |
18874 | No marked?" |
18874 | Or do you still feel tired, and would you rather wait until to- morrow?" |
18874 | Presently Rifle- Eye replied quietly:"You refuse to tell?" |
18874 | Rifle- Eye heard him patiently to the end, and then asked again, without any change of voice:"And what did you profess?" |
18874 | See that big roan in there?" |
18874 | Seeing that he was observed, the lad sidled over to Wilbur and said, in a low voice, questioningly:"Plenty, plenty logs? |
18874 | Suppose no one else had to learn? |
18874 | THE BOY WITH THE U. S. FORESTERS CHAPTER I ENTERING THE SERVICE"Hey, Wilbur, where are you headed for?" |
18874 | That boy, you see him? |
18874 | Then, coming over to Wilbur, he pointed to the rude bandages and said questioningly:"Tumble?" |
18874 | Then, looking straight at the man of the party, he said:"You''re a professor?" |
18874 | Then, turning sharply to the older boy, the Chief Forester continued:"What do you want to be?" |
18874 | There are over a hundred, are there not? |
18874 | Walkin''?" |
18874 | What does it matter? |
18874 | What does?" |
18874 | What for? |
18874 | What started them?" |
18874 | What would a wagon be doing up here?" |
18874 | What would be the use of staying around there? |
18874 | What''s the fire like? |
18874 | What''s the idee o''leavin''them around? |
18874 | What''s the use o''sayin''that you ai n''t forcin''my hand? |
18874 | Where is it, Rifle- Eye? |
18874 | Where''s the corral?" |
18874 | Who was he?" |
18874 | Who''ll stop me?" |
18874 | You do n''t see what bullying has to do with forestry? |
18874 | You do n''t want to back out?" |
18874 | You know about that?" |
18874 | You know that direct way of his?" |
18874 | You know what shakes are?" |
18874 | You look surprised, eh? |
18874 | Your parents live here?" |
18874 | he said;"I t''ink it''s long time since you were here, hey?" |
18874 | said the doctor;"what makes you think so?" |
37182 | ''Did we bury the Indians?'' |
37182 | And Friday? |
37182 | But is not this all told by Richens Wooten himself, in his very own book, in the picturesque and forceful style of a picturesque and forceful pioneer? |
37182 | But would he have returned northward with the army if he thought he was deceiving them? |
37182 | Did Coronado discover Colorado? |
37182 | For what is the pension? |
37182 | May not human life have had its very beginning on this hemisphere? |
37182 | Only one chance to be given us? |
37182 | Shall we say to the bones of our fathers, arise, and go with us into a strange land?" |
37182 | What becomes of all the gold? |
37182 | What deposited it in some parts of the earth''s surface and not in others? |
37182 | What did he do for Colorado? |
37182 | What made Gold? |
37182 | What man would even lose the smallest of his joints for such a trifling pittance?" |
37182 | Whence came this high civilization? |
37182 | Who is the Indian? |
37182 | Who is there to mourn for Logan? |
37182 | Who were those who may have been lost to home and friends and wandered in from Asia over that narrow strip of land long ago submerged? |
37182 | Why is there not more of it? |
37182 | With this historical data before us, do we ask whence came these millions of Indians and their confusion of tongues? |
31426 | All done up brown and slick, Jack old hoss, now what? |
31426 | All set, Perk? |
31426 | And so this is where our friend has his secret hideout at such times when he so mysteriously disappears from his big show place near Miami? 31426 As what, partner?" |
31426 | But hold on a bit-- mebbe now somethin''s a''goin''to strike up we''ll both be sorter glad to set eyes on-- looky there, old hoss, what do you see? |
31426 | But what makes him keep all this smuggling business clear of this wonderful show place near Miami? |
31426 | But what''s the big idea, partner? |
31426 | Course, you knocked up against the gent then, eh Jack? |
31426 | Do we tow the ship behind the sloop, partner? |
31426 | Do you mean he''s got a collection there, Jack? |
31426 | Er--''bout how long will we be in makin''some sort o''start, boss? |
31426 | Give up? |
31426 | How about a little grub for a change, partner? |
31426 | How''bout spendin''the night here, partner? |
31426 | How? |
31426 | I calculate now it means we c''n move around an''get tabs on this here hideout o''the gent we''re so much in love with, eh, what? |
31426 | I get you, boy-- the machine- gun, is it? |
31426 | I swan, but you''re right there, Jack-- which looks kinder like he did n''t mean to strike out for Miami, do n''t it? |
31426 | Jack, I''member there''s a log a''lyin''right over there-- why could n''t I use that an''really break through? |
31426 | Jack-- what''s happened-- are you bad hurt, buddy? |
31426 | Just so, and what d''ye reckon we''re going to do with it? |
31426 | Know how long you''ll be away, Jack? |
31426 | Looks like it might a come all the way across the gulf-- d''ye think from some Mexican port, Jack? |
31426 | Me, I''m jest awonderin''? |
31426 | Meanin''we c''n get somewhere without tryin''to tow the rum- boat behind our crate, and making a long and tiresome job o''it, eh what, partner? |
31426 | Mebbe the Lockheed- Vega comin''back again? |
31426 | Notice that he''s already banking, so as to lay his course toward Cape Sable-- square in the south-- get that, do n''t you Perk? |
31426 | Now would n''t that jar you? |
31426 | Paper, you say? |
31426 | Partner, would you mind tellin''me what about this here Oswald Kearns? |
31426 | Say, what sort of a crazy gyp are you to want to talk things over while we got this scrap on? |
31426 | So-- you think that''s a queer name, do you? 31426 That''s our boat you''re standin''on, and we need it in our business, see? |
31426 | Think that''s this here Kearns, partner? |
31426 | Was he tickled to learn how we managed to run off with that slick little sloop that carried so neat a pack o''cases marked with foreign stamps? |
31426 | We do n''t want him to give us the slip, since he''s the on''y prisoner we got, do we, partner? |
31426 | Well, I guess now that would queer our game, would n''t it, partner? |
31426 | Well, we''ve got the rum- boat okay, have n''t we? |
31426 | What do I see but another crate humping along this way, an''outen the no''th in the bargain? |
31426 | What is it, Perk? |
31426 | What next, Boss? |
31426 | What''re we goin''to do with this chap? |
31426 | What''s that matter to you? |
31426 | What, me? 31426 When do we hop- off, then?" |
31426 | Why not? |
31426 | Would n''t that jar you? |
31426 | Yeah, an''what might that be? |
31426 | Yeah-- but how? |
31426 | You do n''t say? |
31426 | You got me guessin''partner,said the puzzled Perk;"then who''s mixed up in the shindy, I want to know?" |
31426 | You got me in a tail spin, partner-- lift the lid, wo n''t you, an''gimme a look in? |
31426 | You heard me warn them to keep a watchful eye out for smugglers and hijackers by land and sea and air? 31426 You mean_ tonight_ while I was picking up a few winks of sleep-- is that a fact, Perk?" |
31426 | A bit tired in the bargain I take it, partner?" |
31426 | A few more steps and he would have reached the well-- then what must take place? |
31426 | An''now I wonder where we''ll be sent for the next big job we tackle?" |
31426 | An''that goes, partner, see?" |
31426 | But Jack, tell me, you do n''t think he''s got our man alongside him, do you?" |
31426 | But how''bout draggin''that ere mudhook up off the ground-- think we c''n tackle the job between us, Jack?" |
31426 | CHAPTER XXIX A LAST RESORT Meanwhile how fared Jack in his share of the attempt to corner the defiant and persistent law- breaker? |
31426 | Could anything be fairer than that, Perk asked himself, preparing for business at the drop of the hat? |
31426 | Could this later fire have been directed at Jack, who had unwisely exposed himself at the side window? |
31426 | Do n''t think they c''n lamp us lyin''here, do you, Boss?" |
31426 | From this time on seems to me we''d be wise to play a lone hand, an''not bother about takin''any gyps into our confidence, eh what, Jack?" |
31426 | Get that do you, Perk?" |
31426 | Get that, Kamarad?" |
31426 | Got a line on the racket, old boss?" |
31426 | Got that piece of stout rope I gave you?" |
31426 | How about Jack? |
31426 | How does the land lie over there?" |
31426 | How''bout that, old hoss?" |
31426 | Is it all right with you, buddy?" |
31426 | Listen to''em squabble, will you, boy? |
31426 | Mebbe now you noticed some sort o''crate just vanishing among them clouds off toward the east as you breezed along?" |
31426 | No objections, have you, Perk?" |
31426 | Now I wonder what he wants to barge in for when things seem to be doin''their prettiest for us fellers? |
31426 | On a previous occasion the same thing had handily proved its efficacy, so why not again? |
31426 | Perk was asking,"mean to kidnap both o''these guys Jack?" |
31426 | Say, ai n''t this the boss job though? |
31426 | See here, what''s the matter with you, staring that way, Perk?" |
31426 | So he used to fish in them passages''tween the mangrove islands years ago, did he, Jack?" |
31426 | Strikes me they''re a''searchin''for somethin'', Jack, which might be the pair o''us, eh, what?" |
31426 | Tell me, did this Mr. Ridgeway fork over any news worth knowin''?" |
31426 | Well, I''m asking you again, where did you ever run across it-- who ever spoke it in your hearing, Perk?" |
31426 | What could he do should this crisis come upon him, Jack was asking himself as he crouched there and counted the minutes passing by? |
31426 | What''s her name and where are you from?" |
31426 | What''s it mean, Perk-- was he kicking up a mess around here?" |
31426 | Whatever under the sun is he doing, I wonder?" |
31426 | Who got fooled that time, I want to know, Gabe Perkiser, you smarty?" |
31426 | Why d''ye suppose we did n''t see the crate before?" |
31426 | Would it be proper to set the bally boat afire and see all this hot stuff go up in flames? |
31426 | but ai n''t this the life, though?" |
31426 | do n''t I know how impatience is my besettin''sin and ai n''t I always a''tryin''to curb it? |
31426 | ejaculated Perk,"that there''s the place we learned they was shippin''Chinks over to Florida from, ai n''t it Jack, boy?" |
31426 | partner, what''s broke loose, would you say?" |
31426 | so_ this_ is where he dropped down, is it?" |
31426 | that drummin''noise, it''s stopped-- wonder if they got out to the sloop or else smell a rat an''are lyin''low till they make it a dead certainty? |
31426 | that''s so, old hoss,_ what?_ Mebbe now the shoe''s on the other foot, an''it''s the blamed sloop that''s got us held up. |
31426 | the weight do n''t count with such a husky as me, old hoss an''how do we know what''s goin''to happen before we gets back here? |
31426 | two may be company, but three''s considered a crowd and we might have found we''d bitten off more than we could chew, so what does it matter?" |
31426 | what d''ye mean by sayin''that, old pal?" |
31426 | what''s this I''m seein''partner?" |
31426 | why not?" |
39205 | What are the other relative expenses of these breeds? |
37812 | What the devil do you mean, sir,exploded the governor,"by showing yourself here? |
37812 | What''s this? 37812 You come from the South-- from Mexico?" |
37812 | You have stopped firing? 37812 Do n''t you know that I shall call the sentry and have you arrested? |
37812 | Does the State care to accept their services or does it not?" |
37812 | Have not the Indians told us many times that there is no food, no water in that direction, and that, moreover, there is no way to cross the mountains? |
37812 | Then how shall I occupy my corsairs? |
37812 | To begin with, you have seen fit to put a price upon my head?" |
37812 | WHEN WE CAPTURED AN AFRICAN KINGDOM Did you ever, by any chance, leave the Boston State House by the back door? |
37812 | What American ever had a more ambitious dream and was within such measurable distance of realizing it? |
37812 | What shall I do with my fighting men? |
37812 | What the devil does this mean, sir?" |
37812 | What''s this?" |
28180 | ''Will you scorn the message Sent in mercy from above? 28180 A Jew?" |
28180 | And the king followed the bier; and the king lifted up his voice and wept; and the king said,''Died Abner as a fool dieth?'' |
28180 | And you did n''t protest against such ungallant treatment of a woman, and by mere lads? |
28180 | Architect and builder? |
28180 | Are we to blame for the shortcomings of these people? |
28180 | Be careful,said Molly,"You would n''t have the women for whom you would be so chivalrous know who Ben Hartright_ really is_, would you?" |
28180 | Benny, did you ever read Uncle Tom''s Cabin? |
28180 | But how I gwine fer kill duck? |
28180 | But how are they to do it? |
28180 | But who he s ther rite ter tek them critters property an giv hit ter yo uns? |
28180 | But who of these people would believe that such was in store for them? 28180 By the thunder, what do you mean by such language?" |
28180 | Did n''t you hear me asking Fannie where Emily is? 28180 Did you dare?" |
28180 | Do you believe in the truthfulness of God''s word? |
28180 | Do you know that you are talking to a gentleman? |
28180 | Do you mean to try to choke it down my throat that my whiteness would save me should your people rise up against Niggers in Wilmington? 28180 Do you solemnly promise that you will leave and never come back?" |
28180 | Do you think that a very brave thing to do? |
28180 | Emily, are you mad? |
28180 | Fisher? |
28180 | Going? 28180 Got er trunk?" |
28180 | Government? 28180 Have you ever tried to put that theory to a test?" |
28180 | Have you joined the sanctified band? |
28180 | How long has he been in Wilmington? |
28180 | Is he a tax payer? 28180 Is it true he is killed? |
28180 | Is n''t Miss Emily in there? |
28180 | It''s no use to waste words; we all have suffered at the hands of these superior(?) 28180 Le''me tell yo'', Kurnel, you na Wilmin''ton rich bocra, dun throw yo''number an''los''; hear me? |
28180 | Mr. Sikes, are you looking for work at your trade in the North? 28180 Name?" |
28180 | Now Teck Pervis, wher is yer proof thet the scripter ment Nigger? 28180 Now, is it not time for white men to act?" |
28180 | Say, Calvin, I saw you talking to a rather striking looking colored girl the other day; who is she? 28180 Teck Pervis, do ye mean ter tell me thet Brother Jonas Melvin wus at thet meetin?" |
28180 | Teck Pervis,exclaimed the wife,"Hev I bin er rastlin''in prayer an pleadin ter ther Lawd in vain? |
28180 | Teck, do tell me what preachers war they? |
28180 | Then you believe in Negro rule? |
28180 | Thet name''s Jewey e''nuff fur yir, ai n''t it? |
28180 | Wa fur yo''shake yer he d, you no got um? |
28180 | Wa''fer? |
28180 | Well mus yer put on er graveyard face ter day bekase yer had er interestin meetin las night? 28180 Well what in ther wor''l is ter matter Teck Pervis? |
28180 | Well, Bill, how are you? |
28180 | Well, Henrietta, how have you managed to live through it all? |
28180 | Well, Mr.--what is your name? |
28180 | Well, must white women stop to lament over such things? |
28180 | Well, whart du you wannt? |
28180 | Well, what are Negroes saying about the uprising, Guy? |
28180 | Well, what are you standing up here for? |
28180 | Well, what can I do for you, my good man? |
28180 | Well, what news? |
28180 | Well, what''s ther mater here? |
28180 | Well, what''s up? |
28180 | What I keers fer der black lisdt, eh? 28180 What did you say boudt black lisdt, Gheorge?" |
28180 | What do I want? |
28180 | What do them risticrats kere er bout the likes er we? 28180 What do you want?" |
28180 | What do you wish us to do? 28180 What has happened her?" |
28180 | What have I done? |
28180 | What is Thanksgiving Day? |
28180 | What is the bells ringin''for, mamma? |
28180 | What is the feller''s name? |
28180 | What is your name, my son? |
28180 | What means this demonstration? |
28180 | What s the matter with the Colonel? 28180 What will such a thing as that amount to against rifles? |
28180 | What''s his name? |
28180 | What''s the matter my darling? |
28180 | What''s the matter, Fannie; is the baby sick? |
28180 | What''s the matter, William? |
28180 | What''s the matter, William? |
28180 | Where is you sneakin''ter? 28180 Where''s my husband?" |
28180 | Who air yu er talkin ter Mandy? |
28180 | Who else will come? 28180 Who is the Colonel, and what right has he to give such orders?" |
28180 | Who is this man Isaacs? |
28180 | Who is this man? 28180 Who''s there?" |
28180 | Whose widow are you? |
28180 | Why did you, oh, why did you come back? |
28180 | Why do you sit up so late to- night, my dear? |
28180 | Why fer ther lan sake, what''s er comin over ye Teck Pervis? 28180 Why hello, Calvin, is that you?" |
28180 | Why is you bin er listenin ter me all this time an dunno who I''m talkin erbout? |
28180 | Why this excitement so early in the morning? |
28180 | Why, what''s the matter Molly? |
28180 | Why, what''s the matter, son? |
28180 | Why? 28180 Will I never be permitted to reach the press?" |
28180 | Will you kindly inform me who the leader of this movement is? |
28180 | Yes, but will he use that power? 28180 Yes? |
28180 | You are almost white, why vote with them Niggers? |
28180 | You mean to say that you took contracts, planned and built houses? |
28180 | You say you are a carpenter-- house builder? |
28180 | You will warn them, wo n''t you, Silas? 28180 Your house?" |
28180 | Yuna mouts g''wine ter git yuna inter trouble; hear me? 28180 _ Do you want niggers to marry your daughters? |
28180 | _ Where in the thunder is she then?_roared Ben Hartright, now beside himself with rage. |
28180 | A few lines of another:"The cows in de ole field, do n''t yo''hear de bell? |
28180 | A young man was called to his door a few nights ago and shot down because he had driven his horse over a gentleman''s(?) |
28180 | Ai n''t your name Silkirk?" |
28180 | An''are you comin''to kill me?" |
28180 | And for what?" |
28180 | And what better market could have been sought for murderers and cowards and assassins, and intense haters of negroes than Georgia? |
28180 | As we gaze upon the bleeding form of this simple negro, this question comes forcibly to us: Died Dan Wright as a fool dieth? |
28180 | But did yer git em?" |
28180 | But who is really responsible for this cowardly massacre? |
28180 | But why this ghastly sentence from the mouth of a representative Wilmingtonian? |
28180 | But why weary the reader with the Colonel''s firey harangue? |
28180 | But would we suppose that Pilate washed his hands only once? |
28180 | But, my dear girl, if you are here to aid us, have you counted the cost?" |
28180 | Ca n''t you fix it so I can get an interview?" |
28180 | Can man sin against his neighbor without suffering its consequences? |
28180 | Can men capable of committing such deeds as the burning and mutilating the body of this wretch be relied upon for truth? |
28180 | Can we look around Wilmington and believe that his home does not need a stronger arsenal than ours? |
28180 | Colored girls in isolated districts exposed to lustful white brutes; what''s the difference? |
28180 | Dese rich bocra? |
28180 | Did Dan Wright feel that death was to be his reward for this act of bravery? |
28180 | Did Dan Wright fully realize the enormity of his act as he faced this mob of white men, armed to the teeth, now pressing down upon him? |
28180 | Did n''t I beg yer not ter fergit yer religin in jine- in in wid sinners in doin eval?" |
28180 | Did this man know that Sam Hose committed the crime for which he suffered such a horrible death? |
28180 | Did yuna see Jedge Morse when he go by? |
28180 | Did yuna see''i m stop ter listen at you? |
28180 | Do we feel pity for Dan Hawes, John Maxim, Charlotte Jones? |
28180 | Do you want niggers on the juries trying white men? |
28180 | Do you want niggers to sit in school beside your children? |
28180 | Does he think we air the banner carriers of Christian civilization? |
28180 | Does not this account for the human sacrifices that have shocked the nation? |
28180 | Does the Negro''s ruined home amount to nought? |
28180 | For can any of us feel that God has countenanced the murder, pillage and intimidation which the whites of Wilmington have resorted to? |
28180 | Gideon, in the name of God, what next? |
28180 | Goin''down ter tell wa''t you foun''out at de committee meet''n, eh?" |
28180 | Have we not done enough to a forgiving race? |
28180 | Have yer back slided an fergot yer religin erready Teck Pervis?" |
28180 | Honestly, Ben Hartright, do you mean that?" |
28180 | How dey no it, I say?" |
28180 | How dey no it? |
28180 | I wonder what the Negro thinks of us now? |
28180 | If you do n''t want such dreadful calamities to befall the South, go to the polls and do your duty!_""What''d he say? |
28180 | Is he or has he ever engaged in any business in the community?" |
28180 | Le''us ask de Lawd wot it all means?" |
28180 | Look at Illinois; can the South cope with such? |
28180 | Mac?" |
28180 | Mrs. Fells style is extremely brazen, and can we expect to harp with impunity upon the shortcomings of the Negro? |
28180 | Must the innocent and guilty suffer alike? |
28180 | Naamah,"What will you see in Shulamite?" |
28180 | Niggers er marryin our darters? |
28180 | Niggers in skule wid we uns? |
28180 | Now pray tell me where do we get the right to drive him from his home where he has as much right to dwell as we have?" |
28180 | Now, when we have driven out the Negro, whose to take his place? |
28180 | Ole Noey''s er our Blessed Lawd an Saviour? |
28180 | Protest? |
28180 | Pure Nigger cunnin'', here me? |
28180 | See how he''pliss yer is? |
28180 | Shall earth''s brief ills appall the brave? |
28180 | Shall manly hearts despond? |
28180 | Shall we for the sake of political ascension plunge Wilmington into an abyss of shame?" |
28180 | Shall we smite with the sword?" |
28180 | Shall we this day rise in our might? |
28180 | Should we be disappointed under this showing because the Negro does not vote with us? |
28180 | The Colonel jumped to his feet;"In the name of God, Gideon, do you believe that a nigger should answer a white man back?" |
28180 | The cows in de ole field, do n''t yo''hear de bell? |
28180 | Then there was Jim, the drummer, Who could beat a drum like Jim? |
28180 | This caused many of his white friends to cool towards him, and it placed his name upon the list of dangerous(?) |
28180 | Walking up and touching this man on the shoulder, he said:"Looker here, mister, you goin''North?" |
28180 | Was it right for him to stand alone against such fearful odds? |
28180 | Was there a Judas on the Republican Executive Committee of New Hanover county? |
28180 | We went back on our colored frends ter giv''yo''''ristocrats ther gov''ment, and we uns''ll combine wi''ther colored men an''take hit from yer, see?" |
28180 | What are we to do? |
28180 | What are you doing in my house?" |
28180 | What brings you here?" |
28180 | What had plunged the Colonel into such a desperate state of mind? |
28180 | What has he done?" |
28180 | What has wrought all this havoc in the city once so peaceful? |
28180 | What kept you out so late, Emily?" |
28180 | What of that? |
28180 | What would Jesus do under such circumstances? |
28180 | What''s the matter with those people down there-- crazy?" |
28180 | What''s your name, old Aunty?" |
28180 | When Schults cum ster Wilmiton sick mit der rhumatiz, mit no moneys, mit no frients, who helbs Schults ter git on his feets? |
28180 | Where are you from?" |
28180 | Where have you been?" |
28180 | Where?" |
28180 | Who buys mine groceries? |
28180 | Who give ther nigger ther stick ter break our heads? |
28180 | Who helbs Schults den? |
28180 | Who here is ready to make a start for heaven to- night? |
28180 | Who is to guard the home of the Negro man? |
28180 | Who ish mine frients? |
28180 | Who killed this simple fellow, and the score of others of his race who fell on that eventful day? |
28180 | Who makes Bohn whadt he is on Dry Pon''? |
28180 | Who makes Gheorge Bohn whad he is in dis counthry? |
28180 | Who of that great church can forget Frey Chambers, Thomas, Nichols, Gregg, Epps and others whose names I can not now recall? |
28180 | Who was in ther Cote House thet day when thet Nigger White tole Colonel Buck he did''n no law? |
28180 | Who''s in there with you?" |
28180 | Whose teachin air we er follerin? |
28180 | Wonder where is Emily? |
28180 | Would you believe it? |
28180 | _ Who done it I say?_ You rich white uns, thets who;""But we''ll do it no longer,"said a voice from the audience. |
28180 | _ You_ a gentleman? |
28180 | how dare you expose that woman in that manner?" |
28180 | oudt weer?" |
28180 | what next?" |
28180 | who can control his fate?" |
28180 | will these hands never be clean?" |
28180 | you as good as tell a gentleman to his teeth that he lies then?" |
36146 | What must be the feelings of Dr. McLoughlin? 36146 ''What does Congress care about measuring wheat? 36146 And did not the Delegate and the Chief Justice say that Dr. McLoughlin was so dangerous and unprincipled a man as not be entitled to his land claim? 36146 And did the secular department of the Methodist Mission assist these early pioneers in any way similar to what was done by Dr. McLoughlin? 36146 And now, as they have succeeded, where is the Hudson Bay Company? 36146 And referring to the early immigrants and Dr. McLoughlin''s treatment of them, Dr. Hines said:What would Dr. McLoughlin do? |
36146 | And that he refused to become an American citizen? |
36146 | And what will be the consequences? |
36146 | And who was Dr. McLoughlin to Congress? |
36146 | And who, at that advanced age declares his intention of becoming a citizen of our great Republic.--I say what must be his feelings? |
36146 | And why the necessity of such secular business as a part of a mission to convert Indians to Christianity? |
36146 | And yet this same Honorable(?) |
36146 | At the election I happened to be one of the Judges; Dr. McLoughlin came up to vote; the question was asked by myself, if he had filed his intentions? |
36146 | But if that was his intention, as he refused to sell, where was to be the profit? |
36146 | Did not the first Delegate from Oregon advocate it? |
36146 | Did not the first Territorial Chief Justice of Oregon then in Washington, advise it? |
36146 | For what? |
36146 | Have you anyone in Portland that would help any and all such men off to the mines on such chances of getting their pay? |
36146 | He then commenced at the head man saying,''Your name, if you please; how many in the family, and what do you desire?'' |
36146 | How, sir, would you reward Benedict Arnold, were he living? |
36146 | I immediately rushed on them with my cane, calling out at the same time,''Who is the dog that says it is a good thing to kill the Bostons?'' |
36146 | Is it to be wondered at that he sometimes felt bitter? |
36146 | Is not the hand of Providence in all this? |
36146 | Is this not the cunning of the fox? |
36146 | Or that they were not grateful? |
36146 | Or think that Jason Lee would ever forget? |
36146 | Thurston said:"The_ names_ must be given, and for what? |
36146 | What were the wrongs and misfortunes of one old man to Congress? |
36146 | What would he do? |
36146 | Who ever knew or heard of Dr. McLoughlin telling a lie? |
36146 | Why did he ask me for my vote if I had not one to give? |
36146 | Why did he ask me for my vote if I had not one to give? |
36146 | Would he deny asylum to the weary, footsore, famishing immigrants? |
36146 | Would he lock the doors of his granaries? |
36146 | Would he shut the gates of his fortress? |
36146 | Would you have me turn the cold shoulder to the men of God, who came to do that for the Indians which this Company has neglected to do?" |
36146 | [ 14] From this act alone could anyone doubt that Dr. McLoughlin was a sympathetic, kind, thoughtful, and considerate man? |
36146 | [ 26] In his answer Dr. McLoughlin said, concerning his treatment of the missionaries:"What would you have? |
36146 | or a contest between two milling companies?'' |
15718 | And was he pleased? |
15718 | Are You a Good or a Poor Penman? |
15718 | Are you certain your drains are not stopped up? |
15718 | Are you full- up, George? |
15718 | Broke down? |
15718 | But I tell you--"I know, dear; but what are we going to do about it? 15718 But how?" |
15718 | But supposing the electric apparatus failed? |
15718 | But what am I goin''to do till then? 15718 But where does the dignity come in?" |
15718 | Can you take the first train? |
15718 | Did n''t you feel anything, my boy? |
15718 | Do n''t you want to know how these trucks are going to make you money? |
15718 | Do you really think you have a right to devote so much time to outside work? |
15718 | Done los''something, boss? |
15718 | Ella,said Miss Bartelme, looking up from her desk,"why did n''t you tell me the truth when you came in here the other day? |
15718 | Got any friends in the army? |
15718 | Got anything else? |
15718 | Got ta job? |
15718 | Have n''t you any reasons at all? |
15718 | Have n''t you ever talked it over at home or at school? |
15718 | Have n''t you ever thought about it? |
15718 | How are you, Steve? 15718 How do you feel now?" |
15718 | How many times have I got to tell all of you to put the head of my bed toward the engine? |
15718 | How would you like to go into a good home where some one would love you and care for you? |
15718 | I do n''t know-- is that a good position? |
15718 | If you have n''t anything to write about, why write at all? |
15718 | Is n''t that it? |
15718 | Is this point essential to the accomplishment of my aim? |
15718 | Really, you know,he mused,"does it pay Society to reward its individuals in inverse ratio to their usefulness?" |
15718 | Saturday afternoons off? |
15718 | Say, Mis''Cronan, there was n''t no real dragon, was they? |
15718 | Say, kid, ai n''t it the limit that a woman ca n''t vote on her own business? |
15718 | Suppose I have company for dinner and the Home Assistant is n''t through her work when her eight hours are up, what happens? |
15718 | Suppose I wanted to buy them anyway? |
15718 | Supposing the motor driving the gyroscopes broke down; what then? |
15718 | THEY CALL ME THE''HEN EDITOR''THE STORY OF A SMALL- TOWN NEWSPAPER WOMAN By SADIE L. MOSSLER"What do you stay buried in this burg for? |
15718 | That meant perpetuity to us, do n''t you see? |
15718 | Them soldiers have a pretty easy life, do n''t they? |
15718 | They was n''t no really dragon, was they? |
15718 | Think you''ll like to soldier with us? |
15718 | Vat, Minna, you ai n''t goin''to stay out of de mill today and lose your pay? 15718 Was n''t it so?" |
15718 | We got out some paper today, did n''t we? |
15718 | Well, could n''t I stand on a box? |
15718 | Well, have you ever seen the chauffeur at night, after being out all day with the car? 15718 Well, how old are you, Steve?" |
15718 | Were you lost in the cave, as Tom Sawyer and Becky Thatcher were? |
15718 | What can I do for you? |
15718 | What do you mean,she declared,"by putting it in the paper that I served light refreshments at my party?" |
15718 | What does it mean anyway? |
15718 | What has he done to show that? |
15718 | What is the reason that so many Arbor day trees die? |
15718 | What kind of a position? |
15718 | What made you think you needed motor trucks? |
15718 | What part of my material will make the strongest appeal to the readers of this newspaper? |
15718 | What shall I write about? |
15718 | What time d''ye have to get to work in the morning? |
15718 | What would my readers ask this person if they had a chance to talk to him about this subject? |
15718 | What''s your name? |
15718 | Why do you want to be a chauffeur? |
15718 | Why do you want to leave school? |
15718 | Why, Ella, would n''t you like to have a kind friend, somebody you could confide in and go walking with and who would be interested in you? |
15718 | Will the reader like this? |
15718 | Will these girls from offices and stores do their work well? 15718 Will you contribute$ 500 to get rid of them?" |
15718 | With Briddie? |
15718 | Would you like to be a machinist? |
15718 | Would you like to be a plumber? |
15718 | You in the army? |
15718 | ( 2) HOW MUCH HEAT IS THERE IN YOUR COAL? |
15718 | ( 3) WHO''S THE BEST BOSS? |
15718 | ( 3)(_ Kansas City Star_) MUST YOUR HOME BURN? |
15718 | ( 3)(_ New York Times)_ FARM WIZARD ACHIEVES AGRICULTURAL WONDERS BY ROBERT G. SKERRETT Can a farm be operated like a factory? |
15718 | ( 4)"SHE SANK BY THE BOW"--BUT WHY? |
15718 | ( 4)(_ Good Housekeeping_) GERALDINE FARRAR''S ADVICE TO ASPIRING SINGERS INTERVIEW BY JOHN CORBIN"When did I first decide to be an opera singer?" |
15718 | ( 4)(_ San Francisco Call_) DOES IT PAY THE STATE TO EDUCATE PRETTY GIRLS FOR TEACHERS? |
15718 | ( 5) HOW SHALL WE KEEP WARM THIS WINTER? |
15718 | ( 6) DOES DEEP PLOWING PAY? |
15718 | ( 6)(_ The Outlook_) GROW OLD ALONG WITH ME BY CHARLES HENRY LERRIGO Are you interested in adding fifteen years to your life? |
15718 | ( 7)(_ Country Gentleman_) SIMPLE ACCOUNTS FOR FARM BUSINESS BY MORTON O. COOPER Is your farm making money or losing it? |
15718 | A picture of a young woman feeding chickens in a backyard poultry run that accompanied an article entitled"Did You Ever Think of a Meat Garden?" |
15718 | After the sick man''s job? |
15718 | And he? |
15718 | And if you''re no scholar, how can you become a full professor? |
15718 | And the kind of woman who should attempt the summer camp for girls as a means of additional income? |
15718 | And were they not checks of a denomination far larger than those we selfishly cashed for ourselves? |
15718 | And what other flower, at whatever price per dozen, will give you such abundance of beauty without a fear of frosts? |
15718 | And what then? |
15718 | And what was a poor professor doing at Newport? |
15718 | And will not Sue lose, possibly, some of the gentle manners and dainty ways inculcated at home, by close contact with divers other ways and manners? |
15718 | And with those who succeed, what have they more than I? |
15718 | And yet, when willing to stop being a lady, what could one do? |
15718 | Are concrete examples and specific instances employed effectively? |
15718 | Are figures of speech used effectively? |
15718 | Are important ideas placed at the beginning of sentences? |
15718 | Are the paragraphs long or short? |
15718 | Are they well- organized units? |
15718 | BY KATHERINE ATKINSON Does it pay the state to educate its teachers? |
15718 | But even when the way has been paved for it, the question,"Why do you want to leave school?" |
15718 | But how about the porter who is not so smart-- the man who has the lean run? |
15718 | But it was that latter part that held me back, that and one other factor:"Those who won,"and"What do they get out of it more than I?" |
15718 | But meanwhile, why be too down- hearted? |
15718 | But what about the employees-- the clerks and the factory workers? |
15718 | By what means are the narrative passages made interesting? |
15718 | Camouflage? |
15718 | Can fickle nature be offset and crops be brought to maturity upon schedule time? |
15718 | Can she trust any one else to watch over her in the matter of flannels and dry stockings? |
15718 | Can you beat it?" |
15718 | Company reputation? |
15718 | Could an article on the same subject, or on a similar one, be written for a newspaper in your section of the country? |
15718 | Could any parts of the article be omitted without serious loss? |
15718 | Could the parts be rearranged with gain in clearness, interest, or progress? |
15718 | Did the writer accomplish his purpose? |
15718 | Did the writer aim to entertain, to inform, or to give practical guidance? |
15718 | Do n''t you understand that it is much easier for me to help you if you speak the truth right away?" |
15718 | Do normal school and university graduates continue teaching long enough to make adequate return for the money invested in their training? |
15718 | Do the descriptive parts of the article portray the impressions vividly? |
15718 | Do the paragraphs begin with important ideas? |
15718 | Do the sentences yield their meaning easily when read rapidly? |
15718 | Do the words, figures of speech, sentences, and paragraphs in this article suggest to you possible means of improving your own style? |
15718 | Do we seem very amusing to you? |
15718 | Do you know what it is to lie awake at night and plan your campaign for the following day? |
15718 | Do you know what they have called me, the old men and women who are wise-- the full- bloods? |
15718 | Do you know? |
15718 | Do you want the rest of the children workin''ten hours a day too? |
15718 | Does it have more than one appeal? |
15718 | Does it seem to be particularly well adapted to the readers of the publication in which it was printed? |
15718 | Does the article contain any material that seems unnecessary to the accomplishment of the purpose? |
15718 | Does the article march on steadily from beginning to end? |
15718 | Does the article suggest to you some sources from which you might obtain material for your own articles? |
15718 | Does the writer seem to have had a definitely formulated purpose? |
15718 | Does this pay? |
15718 | Finally:"Would you like to be a doctor?" |
15718 | For what does it profit a tired teacher if she fill her camp list and have no margin of profit for her weeks of hard labor? |
15718 | From the time of"Mistress Mary, quite contrary, How does your garden grow?" |
15718 | From the_ Journal of Heredity_ was gleaned material for an article entitled"What Chance Has the Poor Child?" |
15718 | Gone as you look at the tiny hand, is n''t it? |
15718 | Got anybody you can let me have for to- day?" |
15718 | Got anything else?" |
15718 | Had we a right not to have children? |
15718 | Had we a right to have children? |
15718 | Have n''t I already dragged you down-- you, a lovely, fine- grained, highly evolved woman-- down to the position of a servant in my house? |
15718 | Have they been"in"on this"big shove toward prosperity?" |
15718 | Have they found it a"nice"town to live in? |
15718 | Have you ever given thought to the accidentalism of many great discoveries? |
15718 | Have you felt that you would_ like_ to take a month''s vacation, but with so many"irons in the fire"things would go to smash if you did? |
15718 | Have you followed the chain of accidents, coincidences, and fortunate circumstances? |
15718 | He must ask himself,"What is my aim in writing this article?" |
15718 | He ought to ask himself,"How widespread is the interest in my subject? |
15718 | How could they waken the public to woman''s bitter necessity for shorter hours? |
15718 | How did they accomplish the next move? |
15718 | How does the Home Assistant plan work in households where two or more helpers are kept? |
15718 | How far back should we be were it not for these fortuitous circumstances? |
15718 | How far did the character of the subject determine the methods of treatment? |
15718 | How long is a second? |
15718 | How much of it was based on his personal observations? |
15718 | How much of the article was based on his personal experience? |
15718 | How much will it appeal to the average individual? |
15718 | How would you state this apparent purpose in one sentence? |
15718 | How''s that for equality? |
15718 | How? |
15718 | I have done both and ought to know.... Can it be merely because the one is done strictly in the home or because no one can see you do it? |
15718 | I''d stand a good chance of losing a customer, would n''t I? |
15718 | I''m so glad to learn of it; but is n''t it tedious to cut the celery into such small bits?" |
15718 | If a person has ability, will not the world learn it? |
15718 | In an article in the_ Philadelphia Ledger_ on"What Can I Do to Earn Money?" |
15718 | Is it practical?" |
15718 | Is it sane? |
15718 | Is it the tunes or the words or we ourselves? |
15718 | Is not the dear old fellow always absent- minded on the stage? |
15718 | Is such a policy safe? |
15718 | Is that the old idea? |
15718 | Is the article easy to read? |
15718 | Is the article of general or of local interest? |
15718 | Is the article predominantly narrative, descriptive, or expository? |
15718 | Is the beginning an integral part of the article? |
15718 | Is the beginning skillfully connected with the body of the article? |
15718 | Is the diction literary or colloquial, specific or general, original or trite, connotative or denotative? |
15718 | Is the length of the article proportionate to the subject? |
15718 | Is the length of the beginning proportionate to the length of the whole article? |
15718 | Is the material so arranged that the average reader will reach the conclusion that the writer intended to have him reach? |
15718 | Is the purpose a worthy one? |
15718 | Is the subject so presented that the average reader is led to see its application to himself and to his own affairs? |
15718 | Is the title attractive, accurate, concise, and concrete? |
15718 | Is the tone well suited to the subject? |
15718 | Is the type of beginning well adapted to the subject and the material? |
15718 | Is there any evidence that the article was timely when it was published? |
15718 | Is there any other type better adapted to the subject and material? |
15718 | Is there variety in paragraph beginnings? |
15718 | Is there variety in sentence length and structure? |
15718 | Is there variety in the methods of presentation? |
15718 | It looks dull, does n''t it? |
15718 | It sounds fanciful, does n''t it? |
15718 | Mary Antin herself accepted the Is this paragraph girls''invitation to attend the graduation out of logical order? |
15718 | Now is n''t that just like a husband? |
15718 | One day it flashed upon me:''Why invest in city property? |
15718 | Or is it merely because it is unskilled labor? |
15718 | Overalls on, sleeves rolled up, face streaming with perspiration? |
15718 | Precincts 1, 4, 5 of the 9th Ward"So yez would be afther havin''me scratch Misther Troy?" |
15718 | Price? |
15718 | QUESTION BEGINNINGS( 1)(_ Kansas City Star_) TRACING THE DROUTH TO ITS LAIR What becomes of the rainfall in the plains states? |
15718 | Repairing the mechanism, polishing the brass? |
15718 | Say, how much do you want for them anyhow?" |
15718 | Should Carl be blamed? |
15718 | Should I be blamed? |
15718 | Should only the financially fit be allowed to survive-- to reproduce their species? |
15718 | Some of them have a habit of dropping in at the New Haven ticket offices and demanding:"Is Eugene running up on the Merchants''to- night?" |
15718 | That I should go to school every day, while I worked-- who could dream of such a thing? |
15718 | That appealed to me as printable, but where to put it in the paper? |
15718 | That is not why he was called an economist; but can you blame my brothers for doing their best to break the engagement?... |
15718 | The compulsion of the thing, or the appeal of the phrase-- which? |
15718 | The direct question,"Do you know why the sky is blue?" |
15718 | The fact that Columbus, one of her Is this comment by countrymen, had discovered the country the writer effective? |
15718 | The following are typical question titles and sub- titles:( 1) WHAT IS A FAIR PRICE FOR MILK? |
15718 | The house is still standing at Rossville, Ga. Do you know what the old people tell us children when we wish we could go back there?" |
15718 | The housekeeper who has been in the habit of coming into her kitchen about half past five and saying,"Oh, Mary, what can we have for dinner? |
15718 | The new plan seems expensive? |
15718 | Then he added:"But what could you expect? |
15718 | Then, looking up and taking in the big, raw- boned physique of the youngster,"Ever think of joinin''?" |
15718 | There''s raisins in this rice puddin'', ai n''t there?" |
15718 | They''ve got us down-- are we going to let them keep us down? |
15718 | Tired to death?" |
15718 | To what extent are narration and description used for expository purposes? |
15718 | To what type does it conform? |
15718 | To which type does this article conform? |
15718 | Troy to contend with again?" |
15718 | Troy, pledged body and soul to the manufacturers? |
15718 | Troy? |
15718 | WHO''LL DO JOHN''S WORK? |
15718 | Was any of the material obtained from newspapers or periodicals? |
15718 | Was there any law compelling them to give their money to their Alma Mater? |
15718 | We, moreover, in return for our interest in education, did we not shamelessly accept monthly checks from the university treasurer''s office? |
15718 | Were n''t they in the hands of the"big cinch,"as a certain combination of business men in St. Louis is known? |
15718 | Were we? |
15718 | Whadd''ye think the man wanted to paint the picture for if there was n''t a dragon? |
15718 | What Some Recent Tests Have Demonstrated( 7) SHALL I START A CANNING BUSINESS? |
15718 | What appears to have suggested the subject to the writer? |
15718 | What becomes of the older porters? |
15718 | What better than that a woman should set the tune for that voice? |
15718 | What can be done for Lemuel? |
15718 | What color are they?" |
15718 | What could be done? |
15718 | What could the papers do? |
15718 | What department is showing a profit? |
15718 | What did it mean? |
15718 | What has happened? |
15718 | What has he done? |
15718 | What have I, a college professor''s wife, to confess? |
15718 | What if he had been in haste, or had been driven off by the queen''s yellow- jacketed soldiers? |
15718 | What if he had no curiosity, if he had not been a paper- maker, if he had not enjoyed acquaintance with Voelter? |
15718 | What is he? |
15718 | What is life insurance but the bet of an unknown number of yearly premiums against the payment of the policy? |
15718 | What is the character of the sub- title, and what relation does it bear to the title? |
15718 | What kind of a salesman do you call yourself anyway?" |
15718 | What main topics are taken up in the article? |
15718 | What next?" |
15718 | What of it? |
15718 | What one is piling up a loss? |
15718 | What other methods might have been used to advantage in presenting this subject? |
15718 | What phases of it are likely to have the greatest interest for the greatest number of persons?" |
15718 | What portions of the article were evidently obtained by interviews? |
15718 | What possible subjects does the article suggest to you? |
15718 | What reports, documents, technical periodicals, and books of reference were used as sources in preparing the article? |
15718 | What type of beginning is used? |
15718 | What was you calc''lating askin''for showin''me where you found it?" |
15718 | What, for the average reader, is the source of interest in the article? |
15718 | When a writer undertakes to choose between the two, he should ask himself,"Are the facts worth remembering?" |
15718 | When we get''em linked together with speedways, where''ll you find anything prettier?" |
15718 | When? |
15718 | Where did you get your recipe?" |
15718 | Where is de_ fleisch_ and de_ brot_ widout your wages?" |
15718 | Where? |
15718 | Who is John Browning? |
15718 | Who? |
15718 | Why are so many responses received to the other advertisement?" |
15718 | Why ca n''t a mistake be made in either direction?" |
15718 | Why ca n''t this farm bureau put on a spraying service?" |
15718 | Why did they fail? |
15718 | Why do n''t the people around here drain their country?" |
15718 | Why is a signed name to an article necessary, when everyone knows when the paper comes out that I wrote the article? |
15718 | Why is it, then, that the people make such a sorry exhibition of themselves when they attempt to sing the patriotic songs of our country? |
15718 | Why not a little farm? |
15718 | Why not in my own department? |
15718 | Why not? |
15718 | Why should I pay back the money? |
15718 | Why? |
15718 | Why? |
15718 | Why? |
15718 | Will you help me to get a job?" |
15718 | Will you mind if I eat supper here?" |
15718 | Will you?" |
15718 | With what other flower can you do that? |
15718 | Would You Rather Work For a Man or For a Machine? |
15718 | Would n''t you rather they worked her nine hours a day instead o''ten-- such a soft little kid with such a lot o''growin''to do? |
15718 | Would the beginning attract the attention and hold the interest of the average reader? |
15718 | Would you rather not have a good interested worker for eight hours a day than none at all? |
15718 | You never heard of him? |
15718 | You never step on your own toe, do you, or hit yourself in the face-- if you can help it? |
15718 | and what do you get out of it? |
15718 | and,"What do I expect to accomplish?" |
15718 | and,"Will they furnish food for thought?" |
15718 | ¶"How old are you?" |
39927 | I asked him,says Harding,"if he never got lost in his long wanderings after game? |
36292 | Are them your mules? 36292 Do you remember how Lieutenant Baxter and Sergeant Dobbs got those seventy- sevens by outflanking and surprising them?" |
36292 | Exercise, is it, sir? 36292 Get back in time all right?" |
36292 | My lord, Major, why are n''t you the Seventh Field Artillery? |
36292 | Qui est la? |
36292 | See your family? |
36292 | Sergeant Murphy? |
36292 | Sir,asked Johnson,"when do we hit''em?" |
36292 | Sor- r? |
36292 | What are you doing here? 36292 What is it, Bill?" |
36292 | What is it, sergeant, are n''t you getting enough exercise? |
36292 | What was it you said? |
36292 | When, sir? |
36292 | Why not try Roosevelt? |
36292 | Why should you go rather than me? |
36292 | After Donovan had gone, the Frenchman remarked to me,"Buffalo is very wild, is it not?" |
36292 | After talking for a half an hour he would ask confidentially,"Major, what is a switch line?" |
36292 | An officer who talked with these men on their return said that conversations ran much like this:"Cipiloni, have a fine time on your leave?" |
36292 | And what did ye look, they should compass? |
36292 | Can you get the food forward to them? |
36292 | Can you get the food to them hot? |
36292 | Did n''t I tell you to stay with the kitchens?" |
36292 | Hannibal is not there? |
36292 | He challenged,"Who is there?" |
36292 | He described to me on his return how on the way down all the men would talk about was:"Do you remember how we got that machine- gun nest? |
36292 | He explained,"But it is the place where you hunt that great animal, is it not?" |
36292 | How did they impress each other? |
36292 | How heavy is the gassing to be? |
36292 | How quickly will the wind carry it away? |
36292 | I bowed to the girdle and said,"Will they come in?" |
36292 | I knew him to be a good sort and said to him,"What is the matter, how did this come about?" |
36292 | I said to him,"Captain, where is your company?" |
36292 | I said,"Had n''t you better go to the first aid, sergeant?" |
36292 | Lieutenant Van, my supply officer, would reply from the other side,"Hello, hello, is this the King of Essex talking?" |
36292 | Now that the work of fighting was over, uppermost in everyone''s mind was the thought,"When do we get home?" |
36292 | One lieutenant called out to me,"How far have you gone?" |
36292 | One man asked in all solemnity once,"Does blood rust steel more than water?" |
36292 | The Yankee in the British Zone By Captain Ewen C. MacVeagh and Lieutenant Lee D. Brown How did Tommy Atkins and the Yank get on? |
36292 | The conversation would be something like this:"What is light artillery?" |
36292 | The men got so they thought a good deal of it, and frequently when marching through towns the troops would call out,"How about that band?" |
36292 | The question now is, what''s up? |
36292 | The question was so intelligent and so well thought out that the lieutenant said to him:"What were you before the war?" |
36292 | Warcraft learned in a breath, Knowledge unto occasion At the first far view of death?" |
36292 | Well, what do you mean by leaving them loose by the road? |
36292 | What did they learn about each other? |
36292 | What has happened? |
36292 | What is it? |
36292 | Where are you going with those mules?" |
18964 | A hundred thousand dollars, cash, I believe? 18964 A thousand dollars? |
18964 | And after all, do n''t you think one''s nose is like one''s gown in that it''s true effect lies in the way one wears it? |
18964 | And so my name is really the only thing commendable about me? |
18964 | And your proposition? |
18964 | Are there not enough cheap law breakers? 18964 Are we just going to step into a ballroom for the masquerade?" |
18964 | Are you badly hurt? |
18964 | Are you married to either of the hang dogs with whom you are travelling? |
18964 | Because of me? |
18964 | Because there are a couple of men out there to see, I suppose? |
18964 | Because you have found gold, much gold,she returned,"must I come to you penniless, like a beggar?" |
18964 | But are quite willing to let me babble on? |
18964 | But surely some come just through a sense of curiosity? |
18964 | By the way, Mr. Newly- made Croesus, does this mountain belong to you, too? 18964 Ca n''t you get a woman to help?" |
18964 | Ca n''t you help me? |
18964 | Ca n''t you see the man is sick? 18964 Ca n''t you see the uniform? |
18964 | Captain Sefton,went on the girl quite calmly,"will you see what you can do for that man? |
18964 | Could n''t you tell that the fool has money? |
18964 | Coward, am I? 18964 Did n''t you hear me?" |
18964 | Did you hear me, Rand? |
18964 | Do n''t you hear me? |
18964 | Do n''t you know of Paul Bellaire? |
18964 | Do n''t you know that I mean what I say? 18964 Do n''t you want me to tell you of that?" |
18964 | Do you guess what I am going to do? 18964 Do you hate me, Ygerne, because always I was brute to you?" |
18964 | Do you hear me? |
18964 | Do you love Ygerne Bellaire, Dave? |
18964 | Do you remember? 18964 Do you think I am a coward?" |
18964 | Do you think I am dying? 18964 Do you think I am ungrateful? |
18964 | Do you think I run around with a proposition to make every prospector who thinks he''s found a bonanza? 18964 Double again?" |
18964 | Drunk, eh? |
18964 | Early? 18964 For a fortune you''d repay me with a smile, would you? |
18964 | Forgive you? |
18964 | Gone? |
18964 | Has Kootanie George done this to you? |
18964 | Have they robbed the Bank of England? |
18964 | Have you made a dicker with any one? |
18964 | He is delirious? |
18964 | How big are you bettin''''em? |
18964 | How long will it take us to get to it? |
18964 | How old are you? |
18964 | I suppose you''ve done that sort of thing before? |
18964 | I think that that is all, is n''t it, Lieutenant? |
18964 | I wonder how frightened you''d have to be before you could pull the trigger? |
18964 | I wonder if you know that? |
18964 | I''ll give you five hundred if you can tell me why? |
18964 | I''ve been sick? |
18964 | If all of the nonsense were taken out of life what would be left, I wonder? |
18964 | If you mean Greaser why do n''t you say Greaser? |
18964 | If you will allow me, Ygerne? 18964 In hell''s name,"he cried abruptly, his voice ringing with a new menace in it,"what are you doing here? |
18964 | Is it worth it? |
18964 | Is it? 18964 Is love a little thing or a big thing?" |
18964 | Is n''t it fun? |
18964 | Is not George a guest and has he not the right to put his heel upon an evil serpent? 18964 Is that my answer, Ygerne?" |
18964 | Just pleasure of course? 18964 Laugh at me, why do n''t you?" |
18964 | Lemarc and Sefton? |
18964 | May I drink your health? |
18964 | May I see Miss Bellaire? |
18964 | Mees Bellaire? 18964 Mexican gent, huh?" |
18964 | Mr. Drennen,said the lieutenant bruskly coming straight to the business in hand after his way;"you come from MacLeod''s?" |
18964 | My boy,said Sothern very gently,"you are sure that you have made no mistake? |
18964 | My share, señorita? |
18964 | On the seventh day, in the morning early, will you meet me here, Ygerne? |
18964 | Or are we mad now? |
18964 | Or stupidity, which? |
18964 | Perhaps,she ran on, her head a little to one side as she studied him frankly,"you did n''t realise just how interesting a type you are? |
18964 | Queer, is n''t it? |
18964 | Quite sure of that? |
18964 | Shall I put it in the safe for you? |
18964 | Shall I send some one to you? |
18964 | Shall a man say all of the foolish things which flash into his brain? |
18964 | She''s too holy for a woman like me to talk about, is she? 18964 So that''s it? |
18964 | So you do''what you damned please''? 18964 So you''re David Drennen, are you? |
18964 | So, if you do n''t want to know what drove me from New Orleans you do want to know what brought me here? 18964 Stand where you are, do you hear? |
18964 | Surely you know the type of men these two are? 18964 Tempting me further?" |
18964 | That''s not all of the evidence you''ve got that John Harper Drennen is alive, is it? |
18964 | The absconding John Harper Drennen made such a request of you? |
18964 | The rest, m''sieu? |
18964 | Then why do you come to me this way, now? |
18964 | Then, ca n''t you see, I''m the man you want to deal with? |
18964 | Then,said Drennen,"if you are not to be turned aside can I help? |
18964 | They''re both in love with you, no doubt? |
18964 | This Drennen is your son and you love him much? |
18964 | Those are the people you want? |
18964 | Told him what? |
18964 | Was that your bona fide proposition, Mr. Drennen? 18964 Was there a time when you were as innocent as you look, Ygerne?" |
18964 | We are in the presence of gentry, then? |
18964 | Well, Mr. Drennen,he said quietly, going about the table and to his chair,"how does it feel to be worth a cool hundred thousand?" |
18964 | Well? |
18964 | Well? |
18964 | Well? |
18964 | Well? |
18964 | Well? |
18964 | Were they in MacLeod''s when you left? |
18964 | Were you the lovely cashier in an ice cream store? 18964 What are you lookin''for Drennen for?" |
18964 | What do I care? |
18964 | What do you mean? |
18964 | What do you mean? |
18964 | What does it want you for? |
18964 | What for? |
18964 | What have you done? 18964 What horses can climb these cliffs?" |
18964 | What in hell''s name have you done? |
18964 | What is it, Ernestine? 18964 What is it?" |
18964 | What is it? |
18964 | What is it? |
18964 | What matter? |
18964 | What sort of cash bonus? |
18964 | What''s eatin''you, Dave, anyway? |
18964 | What''s wrong? |
18964 | What''s your proposition? |
18964 | What, am I no man but a little baby that a woman must fight my fight? 18964 Where are you taking him?" |
18964 | Where is Miss Bellaire? |
18964 | Where is this mine of yours? |
18964 | Where? 18964 Where? |
18964 | Which way are you headed now? |
18964 | Who is it? |
18964 | Who shot? |
18964 | Who was with her? |
18964 | Whose? |
18964 | Why are the interesting men always rude? |
18964 | Why are you asking me a question like this? 18964 Why did n''t you say that in the first place? |
18964 | Why do n''t you go? |
18964 | Why do n''t you say,''Here''s lookin''at you,''and be done with it? |
18964 | Why do you ask? |
18964 | Why do you come to me that way? |
18964 | Why do you tell me this, Max? |
18964 | Why is a man always blind to what another woman can see so plainly? 18964 Why not?" |
18964 | Why not? |
18964 | Why not? |
18964 | Why, man, are you crazy? |
18964 | Why? |
18964 | Will I love you to- morrow? 18964 Will you come outside with me?" |
18964 | Will you dance with me, señorita? |
18964 | Will you give me my change? |
18964 | Will you open the door, señor? |
18964 | Will you tell her that it is important? |
18964 | Yes, Dad? |
18964 | Yes, they are,she told him with deep gravity of tone, just as though he had done the logical thing, been communicative and said,"Are they?" |
18964 | Yes? |
18964 | Ygerne,cried Drennen harshly,"why do you travel with men like that Sefton and Lemarc?" |
18964 | You are not afraid of me, are you? |
18964 | You are on a hunting trip, I take it? |
18964 | You are thinking that I am rather forward than maidenly? |
18964 | You are very sure? |
18964 | You die, señor? |
18964 | You do n''t burn daylight, do you? |
18964 | You have filed your title, of course? |
18964 | You have not forgot, eh? |
18964 | You know two men named Sefton and Lemarc? 18964 You love your son?" |
18964 | You mean,she cried angrily,"that you will try to rob me?" |
18964 | You said that I could help? |
18964 | You think that they have gone that way? |
18964 | You want me to look it over with you, Sothern? |
18964 | You will tell Max? |
18964 | You wish that I would go away? |
18964 | You''ll take him off to yourself, will you? 18964 You''re not still holding out for that ridiculous proposition you made me the other day, are you?" |
18964 | You''ve heard of him, no doubt? 18964 You''ve met him, I dare say?" |
18964 | Your wound is healing nicely? |
18964 | _ Qui sait_? |
18964 | Am I a fool? |
18964 | Am I insulting? |
18964 | Am I talking like a madman again? |
18964 | An option?" |
18964 | And Captain Sefton?" |
18964 | And Kootanie''s? |
18964 | And a girl named Bellaire?" |
18964 | And a ten per cent royalty?" |
18964 | And did you abscond with a dollar and ninety cents?" |
18964 | And if you will pardon us a second?" |
18964 | And now? |
18964 | And that he should head them back along the trail? |
18964 | And then,"Is n''t it a little strange that after all these years interest in John Harper Drennen should awake?" |
18964 | And why?" |
18964 | And, kind sir,_ why_ is it?" |
18964 | Are the fires of hell venomous tongues that bite deep to punish with their torture when it is too late? |
18964 | Are you a good woman or a bad? |
18964 | Are you generous or mean? |
18964 | Are you loyal and stanch and true-- or treacherous and contemptible? |
18964 | Are you on?" |
18964 | Are you sure now that I am not what you named me?" |
18964 | Before I know where the claim is or see the dirt out of it?" |
18964 | But is it the truth?" |
18964 | But was n''t he reported to have died a long time ago?" |
18964 | But who has dreamed to find gold in the Nez Cassé? |
18964 | Ca n''t you see that? |
18964 | David?" |
18964 | Deal''em up, why do n''t you?" |
18964 | Did a man who has followed the beck of hope of gold ever see a rainbow without wondering what treasure lay at the far end of the radiant promise? |
18964 | Did strength, any more than anything else in the world, come to a man who lay on his back and waited for it? |
18964 | Did you tie up with him?" |
18964 | Do n''t the winters freeze and kill him? |
18964 | Do n''t you know what she is?" |
18964 | Do you fancy that you can anger Marc and Captain Sefton this way?" |
18964 | Do you hear me, Dave, boy? |
18964 | Do you know how I love you now?" |
18964 | Do you know how I worshipped you when I was a boy? |
18964 | Do you know that I am the one who is going to deal out the suffering? |
18964 | Do you know what you have done, Ygerne, with the infernal witchery of you? |
18964 | Do you think a woman is made like a man? |
18964 | Does he love you or does he hate you?" |
18964 | Does n''t water drown him, fire burn him? |
18964 | Drennen?" |
18964 | Drennen?" |
18964 | Drennen?" |
18964 | Drennen?" |
18964 | Drennen?" |
18964 | Drennen?" |
18964 | Else why should she be here at all, and with men like Lemarc and Sefton? |
18964 | For why?" |
18964 | He pocketed his fee, bestowed upon Sothern a gratuitous wink with the words,"I guess it''s a good investment for you, eh? |
18964 | How did he accept the wonder tale of the virgin purity of your red lips, Ygerne?" |
18964 | How little time then must pass to wipe out the memory of the passing of a David Drennen from the busy thoroughfares into the secluded trails? |
18964 | I give you something filled with sweetness to carry in your heart? |
18964 | I have not been good to you, have I? |
18964 | If she did n''t love him, then why did she look at him like that? |
18964 | In the day the whole Settlement would follow,_ non_? |
18964 | Is that it? |
18964 | Is that reason enough?" |
18964 | Is that why you are here to- night?" |
18964 | Is the world so damned small that you''ve got to come and preen yourself under my eyes?" |
18964 | Know her?" |
18964 | Knowing you as I do, is it likely that I should have come to love you?" |
18964 | Lemarc? |
18964 | Lord,"and he laughed softly,"it would be some white feather in my cap if I could bring the old fox in, would n''t it, Mr. Sothern? |
18964 | Max, my boy, you will forgive me? |
18964 | May I have your stenographer for a few moments, sir?" |
18964 | Maybe you''ve heard of me?" |
18964 | Not a common name, is it? |
18964 | Not a pretty trick to play, but was now the time for nicety? |
18964 | Now you request me to get out of Canada? |
18964 | Now, go away, will you? |
18964 | OR JUST PLAIN MAN? |
18964 | OR JUST PLAIN MAN? |
18964 | Or do I have to crawl away from here to get away from you? |
18964 | Or do you love me?" |
18964 | Or just like a fool? |
18964 | Or neither, Ygerne?" |
18964 | Or out of America? |
18964 | Or the western hemisphere, which is it? |
18964 | Or were you merely sparring for time and putting out a bluff?" |
18964 | Over and over the questions pricked his brain:"What was she doing out here alone at this time of night? |
18964 | Shall I drink the toast, Ygerne?" |
18964 | Shall I voice my second idiotic thought?" |
18964 | Suppose that he should be contented with the ten thousand dollar bird in his hand and never mind the hypothetical Bellaire treasure bird in the bush?" |
18964 | Suppose that he turned Max''s horse loose? |
18964 | That I can kill you, that I will kill you if you dare insult me further?" |
18964 | That you do n''t care for trouble to- night? |
18964 | The girl is no better than her companions?" |
18964 | The world had gone stale in his mouth; a black depression beat at him with its stiffling[ Transcriber''s note: stifling?] |
18964 | Then she said abruptly:"Have you told any one yet of your discovery?" |
18964 | Then, with a grim tightening of the lips,"And why not?" |
18964 | Together with the rest of the universe?" |
18964 | True, the thought had flickered through his brain:"And suppose that Lemarc should take the cash and let the credit go? |
18964 | Unless he had a quarrel with some man in the Frenchman''s house, what had brought him? |
18964 | Was that not the reason why such people came here? |
18964 | Well, what was the difference? |
18964 | Well, why not? |
18964 | Were Sefton and Lemarc in there, too? |
18964 | Were we both bluffing? |
18964 | What are you staying here for? |
18964 | What do you care for me?" |
18964 | What had happened to her?" |
18964 | What have the three of you in common?" |
18964 | What in all the world of worlds did she want of him? |
18964 | What is the matter, Ernestine?" |
18964 | What then,_ amigos_? |
18964 | What was he sitting here like a fool for? |
18964 | When a passer- by asked,"How''s he gettin''along?" |
18964 | When he said, over and over,"And you do love me, Ygerne?" |
18964 | When?" |
18964 | When?" |
18964 | Where are the others?" |
18964 | Where do you fit in, Ygerne Bellaire?" |
18964 | Where is Sefton?" |
18964 | Where you can do as you damned please with him? |
18964 | Which?" |
18964 | Who knows? |
18964 | Who went with her?" |
18964 | Who will drink with me?" |
18964 | Who''s getting impertinent now?" |
18964 | Why Garcia? |
18964 | Why do I hate you, your eyes, your mouth, your body and your brain? |
18964 | Why do n''t you go on? |
18964 | Why had he not kept that forty thousand dollars? |
18964 | Why had the horses been left where they would be found so readily? |
18964 | Why must he seek to do my work for me?" |
18964 | Why must you think one thing and say another?" |
18964 | Why not to the Canadian?" |
18964 | Why that careless beacon smoke where no man could fail to see it? |
18964 | Why?" |
18964 | Will you cut loose from them, dear?" |
18964 | Will you tell me about it, Ygerne?" |
18964 | Would you be a little sorry for me if I died?" |
18964 | You are a comic-- no?" |
18964 | You are getting along all right?" |
18964 | You are going to let no one in with you?" |
18964 | You have a mine you want us to look at?" |
18964 | You''ve struck gold, they tell me? |
18964 | _ Hein_? |
18964 | _ Hein_?" |
18964 | and the law wants you back there in the States?" |
18964 | because I made you love me?" |
18964 | if I were a fool like other men?" |
18964 | or are they flames which cleanse and chasten while there is yet time? |
18964 | or you?" |
18964 | where was it? |
18964 | wo n''t you, David?" |
18964 | you do n''t think I''m a sentimental fool, do you?" |
37313 | ), Joseph Interpreting Dreams( 1648); Jacob de Wet( 1610?-71? |
37313 | = Esaias Bourse.=--Esaias Bourse( 1630-?) |
37313 | = His Brother Gerard''s Cologne.=--His brother Gerard Berckheyde( 1631- 98?) |
37313 | = Jacob G. Cuijp''s Scène Champêtre.=--Jacob Gerritsz Cuijp( 1594- 1651? |
37313 | = Jan Vonck.=--Jan Vonck( 1630-? |
37313 | = Koninck''s Famous Gold Weigher.=--Of single figures perhaps the most famous is by Salomon Koninck( 1609- 68? |
37313 | = Nicolas Moeyaert''s Best Points.=--A follower of Elsheimer, who later became a disciple of Rembrandt, was Nicolas Moeyaert( 1630-? |
37313 | = Other Painters belonging to the Same Group.=--An interesting and curious work is Shells, by Balthasar van der Ast(?-1656). |
37313 | = Three Excellent Pictures by Hendrik Dubbels.=--Hendrik Dubbels( 1620- 76? |
37313 | = Two Portraits by Mostert, and One by Queborn.=--Jan Mostert( 1474-? |
37313 | = Van Gaesbeeck and Van der Kuyl.=--Adriaen van Gaesbeeck(?-1650), of the same period, was probably one of G. Dou''s pupils. |
37313 | A. Kruseman( 1804- 62), Elisha and the Shunammite; Pieter Pietersz Lastman( 1583- 1633), The Sacrifice of Abraham; Willem de Poorter(?-1645? |
37313 | A. Kruseman( 1804- 62), Elisha and the Shunammite; Pieter Pietersz Lastman( 1583- 1633), The Sacrifice of Abraham; Willem de Poorter(?-1645? |
37313 | And why, indeed, should he do so? |
37313 | Another painter of_ genre_, who is represented here by two charming pictures, is Gysbert van der Kuyl(?-1673). |
37313 | Breughel''s Still- life Pictures.=--His pupil, Abraham Breughel( 1631-? |
37313 | C. van Vliet.=--Hendrik Cornelisz van Vliet( 1608- 66? |
37313 | How did he always know how to discover the paintable spot? |
37313 | How had he observed them? |
37313 | In some of his pictures of this class Steen adds the legend"_ Wat baet hier medecyn-- het is der minne pijn_"( Of what use is medicine here? |
37313 | Is the supply exhausted? |
37313 | Jan Paul Gillemans( 1618-?) |
37313 | On the wall beside it hangs another flower piece by the brush of Elias van Broeck(?-1708). |
37313 | Rachel Ruijsch was a pupil of Willem van Aelst( 1626- 83? |
37313 | Salomon Ruisdael(?-1670) has two fine landscapes, The Halt, dated 1660, and The Village Inn, dated 1655. |
37313 | The latter is particularly interesting, because, although the catalogues give it to Cornelis Drost( 1638-? |
37313 | Who can it be that painted the fine figures in this picture? |
37313 | Who is the hero or heroine of the scene? |
37313 | and King Solomon Sacrificing to Idols; Mechior Brassauw( 1709- 57? |
37313 | de Molyn''s Farm.=--Pieter de Molyn the Elder(?-1661) has a pretty picture of a farm, where two peasant men are talking to a peasant woman. |
38840 | And what do you propose to do with us now? |
38840 | Are you going to turn us adrift here? |
38840 | How did you surprise my camp without a struggle? 38840 How is this?" |
38840 | On foot? |
38840 | What chance is there to trade for him? |
38840 | What do you mean by it? |
38840 | Where''s your command? 38840 Who fired that shot?" |
38840 | After they had disarmed us, Simpson asked,"Well, Smith, what are you going to do with us?" |
38840 | Bill said:"How?" |
38840 | How does that beautiful spot down in the valley suit you?" |
38840 | How does that suit you?" |
38840 | I ca n''t understand it?" |
38840 | Massa Bill, am dat you?" |
38840 | Simpson?" |
38840 | The boy jumped up, grasped his rifle, and said,"What are you doing with my horse?" |
38840 | The chief in his guttural tones, without changing his expression at all, said:"How?" |
38840 | The wagon train was a mile in the rear, and when it came up one of the drivers asked,"How are we going down there?" |
38840 | Then he sang out,"Massa Bill, is you got any hawdtack?" |
38840 | Where''s General Penrose?" |
38840 | the leader of the Danites?" |
18909 | Ai n''t goin''to see the celebration? |
18909 | And is mine one? |
18909 | And so you saw them-- when? 18909 And where are they? |
18909 | Are you not tired with rolling and never Resting to sleep? 18909 Backward?" |
18909 | Birds can fly, An''why ca n''t I? 18909 But if some maid with beauty blest, As pure and fair as Heaven can make her, Will share my labor and my rest Till envious Death shall overtake her? |
18909 | But if some maiden with a heart On me should venture to bestow it, Pray should I act the wiser part To take the treasure or forego it? 18909 But what if, seemingly afraid To bind her fate in Hymen''s fetter, She vow she means to die a maid, In answer to my loving letter? |
18909 | But why do I talk of Death,-- That phantom of grisly bone? 18909 Could we send him a short message? |
18909 | Dear Pig, are you willing to sell for one shilling Your ring? |
18909 | Do you know the Blue- Grass country? |
18909 | Has some saint gone up to heaven? |
18909 | How many are you, then,said I,"If they two are in heaven?" |
18909 | How many? 18909 If seven maids with seven mops Swept it for half a year, Do you suppose,"the Walrus said,"That they could get it clear?" |
18909 | Lady Moon, Lady Moon, where are you roving? |
18909 | Lady Moon, Lady Moon, whom are you loving? |
18909 | Lady Moon, Lady Moon, whom are you loving? |
18909 | Now why weep ye so, good people? 18909 Now, who will buy my apples?" |
18909 | Oh, he''s a fanatic,the others rejoined,"Dispense with the ambulance? |
18909 | Sisters and brothers, little Maid, How many may you be? |
18909 | Some whisky, rum or gin? |
18909 | The night is fine,the Walrus said,"Do you admire the view? |
18909 | Well, well,said he,"explain to me and I''ve no more to say; Can you go anywhere to- morrow and come back from there to- day?" |
18909 | What does it want? |
18909 | What if, aweary of the strife That long has lured the dear deceiver, She promise to amend her life, And sin no more; can I believe her? 18909 What if, in spite of her disdain, I find my heart entwined about With Cupid''s dear, delicious chain So closely that I ca n''t get out? |
18909 | What''s that? |
18909 | Where did it come from? |
18909 | Who planted this old apple- tree? |
18909 | Whom should I marry? 18909 Why do n''t you laugh? |
18909 | Will you trust me, Katie dear,-- Walk beside me without fear? 18909 You did? |
18909 | Your name? |
18909 | _ We Are Seven--A simple Child, That lightly draws its breath, And feels its life in every limb, What should it know of death? 18909 --and I seized the little lad;How can you dare to rob your wife and your little helpless child?" |
18909 | 9''? |
18909 | A Child''s Thought of God They say that God lives very high; But if you look above the pines You can not see our God; and why? |
18909 | A funeral? |
18909 | Ai n''t I always been a pardner to you? |
18909 | Ai n''t I always been your friend? |
18909 | Ai n''t he a funny old Raggedy Man? |
18909 | Ai n''t he the beanin''est Raggedy Man? |
18909 | Ai n''t nu''h''n but_ rocks_? |
18909 | Ai n''t you satisfied at all? |
18909 | All my pennies do n''t I spend In getting nice things for you? |
18909 | Am I blind or lame? |
18909 | Am I lazy or crazy? |
18909 | An''that t''other thing? |
18909 | An''then that feller looked around An''seed me there, down on the ground, An''--was he mad? |
18909 | An''w''y fer is you''s little foot tied, Little cat? |
18909 | And Sis?--has she grown tall? |
18909 | And is n''t it, my boy or girl, The wisest, bravest plan, Whatever comes, or does n''t come, To do the best you can? |
18909 | And mother-- does she fade at all? |
18909 | And now she watches the pathway, As yester eve she had done; But what does she see so strange and black Against the rising sun? |
18909 | And oft the young lads shouted, when they saw the maid at play:"Ho, good- for- nothing Brier- Rose, how do you do to- day?" |
18909 | And shall this man dictate to us? |
18909 | And suppose the world do n''t please you, Nor the way some people do, Do you think the whole creation Will be altered just for you? |
18909 | And tell me now, what makes thee sing, With voice so loud and free, While I am sad, though I''m a king, Beside the river Dee?" |
18909 | And the brown thrush keeps singing,"A nest do you see, And five eggs hid by me in the juniper tree? |
18909 | And what does he say, little girl, little boy? |
18909 | And what is so rare as a day in June? |
18909 | And what meaneth that stifled murmur of wonder and amaze? |
18909 | And what shall_ I_ say, if a wretch should propose? |
18909 | And when they were alone, the angel said,"Art thou the king?" |
18909 | And whom bury ye today? |
18909 | And would n''t it be nicer For you to smile than pout, And so make sunshine in the house When there is none without? |
18909 | And would n''t it be nobler To keep your temper sweet, And in your heart be thankful You can walk upon your feet? |
18909 | And would n''t it be pleasanter To treat it as a joke, And say you''re glad"''Twas Dolly''s And not your head that broke"? |
18909 | And would n''t it be wiser Than waiting like a dunce, To go to work in earnest And learn the thing at once? |
18909 | And your age?" |
18909 | Any memory of his sermon? |
18909 | Are n''t we picking up folks just as fast as they fall? |
18909 | Art thou a mourner? |
18909 | Art thou afraid?" |
18909 | Away with a bellow fled the calf, And what was that? |
18909 | Aye? |
18909 | Bearing his load on the rough road of life? |
18909 | Before her stood fair Bregenz, once more her towers arose; What were the friends beside her? |
18909 | Bob kept askin''for a job, And the Boss, he says:"What kind?" |
18909 | Boy, whah''s de raisin''I give you? |
18909 | Brave Adm''r''l, say but one good word: What shall we do when hope is gone? |
18909 | Brave Adm''r''l, speak; what shall I say?" |
18909 | Bright jewels of the mine? |
18909 | But here the pitcher twirled again-- was that a rifle shot? |
18909 | But the treasures-- how to get them? |
18909 | But vot off dot? |
18909 | But where was the child delaying? |
18909 | But who that fought in the big war Such dread sights have not seen? |
18909 | But why does a sudden tremor seize on them as they gaze? |
18909 | Cain''t tell w''en dey''s ripe? |
18909 | Can you hear?" |
18909 | Come you back to Mandalay, Where the old flotilla lay: Ca n''t you''ear their paddles chunkin''from Rangoon to Mandalay? |
18909 | Come, haste"? |
18909 | Did dey pisen you''s tummick inside, Little cat? |
18909 | Did dey pound you wif bricks, Or wif big nasty sticks, Or abuse you wif kicks, Little cat? |
18909 | Did he die like a craven, Begging those torturing fiends for his life? |
18909 | Did it hurt werry bad w''en you died, Little cat? |
18909 | Did the gosling laugh? |
18909 | Did you kiss me and call me"Mother"--and hold me to your breast, Or is it one of the taunting dreams that come to mock my rest? |
18909 | Do n''t I give you lots of cake? |
18909 | Do n''t ye see I have her with me-- my poor sainted little Belle?'' |
18909 | Do n''t you hear? |
18909 | Do you not know me? |
18909 | Do you see her little hand beckoning? |
18909 | Do you see o''er the gilded cloud mountains Sister''s golden hair streaming out? |
18909 | Do you think that Katie guessed Half the wisdom she expressed? |
18909 | Do you think, sir, if you try, You can paint the look of a lie? |
18909 | Does half my heart lie buried there In Texas, down by the Rio Grande? |
18909 | Does he see the ruddy wine Shiver in its crystal goblet, or do those grave eyes divine Something sadder yet? |
18909 | Does he see the waxen bloom Tremble in its vase of silver? |
18909 | Does no voice within Answer my cry, and say we are akin?" |
18909 | Does the leetle, chatterin'', sassy wren, No bigger''n my thumb, know more than men? |
18909 | Dost reel from righteous retribution''s blow? |
18909 | Dost thou behold thy lost youth all aghast? |
18909 | En wut you s''posen Brer Bascom, yo''teacher at Sunday school,''Ud say ef he knowed how you''s broke de good Lawd''s Gol''n Rule? |
18909 | Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold, And to the Presence in the room he said,"What writest thou?" |
18909 | Firstly? |
18909 | For angels have golden tresses And eyes like sister''s, blue? |
18909 | Have I been here long? |
18909 | Have the loving voice and the Helping Hand brought back my wandering son? |
18909 | He asks me questions sooch as dese: Who baints mine nose so red? |
18909 | Here hath been dawning another blue day: Think, wilt thou let it slip useless away? |
18909 | His brothers had walked but a little way When Jotham to Nathan chanced to say,"What on airth is he up to, hey?" |
18909 | Ho, ho, pale brother,"said the Wine,"Can you boast of deeds as great as mine?" |
18909 | How answer his brute question in that hour When whirlwinds of rebellion shake the world? |
18909 | How gan I all dese dings eggsblain To dot schmall Yawcob Strauss? |
18909 | How many ages in time? |
18909 | How many days in a week? |
18909 | How many hours in a day? |
18909 | How many minutes in an hour? |
18909 | How many months in a year? |
18909 | How many seconds in a minute? |
18909 | How many weeks in a month? |
18909 | How many years in an age? |
18909 | I breathed a song into the air, It fell to earth, I knew not where; For who has sight so keen and strong, That it can follow the flight of song? |
18909 | I do''want no foolin''--you hear me? |
18909 | I staggered faintly in, Fearing--_what_? |
18909 | I''ll light on the libbe''ty- pole, an''crow; An''I''ll say to the gawpin''fools below,''What world''s this''ere That I''ve come near?'' |
18909 | If a storm should come and awake the deep What matter? |
18909 | If by easy work you beat, Who the more will prize you? |
18909 | If the men_ were_ so wicked, I''ll ask my papa How he dared to propose to my darling mamma; Was he like the rest of them? |
18909 | In the laugh that rings so gayly through the richly curtained room, Join they all, save one; Why is it? |
18909 | Is his heaven far to seek for those who drown?" |
18909 | Is it possible? |
18909 | Is it worth while that we battle to humble Some poor fellow down into the dust? |
18909 | Is it worth while that we jeer at each other In blackness of heart that we war to the knife? |
18909 | Is n''t it true? |
18909 | Is the pudding done? |
18909 | Is this a hoax? |
18909 | Is this the dream He dreamed who shaped the suns And pillared the blue firmament with light? |
18909 | Is you boun''fuh ter be a black villiun? |
18909 | Is you''s purrin''an''humpin''-up done? |
18909 | Is your heart an ocean so strong and deep I may launch my all on its tide? |
18909 | Jest fold our hands an''see the swaller, An''blackbird an''catbird beat us holler? |
18909 | Maggie, sister''s an angel, Is n''t she? |
18909 | May I carry, if I will, All your burdens up the hill?" |
18909 | Men who had fought ten to one ere that day? |
18909 | Morgan-- Morgan is waiting for me; Oh, what will Morgan say?" |
18909 | Must we give in,"Says he with a grin,"''T the bluebird an''phoebe Are smarter''n we be? |
18909 | My labor never flags; And what are its wages? |
18909 | No? |
18909 | Not Sunday? |
18909 | Now ai n''t you ashamed er yo''se''lf sur? |
18909 | Now if from here to Morrow is a fourteen- hour jump, Can you go to- day to Morrow and come back to- day, you chump?" |
18909 | Now the smiles are thicker-- wonder what they mean? |
18909 | Now, Maggie, I''ve something to tell you-- Let me lean up to you close-- Do you see how the sunset has flooded The heavens with yellow and rose? |
18909 | Now, tell me, Are you guilty of this, or no?" |
18909 | Now_ my_ hair is n''t golden, My eyes are n''t blue, you see-- Now tell me, Maggie, if I were to die, Could they make an angel of me? |
18909 | O masters, lords and rulers in all lands, How will the Future reckon with this man? |
18909 | O masters, lords and rulers in all lands, Is this the handiwork you give to God, This monstrous thing distorted and soul- quenched? |
18909 | Oh, let us be married,--too long we have tarried,-- But what shall we do for a ring?" |
18909 | Oh, w''y did n''t yo wun off and hide, Little cat? |
18909 | Oh, when its aged branches throw Thin shadows on the ground below, Shall fraud and force and iron will Oppress the weak and helpless still? |
18909 | Or does she seem to pine and fret For me? |
18909 | Remember the story of Elihu Burritt, An''how he clum up to the top, Got all the knowledge''at he ever had Down in a blacksmithing shop? |
18909 | Rouse thee from thy spell; Art thou a sinner? |
18909 | Said I,"I guess you know it all, but kindly let me say, How can I go to Morrow, if I leave the town to- day?" |
18909 | Said I,"I want to go to Morrow; can I go to- day And get to Morrow by to- night, if there is no delay?" |
18909 | Said I,"My boy, it seems to me you''re talking through your hat, Is there a town named Morrow on your line? |
18909 | Say, stummick, what''s the matter, You had to go an''ache? |
18909 | Say, what''s the matter with you? |
18909 | Secondly? |
18909 | Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean- side? |
18909 | Shall I tell you where and when? |
18909 | Shall he? |
18909 | Shall not the roaring waters their headlong gallop check? |
18909 | Shall she let it ring? |
18909 | Shall we be trotting home again?" |
18909 | Should it be A dashing damsel, gay and pert, A pattern of inconstancy; Or selfish, mercenary flirt? |
18909 | Slave of the wheel of labor, what to him Are Plato and the swing of Pleiades? |
18909 | So shalt thou rest, and what if thou withdraw In silence from the living, and no friend Take note of thy departure? |
18909 | So she resolutely walked up to the wagon old and red--"May I have a dozen apples for a kiss?" |
18909 | Suppose that some boys have a horse, And some a coach and pair, Will it tire you less while walking To say,"It is n''t fair"? |
18909 | Suppose you''re dressed for walking, And the rain comes pouring down, Will it clear off any sooner Because you scold and frown? |
18909 | Suppose your task, my little man, Is very hard to get, Will it make it any easier For you to sit and fret? |
18909 | Suppose, my dear, I take my knife, And cut the rope to save my life?" |
18909 | THEN DID HE BLENCH? |
18909 | Tell me dat, Did dey holler at all when you cwied? |
18909 | Tell me, darling, will you be The wife of Bobby Shaftoe?" |
18909 | That old familiar tree, Whose glory and renown Are spread o''er land and sea-- And wouldst thou hew it down? |
18909 | The Baby Where did you come from, baby dear? |
18909 | The Pilgrims came to Plymouth Rock In fourteen ninety- two, An''the Indians standin''on the dock Asked,"What are you goin''to do?" |
18909 | The Tree bore his blossoms, and all the birds sung:"Shall I take them away?" |
18909 | The Tree bore his fruit in the midsummer glow: Said the child,"May I gather thy berries now?" |
18909 | The Wind, he took to his revels once more; On down In town, Like a merry- mad clown, He leaped and halloed with whistle and roar,"What''s that?" |
18909 | The church, a phantom, vanished soon; What saw the teacher then? |
18909 | The old man-- is he hearty yet? |
18909 | The weather was bitter cold, The young ones cried and shivered--( Little Johnny''s but four years old)-- So what was I to do, sir? |
18909 | Then I felt myself pulled once again, and my hand caught tight hold of a dress, And I heard,"What''s the matter, dear Jim? |
18909 | Then said,"Who art thou, and why com''st thou here?" |
18909 | Then why should I sit in the scorner''s seat, Or hurl the cynic''s ban? |
18909 | There were men with hoary hair Amidst that pilgrim band: Why had they come to wither there Away from their childhood''s land? |
18909 | There, do n''t hold my hands, Maggie, I do n''t feel like tearing it now; But-- where was I in my story? |
18909 | They scrape away a little snow; What''s this? |
18909 | Tom was only a moderate drinker; ah, sir, do you bear in mind How the plodding tortoise in the race left the leaping hare behind? |
18909 | Und vhere der plaze goes vrom der lamp Vene''er der glim I douse? |
18909 | Up spoke our own little Mabel, Saying,"Father, who makes it snow?" |
18909 | W''y is dat? |
18909 | Waking or asleep, Thou of death must deem Things more true and deep Than we mortals dream, Or how could thy notes flow in such a crystal stream? |
18909 | Was that thunder? |
18909 | Was there a man dismay''d? |
18909 | Was there a soldier who carried the Seven Flinched like a coward or fled from the strife? |
18909 | We shall be so kind in the after while, But what have we been to- day? |
18909 | We shall bring to each lonely life a smile, But what have we brought to- day? |
18909 | We shall give out gold in princely sum, But what did we give to- day? |
18909 | What ails you, Hal? |
18909 | What does little baby say In her bed at peep of day? |
18909 | What fields, or waves, or mountains? |
18909 | What is the use of heapin''on me a pauper''s shame? |
18909 | What love of thine own kind? |
18909 | What means this great commotion? |
18909 | What means this stir in Rome? |
18909 | What objects are the fountains Of thy happy strain? |
18909 | What plant we in this apple- tree? |
18909 | What plant we in this apple- tree? |
18909 | What plant we in this apple- tree? |
18909 | What recked he? |
18909 | What recked those who followed? |
18909 | What shall the tasks of mercy be, Amid the toils, the strifes, the tears Of those who live when length of years Is wasting this apple- tree? |
18909 | What shapes of sky or plain? |
18909 | What sought they thus afar? |
18909 | What the long reaches of the peaks of song, The rift of dawn, the reddening of the rose? |
18909 | What thou art we know not; What is most like thee? |
18909 | What was done? |
18909 | What whistle''s that, yelling so shrill? |
18909 | What''s he got on? |
18909 | What? |
18909 | When can their glory fade? |
18909 | When pain and sickness made me cry, Who gazed upon my heavy eye, And wept, for fear that I should die? |
18909 | When sleep forsook my open eye, Who was it sung sweet lullaby And rocked me that I should not cry? |
18909 | When the sun goes down with a flaming ray And the dear friends have to part? |
18909 | When you were home, old comrade, say, Did you see any of our folks? |
18909 | Where breathes the foe but falls before us, With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us? |
18909 | Where now the solemn shade, Verdure and gloom where many branches meet; So grateful, when the noon of summer made The valleys sick with heat? |
18909 | Where should I fly to, Where go to sleep in the dark wood or dell? |
18909 | Who fathoms the Eternal Thought? |
18909 | Who has seen the wind? |
18909 | Who is he That every man in arms should wish to be? |
18909 | Who knows whither the clouds have fled? |
18909 | Who knows? |
18909 | Who loosened and let down this brutal jaw? |
18909 | Who made him dead to rapture and despair, A thing that grieves not and that never hopes, Stolid and stunned, a brother to the ox? |
18909 | Who ran to help me when I fell And would some pretty story tell, Or kiss the part to make it well? |
18909 | Who sat and watched my infant head When sleeping in my cradle bed, And tears of sweet affection shed? |
18909 | Who talks of scheme and plan? |
18909 | Who taught my infant lips to pray, To love God''s holy word and day, And walk in wisdom''s pleasant way? |
18909 | Who vos it cuts dot schmoodth blace oudt Vrom der hair ubon mine he d? |
18909 | Who won the war? |
18909 | Who won the war? |
18909 | Who won the war? |
18909 | Who won the war? |
18909 | Who won the war? |
18909 | Who won the war? |
18909 | Who''s to blame?" |
18909 | Who, Harry? |
18909 | Who? |
18909 | Whose breath blew out the light within this brain? |
18909 | Whose heart hath ne''er within him burned, As home his footsteps he hath turned From wandering on a foreign strand? |
18909 | Whose the fault then? |
18909 | Whose was the hand that slanted back this brow? |
18909 | Why ai n''t you a friend o''mine? |
18909 | Why do n''t you tell me like a man: What is the matter with our folks?" |
18909 | Why do yonder sorrowing maidens scatter flowers along the way? |
18909 | Why is the Forum crowded? |
18909 | Why look so pale and so sad, as for ever Wishing to weep?" |
18909 | Why should people of sense stop to put up a fence, While the ambulance works in the valley?" |
18909 | Why, sir, you''re crying as hard as I; what-- is it really done? |
18909 | Why, what''s the mattter, friend? |
18909 | Will he dare it, the hero undaunted, that terrible, sickening height, Or will the hot blood of his courage freeze in his veins at the sight? |
18909 | Will he fall? |
18909 | Wu''dat you got under dat box? |
18909 | Wut you say? |
18909 | Yet through that summer morning I lingered near the spot: Oh, why do things seem sweeter if we possess them not? |
18909 | You Moon, have you done something wrong in heaven, That God has hidden your face? |
18909 | You say,"Oh, yes"; you think so? |
18909 | Your feet were bleeding as You walked our pavements-- How did we miss Your footprints on our pavements?-- Can there be other folk as blind as we? |
18909 | _ A soft hand stroked it as I went by._ What makes your cheek like a warm white rose? |
18909 | _ Alfred, Lord Tennyson._ The Tree The Tree''s early leaf buds were bursting their brown;"Shall I take them away?" |
18909 | _ Alice Cary._ The Wind Who has seen the wind? |
18909 | _ Alice Cary._ Who Won the War? |
18909 | _ Alice Gary._ Little Birdie What does little birdie say, In her nest at peep of day? |
18909 | _ Charles F. Adams._ To- day We shall do so much in the years to come, But what have we done to- day? |
18909 | _ Charles Wolfe._ How Many Seconds in a Minute? |
18909 | _ Christina G. Rossetti._ To- day Here hath been dawning another blue day: Think, wilt thou let it slip useless away? |
18909 | _ Edwin Markham._ Poorhouse Nan Did you say you wished to see me, sir? |
18909 | _ Fannie Windsor._ What is Good"What is the real good?" |
18909 | _ Felicia Hemans._ Bobby Shaftoe"Marie, will you marry me? |
18909 | _ Frederick Whitttaker._ A Boy and His Stomach What''s the matter, stummick? |
18909 | _ From the same box as the cherubs''wings._ How did they all just come to be you? |
18909 | _ Give you a song?_ No, I ca n''t do that, my singing days are past; My voice is cracked, my throat''s worn out, and my lungs are going fast. |
18909 | _ God spoke, and it came out to hear._ Where did you get those arms and hands? |
18909 | _ God thought about me, and so I grew._ But how did you come to us, you dear? |
18909 | _ I found it waiting when I got here._ What makes your forehead so smooth and high? |
18909 | _ Joseph Bert Smiley._ Is It Worth While? |
18909 | _ Lord Houghton._ Breathes There the Man With Soul So Dead? |
18909 | _ Lord Houghton._ Lady Moon"Lady Moon, Lady Moon, where are you roving?" |
18909 | _ Love made itself into hooks and bands._ Feet, whence did you come, you darling things? |
18909 | _ Marion Short._ The Owl Critic"Who stuffed that white owl?" |
18909 | _ Out of the everywhere into the here._ Where did you get your eyes so blue? |
18909 | _ Out of the sky as I came through._ What makes the light in them sparkle and spin? |
18909 | _ Rose Hartwick Thorpe._ Kate Shelly Have you heard how a girl saved the lightning express-- Of Kate Shelly, whose father was killed on the road? |
18909 | _ Rudyard Kipling._ Whistling in Heaven You''re surprised that I ever should say so? |
18909 | _ Some of the starry spikes left in._ Where did you get that little tear? |
18909 | _ Something better than anyone knows._ Whence that three- cornered smile of bliss? |
18909 | _ Three angels gave me at once a kiss._ Where did you get that pearly ear? |
18909 | _ William Cullen Bryant._ Character of the Happy Warrior Who is the happy Warrior? |
18909 | _ William Cullen Bryant._ My Mother Who fed me from her gentle breast And hushed me in her arms to rest, And on my cheek sweet kisses prest? |
18909 | _( From"The Lay of the Last Minstrel")_ Breathes there the man with soul so dead Who never to himself hath said, This is my own, my native land? |
18909 | ai n''t it fun to just wade in and help myself? |
18909 | and where? |
18909 | der you think dat I''s bline? |
18909 | do n''t be tazin''me,"said she, With just the faintest sigh,"I''ve sinse enough to see you''ve come, But what''s the reason why?" |
18909 | do n''t you see it is? |
18909 | do n''t you see? |
18909 | do n''t you see? |
18909 | each pain her hurt and woe? |
18909 | he shouted, long and loud; And,"Who wants my potatoes?" |
18909 | how de yeou like flyin''? |
18909 | oh, my baby-- did-- you-- come All the way-- alone-- my darling-- just to lead-- poor-- papa-- home?'' |
18909 | shall Providence be blamed?" |
18909 | shouted she;"Why, do you see it?" |
18909 | so mournful? |
18909 | the teacher said, Filled with a new surprise;"Shall I behold his name enrolled Among the great and wise?" |
18909 | was there ever so merry a note? |
18909 | what ignorance of pain? |
18909 | what to do? |
18909 | when shall they all meet again?" |
18909 | who ever yeered tell er des sich? |
18909 | why so soon Depart the hues that make thy forests glad; Thy gentle wind and thy fair sunny noon, And leave thee wild and sad? |
18909 | wot_ do_ they understand? |
23677 | A camera? 23677 A dress one?" |
23677 | A real wreck? |
23677 | A spread, eh? 23677 A storm; eh?" |
23677 | All ready? |
23677 | All ready? |
23677 | Am I supposed to be in on that? |
23677 | And I''m to be funny? |
23677 | And have I really a sister? |
23677 | And how can we get there? |
23677 | And if they were, what could they pick up? |
23677 | And so you are chums; eh? |
23677 | And so you got other good ones? |
23677 | And so you''re here to get moving pictures; eh? 23677 And there''s no way of telling where he went?" |
23677 | And you rescued your enemies, too? 23677 Any special vessels in view?" |
23677 | Are n''t you going to tell me? |
23677 | Are you Nate Duncan''s son? |
23677 | Are you going to-- gulp-- let me-- glub-- sink out here? 23677 Are you sure it is n''t dynamite?" |
23677 | Are you sure this is the place? |
23677 | Are you the lads that have rooms sixty- six and sixty- seven? |
23677 | Are-- are you going to put us in jail? |
23677 | Be you plumb crazy? 23677 But are you Mr. Nathaniel Duncan?" |
23677 | But has he shipped? |
23677 | But how are you going to do it? |
23677 | But in that case,asked Joe,"why did n''t he leave some word as to where he was going?" |
23677 | But what about my sister? |
23677 | But what could the Indians want with them? |
23677 | But what has that got to do with Joe''s father? |
23677 | But what is it all about? 23677 But what is the matter? |
23677 | But where are they now? |
23677 | But where did he go? |
23677 | But why did you leave so suddenly, and why did the officer come for you the next day? |
23677 | But wo n''t it be risky to go out there in the darkness to bring in the ponies and burros? |
23677 | Ca n''t you get some of the fishermen from around here? |
23677 | Ca n''t you see some side path we can take? |
23677 | Can we find her? |
23677 | Can you see anything of a light? |
23677 | Can you see him? |
23677 | Can you see the vessel? |
23677 | Come on, Hank, you can follow an Indian trail; ca n''t you? |
23677 | Come where? |
23677 | Did I understand him to say that one of you is a Duncan? |
23677 | Did I understand you to say I had to rush out of a burning building? |
23677 | Did he-- did he get my letter? |
23677 | Did n''t he leave any trace at all? |
23677 | Did they get any of our horses-- or things? |
23677 | Did you mean for us to help catch''em? |
23677 | Did you want the devourin''element to consume that buildin''? |
23677 | Did-- did you see anything, Hank? |
23677 | Disappeared? |
23677 | Do I have to fall overboard? |
23677 | Do n''t you call it wrong to set up a false light to lure unsuspecting captains on the rocks, so you can get your pickings? 23677 Do n''t you?" |
23677 | Do you happen to know of a Mr. Duncan there? |
23677 | Do you mean to accuse Joe''s father of being in with the wreckers? |
23677 | Do you mean to say you wo n''t go on with this act? 23677 Do you mean to say, Blake, that this man whom I''ve traced after such hard work, is n''t any relation to me-- haven''t I any folks, after all?" |
23677 | Do you really mean that? |
23677 | Do you think he''ll be gone? |
23677 | Do you want that in the picture? |
23677 | Do-- do you think they''ll shoot? |
23677 | Does it mean a fight? |
23677 | Experimenting? 23677 Feel any brighter?" |
23677 | Get_ me_ one? |
23677 | Had enough? |
23677 | Has Joe a sister, too? |
23677 | Have we been robbed? |
23677 | Have you got the lantern fixed so that she''ll flash like the other? |
23677 | He was n''t; eh? |
23677 | Hold on, C. C.; what''s the matter? |
23677 | How are you making out, Blake? |
23677 | How can I ever tell Joe the news? |
23677 | How dare you poke one out of the window, right toward one of our largest banks, and go out, leaving the mechanism clicking? 23677 How did you happen to come to help us?" |
23677 | How''s that? |
23677 | How? |
23677 | How? |
23677 | I guess you do n''t quite believe that, Hank; do you? |
23677 | I hardly know, and yet----"Maybe they''re experimenting with a new kind of light? |
23677 | I mean, lad,and the lighthouse keeper''s tones sank to a whisper;"I mean, if I tell you something, can you keep it from him?" |
23677 | I wonder if all the Moquis and Navajos who skipped off their reservations have been driven back? |
23677 | I wonder if he will ever get this? |
23677 | I wonder if my father is in any such storm as this, on his way to China? |
23677 | I wonder if my father looks like that? |
23677 | I wonder if the folks who look at moving pictures realize how they are made? |
23677 | I wonder if we''ll go through another scare like that? |
23677 | I wonder what I shall say to him, when I first see him, Blake? |
23677 | I wonder what he''s looking for? |
23677 | I wonder what kind of a man he''ll be? |
23677 | I wonder what will be next on the program? |
23677 | I wonder when we can go to San Francisco? |
23677 | I-- I wonder if that''s him-- my father? |
23677 | I-- I''m to be shipwrecked; am I? |
23677 | If you''ve driven''em off, so they ca n''t try any of their dastardly tricks to lure vessels ashore, is n''t that all you want? 23677 If-- if you-- are you my father?" |
23677 | Is it-- is it that he is n''t my father, after all? |
23677 | Is there anything wrong-- is Mr. Duncan wanted for anything? 23677 Is-- is that right?" |
23677 | It may seem a heartless thing to do, but why ca n''t we get some moving pictures of this? |
23677 | Joe Duncan? 23677 Joe''s father; eh?" |
23677 | Joe, how will it seem to see yourself on a screen? |
23677 | Lucky? |
23677 | Matter? 23677 My name cleared-- and my son with me-- what else could I want?" |
23677 | My sister? |
23677 | Never hold anything back? |
23677 | Oh, ca n''t you look on the bright side? |
23677 | Oh, why did I ever get into this business? 23677 Our own words?" |
23677 | Robbed? 23677 Say, what do you imagine they are doing?" |
23677 | Say, what do you think they are? |
23677 | Say, you do n''t mean to tell me you snapped what happened? |
23677 | Scenes at night? |
23677 | See any of''em, Hank? |
23677 | So that''s how the scoundrels are planning to work; are they? |
23677 | So you did n''t get scalped, after all? |
23677 | That is, unless you''re----"Afraid? 23677 That will be hard to do; wo n''t it?" |
23677 | That''s it, C. C."But to rush out I''ve got to go in; have n''t I? |
23677 | The Rockypoint light? |
23677 | The question is-- where did they go? |
23677 | The wreck-- it''ll come close on shore, the guard says; why not make some moving pictures of it? 23677 Then you do n''t mind if we go?" |
23677 | These movin''pictures are n''t like tintypes; are they? |
23677 | They do n''t; eh? |
23677 | Think of it? |
23677 | Throw that prod; ca n''t you? 23677 Trouble? |
23677 | Want it to burn? |
23677 | Was there some mistake? 23677 We''ll do it; eh, Joe?" |
23677 | Well, I''m not saying we are, either; but if your father is n''t a wrecker why did he run away before the officers came for him? 23677 Well, something will happen, I''m sure,"declared C. C."When do we move?" |
23677 | Well, what about this? |
23677 | Well, what do you think? |
23677 | Well, you have n''t any more infernal machines; have you, boys? |
23677 | Well? |
23677 | Well? |
23677 | What can we do? |
23677 | What can we do? |
23677 | What did they take? |
23677 | What do you mean? |
23677 | What do you think is the best thing to do? |
23677 | What do you want to spoil their welcome for, just as we have a little spread arranged for them? |
23677 | What for? |
23677 | What for? |
23677 | What is it? |
23677 | What is it? |
23677 | What is it? |
23677 | What is it? |
23677 | What is it? |
23677 | What is it? |
23677 | What is it? |
23677 | What is it? |
23677 | What is it? |
23677 | What is it? |
23677 | What is it? |
23677 | What is it? |
23677 | What is she like? 23677 What is your name?" |
23677 | What makes you ask that? |
23677 | What makes you say that? |
23677 | What makes you think I have a secret, Joe? |
23677 | What makes you think so? |
23677 | What shall we do if we find them? |
23677 | What shall we do? |
23677 | What sort of a man was he? |
23677 | What sort? |
23677 | What were you going to say, Blake? |
23677 | What''s best to be done? |
23677 | What''s best to be done? |
23677 | What''s it all about? |
23677 | What''s it going to be about? |
23677 | What''s that, Blake? |
23677 | What''s that? |
23677 | What''s that? |
23677 | What''s that? |
23677 | What''s that? |
23677 | What''s that? |
23677 | What''s the joke? |
23677 | What''s the matter? |
23677 | What''s this? |
23677 | What? |
23677 | What? |
23677 | Where has he gone? |
23677 | Where is he? |
23677 | Where is she? |
23677 | Where is she? |
23677 | Which way shall we go, Blake? |
23677 | Which way shall we shoot? |
23677 | Who sent you? |
23677 | Who-- the fish, or Jake? |
23677 | Who? |
23677 | Why ca n''t you be cheerful? |
23677 | Why did you have to leave so suddenly? |
23677 | Why not? |
23677 | Why not? |
23677 | Why not? |
23677 | Why so? |
23677 | Why was that? |
23677 | Why, has anything happened there? |
23677 | Why, what do you mean? |
23677 | Why, you do n''t think they''re around here; do you? |
23677 | Why, you''re not going to come any of that gloomy C. C. business on me; are you? |
23677 | Why-- why? |
23677 | Why? |
23677 | Why? |
23677 | Will he come back when he knows of the wrecking charge that may be made against him? 23677 Will he, though?" |
23677 | Will it be a real wreck scene? |
23677 | Will the haul- rope stand it? |
23677 | Will they run, do you think? |
23677 | Will we have to go very far to sea? |
23677 | Work hard? 23677 Would you mind telling me why you left so suddenly?" |
23677 | Wrecked? |
23677 | Wreckers; eh? |
23677 | Yes, he''s right astern, but that fish----"Is he coming after Jake? |
23677 | You did n''t know he was a sailor? 23677 You have n''t seen us work so very hard; have you?" |
23677 | You''re not going to have the real fire now; are you? |
23677 | A wreck; eh? |
23677 | Are there any more of you aboard-- or any children?" |
23677 | Are you all right, Jake?" |
23677 | Are you going to balk as you did in the Indian scene?" |
23677 | Are you my son?" |
23677 | Are you really in this queer business of taking moving pictures?" |
23677 | Blake, is there anything you''re holding back from me?" |
23677 | But I mean, what will we do after that? |
23677 | But I wonder if the men will come back after the alarm we gave''em?" |
23677 | But I wonder what it will be next?" |
23677 | But what does it mean?" |
23677 | But why are you asking?" |
23677 | But you wo n''t leave me; will you, Joe?" |
23677 | But, Joe, did you notice just what it was that big wrecker said?" |
23677 | But----""Now what''s the answer? |
23677 | CHAPTER II A DARING RAID"Where are they?" |
23677 | CHAPTER V A NEW KIND OF DRAMA"And so you really got what you went for; eh, boys?" |
23677 | CHAPTER XI A STRANGE CHARGE"Are you going to take a camera with you, boys?" |
23677 | CHAPTER XVI JOE SUSPECTS SOMETHING"What''ll we do, Blake?" |
23677 | CHAPTER XXIII THE DOOMED VESSEL"You say there''s a wreck?" |
23677 | Can you prove your innocence?" |
23677 | Can you-- can you save the others? |
23677 | Did Duncan have a son?" |
23677 | Did I ever see her when we were both little?" |
23677 | Did you happen to hear, boys, when they expected to play that wicked game?" |
23677 | Did you_ want_ her to burn?" |
23677 | Do you hear me? |
23677 | Do you know where Mr. Duncan went?" |
23677 | Duncan?" |
23677 | Duncan?" |
23677 | Duncan?" |
23677 | For a moment Joe seemed to stiffen as he heard the name, and then, in a hoarse whisper, he turned to Blake and said:"Did you hear that? |
23677 | Go back to New York?" |
23677 | Got everything, Blake?" |
23677 | Has he committed any crime, or is he wanted by anyone?" |
23677 | Have you a plan, Blake?" |
23677 | He''s been traveling all over, you know, looking for you and your sister----""Sister?" |
23677 | His face showed his disappointment so unmistakably that Blake called out:"What''s the matter, Joe?" |
23677 | How dare you?" |
23677 | How do you know but what this light was put here as a range finder for us fishermen?" |
23677 | I guess I''ll just say:''Hello, Dad; do you know me?''" |
23677 | I suppose you know what sort of men those were that we just got away from?" |
23677 | I wonder how many there are?" |
23677 | I wonder what they can be up to?" |
23677 | I wonder why he went away?" |
23677 | I wonder, though, if the story is known about San Diego? |
23677 | If he was innocent why did n''t he stay and fight it out? |
23677 | Is Mr. Duncan-- is he-- dead?" |
23677 | Is anything troubling you?" |
23677 | Is my father somewhere around here, after all?" |
23677 | Is n''t his father here?" |
23677 | Is n''t there any way in which we may get a clue to the direction he took?" |
23677 | It must n''t be allowed to pull out-- do you understand? |
23677 | It''s what Hemp said about your father; is n''t it?" |
23677 | Jolly? |
23677 | Moving pictures; eh? |
23677 | Not our prize Indian pictures?" |
23677 | Now what is it?" |
23677 | Now you see footprints going off to the left and right from this point; do n''t you?" |
23677 | Of what charge?" |
23677 | Oh, is it possible? |
23677 | Or, The Tyler Will If you had been poor and were suddenly left a half- million dollars, what would you do with it? |
23677 | Ringold?" |
23677 | Ringold?" |
23677 | Say, do n''t you know your father''s business?" |
23677 | So he''s somewhere on the southern California coast?" |
23677 | Stanton?" |
23677 | Suppose he has gone? |
23677 | The lighthouse keeper turned, surveyed the boy and in a pleasant voice asked:"Well?" |
23677 | Was he a sailor?" |
23677 | Was he the Duncan from somewhere down the coast?" |
23677 | Was there a girl?" |
23677 | We''re down pretty low; are n''t we, Blake?" |
23677 | Well, what shall we do?" |
23677 | What became of Munson?" |
23677 | What have we done that''s wrong?" |
23677 | What kind?" |
23677 | What makes you think that?" |
23677 | What''s that?" |
23677 | Where is he?" |
23677 | Where''s Jake?" |
23677 | Why, what do you mean?" |
23677 | Why?" |
23677 | You mean that, maybe, after all, he left because he was afraid of the wreckers, and not because he had done anything wrong?" |
23677 | You tell each other all your secrets, I suppose?" |
23677 | You wo n''t tell him; will you?" |
23677 | You''re not going to have it said that you let a little cat''s paw of wind like this beat you; are you?" |
23677 | asked the lad, eagerly;"is my father----?" |
23677 | exclaimed the hotel clerk;"do you think it could be that, officer?" |
14994 | ''Tis well thought,the old man made answer;"but where shall I do the deed?" |
14994 | A stranger, sayest thou? 14994 And did men judge of him as living or dead?" |
14994 | And did the King leave any other child behind him? |
14994 | And dost thou not dishonour him when thou honourest his enemy? |
14994 | And hath it aught else, as wealth sufficient? |
14994 | And hath the taking of the city so long delayed him? 14994 And how wilt thou deal with the other?" |
14994 | And is his son yet alive? |
14994 | And is there none that can help thee? |
14994 | And of what country is he, and who is his father? |
14994 | And should it hinder him that there is some stranger dead in the house? |
14994 | And the master of these steeds, whose son is he? |
14994 | And thou wast ready to answer for this deed? |
14994 | And to whom shall I give it? |
14994 | And what if a wife slay her husband? |
14994 | And what is thy name? |
14994 | And where didst thou leave him? 14994 And who are these? |
14994 | And who is master of their army? |
14994 | And who of the men of Trachis is so cunning in leechcraft? |
14994 | And why did my son seek to subdue this city? |
14994 | And why do ye pursue this man? |
14994 | Art thou going a journey from me, my father? |
14994 | Art thou, then, he? |
14994 | Aye,said the Queen,"and I would lead them myself; but where shall I slay him?" |
14994 | Aye,said the old man,"but how wilt thou deal with King Achilles? |
14994 | But if it be so, my sister, how can we avail to change it? |
14994 | But is it not a base thing for a man to lie? |
14994 | But may I not believe that which I have seen with mine own eyes? |
14994 | But say,said the King,"what troubles thee so much?" |
14994 | But say,said the Queen,"who began this battle of ships? |
14994 | But where,answered the Queen,"is it your pleasure that I should be?" |
14994 | But who shall hinder me? |
14994 | But why may I not persuade him, or even constrain him by force? |
14994 | But why slayest thou me in darkness, if this deed be just? |
14994 | But why wilt thou empty thy hands? 14994 But,"said the Queen,"why cometh not the herald himself?" |
14994 | Can I endure to be so base,said the Prince,"hiding that which I should declare, and speaking the thing that is false?" |
14994 | Can it be well to honour them that transgress? 14994 Dead are they? |
14994 | Did aught compel him to this deed? |
14994 | Do not my tidings please thee? |
14994 | Do the men make war with bows? |
14994 | Doth the dead then think so lightly of me? |
14994 | Glad art thou? 14994 Hadst thou then a share in this matter of Troy?" |
14994 | Hast thou hold of her? |
14994 | Hast thou, then, yet worse to bear than these? |
14994 | Hath it, then, so many men that draw the sword? |
14994 | Hath thy lord then suffered some sorrow that he told me not? |
14994 | He hath none-- what need hath the living of a tomb? |
14994 | How daredst thou to transgress the laws? |
14994 | How didst thou learn this? |
14994 | How didst thou slay her? |
14994 | How knowest thou but that such honour pleaseth the Gods below? |
14994 | How sayest thou that they live? 14994 How sayest thou? |
14994 | How so, if this is the body of my Orestes? |
14994 | How so? 14994 How so? |
14994 | How so? |
14994 | How wilt thou do this? 14994 How, then, can they abide the onset of the Persians?" |
14994 | I know thy good will, but what profiteth it? 14994 If thou hast justice, what need of thy bow?" |
14994 | Liveth he, then? |
14994 | Lord of fire, that rulest this land of Lemnos, hearest thou this? |
14994 | Must I make it alone, or with my mother? |
14994 | Nay, what is this? |
14994 | Nay,said the King;"shall I be taught by such an one as thou?" |
14994 | Not akin? 14994 Now what shall I say to my wife? |
14994 | O my sister, wilt thou do this when Creon hath forbidden it? |
14994 | Of what city in the land of Greece are ye? 14994 Payeth he thus some vow, or did some oracle command it?" |
14994 | Sailed he then before you? |
14994 | Sayest thou that I must return? 14994 Sayest thou''without cause''when my brother is dead?" |
14994 | Seest thou this sword whereto I lay my hand? |
14994 | Sendest thou me to dwell elsewhere? |
14994 | Shall I lead the dances, my father? |
14994 | Shall the dead help thee that didst slay thy mother? |
14994 | Shall then the wicked have like honour with the good? |
14994 | Speakest thou of trouble greater than that which I now endure? |
14994 | Tell me now, which of ye two is called Pylades? |
14994 | Tell me, then, who is this woman whom thou hast brought? |
14994 | The people, sayest thou? 14994 Thou art resolved then to do this thing or to die?" |
14994 | What are thy tidings, though I tremble to hear them? |
14994 | What deed? 14994 What ease, when they are past all remedy?" |
14994 | What hast thou to do with that? 14994 What lies are these? |
14994 | What meaneth thy sorrow? 14994 What sayest thou? |
14994 | What sayest thou? 14994 What sayest thou? |
14994 | What sayest thou? 14994 What sayest thou?" |
14994 | What should compel a man to such wickedness? |
14994 | What then? 14994 What then?" |
14994 | What treachery is this? 14994 What troubleth thee, lady, in these news?" |
14994 | What wickedness, then, had these strangers wrought? |
14994 | What will this profit her that is dead? |
14994 | What wilt thou then? 14994 What wrong? |
14994 | What, then, would ye have done? |
14994 | What? 14994 What? |
14994 | What? |
14994 | Where didst thou find it? |
14994 | Where is he? 14994 Who art thou that inquirest thus about matters in Greece?" |
14994 | Who constraineth thee? |
14994 | Who counselled thee to this deed? |
14994 | Who slew her? 14994 Who told thee this tale that thou believest so strangely?" |
14994 | Whom sayest thou they murdered? |
14994 | Why not? 14994 Why should he stand between me and mine?" |
14994 | Wilt thou not speak out thy news and then begone? |
14994 | Wilt thou not tell me thy country? |
14994 | Wilt thou then slay them both? |
14994 | With good intent, thou wicked boy, when she slew her husband? |
14994 | With water from the river, or in the sea? |
14994 | Would ye have commended me the more if I had caused him to depart from this house and this city? 14994 Yet they who attend him please thee not?" |
14994 | And I, if I had an ill purpose, and now have changed it for that which is wiser, dost thou charge me with folly? |
14994 | And King Agamemnon said,''How shall I do this thing, and slay my own daughter, even Iphigenia, who is the joy and beauty of my dwelling? |
14994 | And Menelaüs answered,"Seest thou this letter that I hold in my hand?" |
14994 | And Orestes, whom I barely saved from thy hand, liveth he not in exile? |
14994 | And Philoctetes made answer,"Nay, is not this a fitting thing, seeing of what sire thou art the son, to help a brave man in his trouble?" |
14994 | And Philoctetes made reply,"Knowest thou not whom thou seest? |
14994 | And also how could she, being young, abide in my house, for young I judge her to be? |
14994 | And are ye brothers born of one mother?" |
14994 | And as for this Polynices, thinketh he that signs and devices will give him that which he coveteth? |
14994 | And as he spake these words, he perceived that Medea wept, and said,"Why weepest thou?" |
14994 | And hath not this woman transgressed?" |
14994 | And having sworn it, he said,"But what if a storm overtake me, and the tablet be lost, and I only be saved?" |
14994 | And he answered,"What is it, lady? |
14994 | And he answered,"What sayest thou, lady? |
14994 | And how fares old Nestor of Pylos?" |
14994 | And if I die before my time, what loss? |
14994 | And now King Menelaüs came back, saying that it repented him of what he had said,"For why should thy child die for me? |
14994 | And now think whose should this be but his? |
14994 | And now thou art come, what shall I say? |
14994 | And now what dost thou purpose?" |
14994 | And of the maiden, what shall I say? |
14994 | And one said,"Remember ye not what we saw when the army set forth from the city? |
14994 | And shall not I do pleasure to the dead rather than to the living, seeing that I shall abide with the dead for ever? |
14994 | And shall we not fall into a worse destruction than any, if we transgress these commands of the King? |
14994 | And the Prince said,"What meanest thou by thy''double honour''? |
14994 | And the spirit spake to the Furies, for these were yet fast asleep, saying,"Sleep ye? |
14994 | And the spirit spake, saying,"What trouble is this that seemeth to have come upon the land? |
14994 | And then-- for she took the two for brothers-- she asked them, saying,"Who is your mother, and your father, and your sister, if a sister you have? |
14994 | And thy children-- art thou a mother to them? |
14994 | And what will it profit us if we get great renown, yet die in shameful fashion? |
14994 | And when Death saw him, he said--"What doest thou here, Apollo? |
14994 | And when Ismené saw that she prevailed nothing with her sister, she turned to the King and said,"Wilt thou slay the bride of thy son?" |
14994 | And when he was come to the gates of his palace he cried,"How shall I enter thee? |
14994 | And when he was loath to listen to her, she said,"Seest thou this that I hold in my hand?" |
14994 | And when the Furies saw him they cried,"What hast thou to do with this matter, King Apollo?" |
14994 | And when the King saw him he asked,"What seekest thou, wisest of men?" |
14994 | And when the King saw him, he said,"Art thou content, my son, with thy father''s judgment?" |
14994 | And when the Prince had told his name and lineage, and that he was sailing from Troy, Philoctetes cried,"Sayest thou from Troy? |
14994 | And when the Queen saw him she cried,"What news hast thou of my husband? |
14994 | And when the youth saw this he cried,"Who is it that hath plotted my death? |
14994 | And when they cried,"O my King, who shall do thee due honour at thy burial, and speak thy praise, and weep for thee?" |
14994 | And whence come ye?" |
14994 | And while they went to fetch the maiden Ismené, Antigone said to the King,"Is it not enough for thee to slay me? |
14994 | And who are ye that are so strange of aspect, being like neither to the Gods nor to the daughters of men?" |
14994 | And yet he gave me entertainment?" |
14994 | And yet shall my enemies triumph over me and laugh me to scorn? |
14994 | And yet what profiteth me to live? |
14994 | Are there not, thinkest thou, robes enough and gold enough in the treasure of the King? |
14994 | Art thou not ashamed to work such wrong to a suppliant? |
14994 | Art thou not wife to him that was thy fellow in this deed? |
14994 | Art thou of his kindred?" |
14994 | Art thou, perchance, a kinsman?" |
14994 | As for me I shall fall in this land, for am I not a seer? |
14994 | But Patroclus, where was he when thy father died?" |
14994 | But as for these children, wilt thou not persuade the King that he suffer them to dwell here?" |
14994 | But at the last he said,"Is this the Princess Electra whom I see?" |
14994 | But blood that hath been spilt upon the earth, what charmer can bring back? |
14994 | But come, tell me; where doth he bury her? |
14994 | But how shall I contrive it? |
14994 | But of the end what need to speak? |
14994 | But she said,"What have I done, my son, that thou so abhorrest me?" |
14994 | But tell me now, hath Menelaüs had safe return?" |
14994 | But tell me, messenger, what befell them that escaped from the battle?" |
14994 | But tell me, my lord, why dost thou drive me out of thy land?" |
14994 | But the King was very wroth when he heard this outcry, and cried,"Think ye to make bold the hearts of our men by these lamentations? |
14994 | But the Queen said,"What? |
14994 | But there was a certain Agamemnon, son of Atreus, what of him?" |
14994 | But what had the Greeks to do with child of mine? |
14994 | But what profiteth it to deceive? |
14994 | But what will she say when she knoweth my purpose? |
14994 | But what, I pray thee, bringeth thee to this land?" |
14994 | But when Electra heard it, she said,"Comest thou with proof of this ill news that we have heard?" |
14994 | But when Orestes heard this, he brake in,"Where is this Iphigenia? |
14994 | But when she was gone, Orestes said to Pylades,"Pylades, what thinkest thou? |
14994 | But when the Gods are minded to destroy a man, who is so strong that he can escape? |
14994 | But why art thou silent and castest thine eyes to the ground? |
14994 | But why do I compare myself with you? |
14994 | But why dost thou pamper me with luxury, or make my goings hateful to the Gods, strewing this purple under my feet? |
14994 | But why pitiest thou me as doth no other man? |
14994 | But, hold, was not he that fell in battle with this man thy brother also?" |
14994 | By what Gods shall I swear?" |
14994 | Callest thou this taking vengeance for thy daughter that was slain? |
14994 | Canst thou endure that we should live deprived of the wealth that was our father''s; and also that we should grow old unmated? |
14994 | Did not Zeus slay the man who raised the dead? |
14994 | Did the Greeks begin, or my son, trusting in the greatness of his host?" |
14994 | Didst thou slay thy mother?" |
14994 | Do thou therefore make this recompense, which indeed thou owest to me, for what will not a man give for his life? |
14994 | Dost thou keep watch and ward over this woman with thine arrows and thy bow?" |
14994 | Dost thou not know this Diomed?" |
14994 | Dost thou not see him?''" |
14994 | For being an exile in this city, what could I do better than marry the daughter of the King? |
14994 | For she will cry to me,''Wilt thou kill me, my father?'' |
14994 | For that she is rightly come to the marriage of her daughter who can deny? |
14994 | For the whole host will compel me to this deed?" |
14994 | For we must take husbands to rule over us, and how shall we know whether they be good or bad? |
14994 | For what cause did he slay her? |
14994 | For what woman of the better sort would not do even as I? |
14994 | For when Achilles was dead--""How sayest thou? |
14994 | For who am I that I should transgress against a king? |
14994 | For why, she said, should she struggle against fate which made her to be a slave? |
14994 | From whom didst thou learn this?" |
14994 | Had Death, thinkest thou, desire for my children rather than for his? |
14994 | Had Pallas here a mother? |
14994 | Hast thou not had all happiness, thus having lived in kingly power from youth to age? |
14994 | Hast thou not heard the story of my sorrows?" |
14994 | Hath the dead come back among the living?" |
14994 | Have I not always done due reverence to thee and to my mother? |
14994 | How died he?" |
14994 | How have I wronged thee? |
14994 | How many in number were the ships of the Greeks that they dared to meet the Persians in battle array?" |
14994 | How then shall she not hate me when she seeth me at thy right hand? |
14994 | I am ready to carry off this man with a strong arm; and how, being a cripple, shall he stand against us? |
14994 | In some country of the Greeks, or among barbarians?" |
14994 | Is he yet alive?" |
14994 | Is his wife yet alive?" |
14994 | Is it for them to rule, or for me?" |
14994 | Is it not enough for thee to have kept Admetus from his doom? |
14994 | Is it not said that even the Gods are persuaded by gifts, and that gold is mightier than ten thousand speeches? |
14994 | Is the son of Peleus dead?" |
14994 | Is there a man in Thessaly, nay in the whole land of Greece, that is such a lover of hospitality? |
14994 | Knowest thou what manner of thing the life of a man is? |
14994 | Knowest thou who it is to whom thou speakest?" |
14994 | May I not rule my own household?" |
14994 | Must I be as a slave among them that slew my father? |
14994 | Nothing? |
14994 | O my children, why do ye so regard me? |
14994 | Of what have I defrauded thee? |
14994 | One of thy lord''s children, or the old man his father?" |
14994 | Only he said to himself,"O my dear mother, shall I ever see thee? |
14994 | Or had this accursed father no care for my children, but only for the children of his brother? |
14994 | Or was it for the sake of King Menelaüs his brother? |
14994 | Say, why did ye not pursue her while she lived?" |
14994 | Shall I put fire to the dwelling of the bride, or make my way by stealth into her chamber and slay her? |
14994 | Shall the race of Sisyphus, shall Jason, laugh thee to scorn that art of the race of the Sun?" |
14994 | Shall this land, if thou subduest it by the spear of the enemy, ever make alliance with thee? |
14994 | Shall we stay and listen to her?" |
14994 | Shall ye find elsewhere as fair a land, ye Gods, if ye suffer this to be laid waste, or streams as sweet? |
14994 | Should I, for fear of thee, be found guilty against them? |
14994 | So they went, but the Prince was sorely troubled in his mind and cried,"Now what shall I do?" |
14994 | Speak I plainly?" |
14994 | Tell me, my friends, in what land is this Athens of which they speak?" |
14994 | Tell me, therefore, who is yet alive? |
14994 | Tell me, what trouble hath come upon the land of Persia?" |
14994 | Then King Agamemnon came forth from his tent, saying,"What meaneth this uproar and disputing that I hear?" |
14994 | Then answered King Agamemnon,"What is thy quarrel with me? |
14994 | Then said King Agamemnon,"But how shall I escape from this strait? |
14994 | Then said Philoctetes,"Is this Ulysses that I see? |
14994 | Then said the Furies,"How sayest thou? |
14994 | Then said the King to Antigone,"Tell me in a word, didst thou know my decree?" |
14994 | Then said the goddess,"And whither do ye drive him?" |
14994 | Then she said--"Tell me now, dost thou purpose to slay thy daughter and mine?" |
14994 | Then the Queen said,"Shall I say that this hath happened ill or well? |
14994 | Then why dost thou weep?" |
14994 | Think ye that I had flattered this man but that I thought to gain somewhat thereby? |
14994 | Thinkest thou that Priam would not have walked on purple if perchance he had been the conqueror?" |
14994 | Thinkest thou that thy father loveth it not? |
14994 | Thinketh he that Justice is on his side? |
14994 | Thinketh she to atone in such sort for the blood that she hath shed? |
14994 | To her Orestes answered,"What meanest thou, lady, by lamenting in this fashion over us? |
14994 | Was it not plainly declared?" |
14994 | Well, and if they die, what then? |
14994 | What city will receive me? |
14994 | What hast thou done to me? |
14994 | What hath she to do with Helen? |
14994 | What ill do not I suffer at thy hand and the hand of thy partner? |
14994 | What meanest thou? |
14994 | What meanest thou?" |
14994 | What need to say more? |
14994 | What profit is there in them that sleep? |
14994 | What sayest thou? |
14994 | What sayest thou? |
14994 | What should be done to thee if thou be found doing wrong to me?" |
14994 | When did she slay them?" |
14994 | When didst thou thus?" |
14994 | Where shall I find her?" |
14994 | Whither can I go, for thou and he are gone? |
14994 | Who art thou that thou shouldest bewail her? |
14994 | Who art thou, stranger, that sittest clasping this image? |
14994 | Who hath dared to do this deed?" |
14994 | Who is so nimble of foot that he can spring out of the net which they lay for his feet? |
14994 | Who is this maiden? |
14994 | Who knoweth it not? |
14994 | Who more fit than I? |
14994 | Who now shall stand against this boaster and fear not?" |
14994 | Who then will hold up the torch for the bride?" |
14994 | Who told thee this horrible thing that thou bringest against me?" |
14994 | Whom wilt thou set against this man, O King?" |
14994 | Whom, O King, will thou set against this man?" |
14994 | Whose then could be these offerings on the tomb?" |
14994 | Why blamest thou me if thou couldst not rule thy wife? |
14994 | Why do ye laugh at me that shall never laugh again? |
14994 | Why hast thou left me in my old age?" |
14994 | Why linger ye, ye maids? |
14994 | Why not? |
14994 | Why should I slay my child, and work for myself sorrow and remorse without end that thou mayest have vengeance for thy wicked wife?" |
14994 | Will he not be wroth, hearing that he hath been cheated of his wife?" |
14994 | Wilt thou bury him when the King hath forbidden it?" |
14994 | Wilt thou not take another in her stead?" |
14994 | Wilt thou, if I save thee from this death, carry tidings of me to Argos to my friends, and bear a tablet from me to them? |
14994 | Would she kill me also?" |
14994 | Yet what nobler thing could I have done than to bury my own mother''s son? |
14994 | and for whom must we make lamentation?" |
14994 | he cried,"what shall I do, being bereaved of thee?" |
14994 | how shall I dwell in thee? |
14994 | or that it is an evil thing, yet profitable to me? |
14994 | said he;"is this son yet to be born, or doth he live already?" |
14994 | said the King,"if the ship labour in the sea, and the helmsman leave the helm and fly to the prow that he may pray before the image, doeth he well?" |
14994 | said the elder,"or was he parted from you in a storm?" |
14994 | that Zeus gave this command that this man should slay his mother?" |
14994 | what God hath so smitten thee? |
14994 | what friend shall give me protection? |
14994 | where, then, is his tomb?" |
14994 | who is dead? |
14994 | who will receive me? |
14994 | why lookest thou so solemn and full of care? |
14994 | wilt thou always keep this widowed state?" |
29589 | And I''m not forage, am I? 29589 And she let him do it?" |
29589 | And was n''t that a glorious fight poor old Herkimer''s men made against the Tories and Brandt''s Indians? 29589 And why not? |
29589 | Any one I know? |
29589 | Are n''t you? |
29589 | Are-- are you sure? 29589 But you do n''t know about the father?" |
29589 | By the way, uncle, why do n''t you send Lisbeth to England to finish her education? 29589 Can I do any more for you, sir?" |
29589 | Concluded we would n''t? |
29589 | Could he have done what he has in your country, where your dukes are born with the privilege of lording it over the Morgans? |
29589 | Denham foreclosed? 29589 Did ye inspect the inside o''the nigger as well as the carriage?" |
29589 | Do I look loike I was? |
29589 | Do n''t like his looks, eh? 29589 Do the Indians want to dig up the tomahawk and make war on the whites?" |
29589 | Do they intend to burn me? |
29589 | Do you believe the''medicine man''can talk with him? |
29589 | Do you mean it, mother? |
29589 | Do you remember what Gadsden said at New York at the meeting held in protest against the Stamp Act? |
29589 | Do you think the Indians did right in pretending to be friends of the English in order to kill them? |
29589 | Do you think there will be fighting? |
29589 | Do you, my brother, come from the mighty Cornstalk, wise in counsel and fierce in war? |
29589 | Does yer arm feel numb? |
29589 | Help wi''the work, is it, Joseph, me boy? 29589 Homesick, my lad, or a fit o''the blues?" |
29589 | How is my young friend this morning? 29589 I say, sir, be this the road to Occoquan?" |
29589 | I suppose, Allison, you think the war is over with the surrender of Burgoyne? 29589 I tell ye wot, d''ye mind the lad and girl go riding by when we was eatin''a bite beside the road, along back?" |
29589 | I tink dat one goot hole for bear, ai n''t so? |
29589 | I''d like to roll him in the mud and you''d like to have me do it, would n''t you,''Omi? |
29589 | I? 29589 If my brother kill the paleface and bring war on the tribes when there is peace, shall my lodge be burned by the braves of the paleface? |
29589 | Is that you, Rodney Allison? 29589 It must be very humiliating to their generals to be beaten by a plain''Mister,''must it not? |
29589 | Lan''sakes, an''what heathen mought she be? |
29589 | May I have''Josephus?'' 29589 My kind and tremulous friend, do ye want the pig- stickers ter git yer pigs? |
29589 | Nat, how would you like to change masters? |
29589 | No hunt, what for here? |
29589 | No; what was it? |
29589 | Oh, well, some things might be better, I suppose, but what can you expect when so few desire to take up the work in this country? 29589 Palefaces do not punish palefaces, but honour them for the bad deeds done to the Indian, and must we suffer alone?" |
29589 | She did n''t know what she was doing, did she, Nat, old boy? |
29589 | So you''re not the man the Indians killed, that day down on the Ohio, when they captured me? |
29589 | That''s his way of saying yes, is n''t it, Nat, boy? |
29589 | Vat for you vant him, yet? 29589 Vat you tink?" |
29589 | Was the boy seeking a loan? |
29589 | What became of him? |
29589 | What book would you especially like, Rodney? |
29589 | What d''ye think of him, Rod? |
29589 | What did he say? |
29589 | What did he say? |
29589 | What do you mean? 29589 What do you mean?" |
29589 | What do you mean? |
29589 | What for? |
29589 | What has become of Nat? |
29589 | What in thunder are you doing? 29589 What is it now?" |
29589 | What man? 29589 What of home?" |
29589 | What was that, sir? |
29589 | What''s the good o''stayin''when Congress wo n''t provide board an''clothes? 29589 When d''ye leave yer grave?" |
29589 | Where and when did you know my father? |
29589 | Where did you get him? |
29589 | Where have I seen you? 29589 Where is he now, and have you any news from Charlottesville?" |
29589 | Where is he now? |
29589 | Where now, Rodney? |
29589 | Where''s little Louis, Conrad? |
29589 | Which is one way of saying we should capture a few Hessians for a pastime; hey, Do- as- much Bunster? |
29589 | Who is that? |
29589 | Why ai n''t we chasin''''em, I''d like to know? |
29589 | Why did n''t our men serve''em a like turn at Trenton? |
29589 | Why did you try to kill me? |
29589 | Will it be asking too much for you to look in on me, as they say? |
29589 | Will paleface be Ahneota''s brother? |
29589 | Will there be fightin''at Donnybrook fair, do ye ask? 29589 Would you be willing to send this letter? |
29589 | Yes, and you like my poor, old red hat, too, do n''t you? 29589 You ca n''t mean that you allow Lisbeth to go to such a school?" |
29589 | You must have seen Colonel Washington in the Braddock campaign? |
29589 | You suppose an old fellow has a nest in there? |
29589 | You think trader right when steal Indian''s furs? 29589 Your wife?" |
29589 | Zum place to sleep, yah? |
29589 | ''Why do n''t ye help the men?'' |
29589 | ''Why should you change it?'' |
29589 | Am I the man your backwoodsmen searched the house for, do you think? |
29589 | Angus? |
29589 | Are n''t you proud of her, Rodney?" |
29589 | Are you cold?" |
29589 | At the close of one cold, gray day spent on guard the officer in charge of the guard said to Rodney:"Can ye keep awake all night? |
29589 | But how came you here?" |
29589 | But tell me about the''Mis- er-''""''Mischianza?'' |
29589 | But there''s none like the Rangers, eh, Zeb?" |
29589 | But what are you doing in Philadelphia?" |
29589 | But why attempt to describe that which words fail to express? |
29589 | But why borrow trouble? |
29589 | But why not get advice from your friend at Monticello? |
29589 | By the way, did you ever know a man by the name of David Cameron? |
29589 | By the way, did your father come to Charlottesville from London?" |
29589 | By the way, who are these Allisons? |
29589 | By the way, why did you give him the name,''Nat?''" |
29589 | CHAPTER III HOW RODNEY AND ANGUS BECAME FRIENDS"Say, Sim, what''s the story you''s goin''to tell, the one yer cousin told ye?" |
29589 | CHAPTER XI FATHER MOURNING FOR SON What of David Allison''s fortunes? |
29589 | CHAPTER XXIII IN THE THICK OF IT"Can ye shoot straight an''often, travel light, starve an''yet fight on an empty stomach?" |
29589 | CHAPTER XXIX WHAT THE PACKAGE CONTAINED"What''s the trouble here, Rodney?" |
29589 | Come over and see me, will you?" |
29589 | Could he overtake and pass him? |
29589 | Could she retain her grip until Rodney might reach the bridle rein? |
29589 | Did he have a daughter about your own age?" |
29589 | Do n''t you know Lisbeth? |
29589 | Do n''t you know me, Nat, or have they treated you so badly you''ve forgotten old friends?" |
29589 | Do n''t you know me, your old playmate? |
29589 | Do n''t you think he should go?" |
29589 | Do you come often to the camp?" |
29589 | Does n''t it seem too good to be true?" |
29589 | Enderwood? |
29589 | Ferguson?" |
29589 | Finally, looking up and addressing his mother, he said,"Was n''t it Mr. Mason who said he did not wish to survive the liberties of his country?" |
29589 | Had Lisbeth married her cousin and gone to England? |
29589 | Had she come home? |
29589 | Have you room in the canoe for one more?" |
29589 | Have you then lost the home? |
29589 | He experienced something like a chill and he asked himself,"What if I had seen game and fired?" |
29589 | He met Angus, who said,"Ridin''back along soon?" |
29589 | He peered about in the growing dusk, then he said:"You will not tell? |
29589 | He pulled up an''says,''Can you tell me where the Allison home is?'' |
29589 | His smile was a trifle apprehensive as he said,"That pig tasted so good ye come back fer more?" |
29589 | How are you all?" |
29589 | How are you, anyway? |
29589 | How are you, anyway?" |
29589 | How are you?" |
29589 | How could such a massive figure have escaped, with men falling all around him? |
29589 | How did Washington, knowing as he must that these conditions were unnecessary under proper management, how could he hope ever to save the country? |
29589 | How is mother and''Omi? |
29589 | How long ye been here, Don?" |
29589 | How much had she heard? |
29589 | How old are you?" |
29589 | I did n''t often come that way, did I? |
29589 | I do not wish to seem impertinent but am I correct?''" |
29589 | If so, he had both family and fortune, and somehow the idea did n''t please Rodney, though why should he begrudge young Enderwood such an inheritance? |
29589 | If you were the best man would ye shirk it?" |
29589 | Is Lis-- is Miss Danesford sick?" |
29589 | Is Rodney talking war? |
29589 | Is n''t your ankle wrenched? |
29589 | Is the place gone? |
29589 | Is''Maman''your real mother and is your father living?" |
29589 | Jefferson?" |
29589 | Jefferson?" |
29589 | May I ask you to send here some worthy lawyer or trustworthy justice of the peace? |
29589 | May your name be Allison?" |
29589 | Must you go? |
29589 | Nat, do you want to go home?" |
29589 | Not one? |
29589 | Now he gripped it and pulled both horses to a stop, crying,"Are you hurt?" |
29589 | Now, he could only think,"Must I sell Nat?" |
29589 | Poor fellow, what had become of him? |
29589 | Ride double? |
29589 | Rodney Allison won promotion-- the esteem of all who knew him-- and who could wish for greater? |
29589 | Rodney saw him fall, but what could he do? |
29589 | Seeing an opportunity, Rodney said:"Mr. Jefferson, may I ask your advice?" |
29589 | She fluttered from her horse as a bird alights and threw her arms around the child, exclaiming,"And how is little Naomi?" |
29589 | She ignored him and said:"''Omi, where did you find such eyes? |
29589 | Something besides camp fare? |
29589 | Suppose if we meet''em we give''em the''int an''not wait for an answer?" |
29589 | Surely ye wouldna''ha''the mother an''little one killed by the savages? |
29589 | Take your hero, Morgan; what did he have but his own courage and brains and powerful body? |
29589 | The Shawnee hesitated, and Ahneota continued:"Has he declared war on the paleface?" |
29589 | Then came the thought, why not divide with the bear? |
29589 | Then, turning to Rodney, the chief asked:"Why come to Indian country and kill game? |
29589 | Think we can see Patrick Henry? |
29589 | This the man who paid off the mortgage? |
29589 | Was he, after so long escaping the hazards of camp and battle, to die in a hole like that old prison? |
29589 | Was it his duty to part with the colt? |
29589 | Were the Rangers, the pride of the army, to be shattered in their first encounter after all their boasting? |
29589 | Whar is yer Uncle Dick, at home worryin''about ye?" |
29589 | What are you doing here?" |
29589 | What could he say? |
29589 | What d''ye say, boys, if we tote ourselves down thar this evenin''?" |
29589 | What d''ye see?" |
29589 | What do you suppose that young scamp is trying to accomplish? |
29589 | What does''Little Knife''say when they kill good Indians at Conestoga and make dogs of Moravians? |
29589 | What had become of him? |
29589 | What have I done that I should not be permitted to return to Philadelphia? |
29589 | What is it here, an''what chance have the childer to ither teaching than I''m able to gie them? |
29589 | What is it?" |
29589 | What the boats ahead doin'', lad?" |
29589 | What was an Indian doing in those serried ranks, why was n''t he skulking on the outskirts as Indians should? |
29589 | What was that sound? |
29589 | What will the King of France think when he hears of this? |
29589 | What would be the end of the muddle? |
29589 | What would become of him should the savages be driven off and he left tied to a tree in that wilderness? |
29589 | What''d he look like?" |
29589 | What''s doin''?" |
29589 | What''s the good o''your foragin''if yer do n''t?" |
29589 | What''s this? |
29589 | When did he die, Rodney?" |
29589 | When he told one of the men later what the"Chevalier"had said, the fellow remarked:"So the Chevalier was solemn, was he? |
29589 | When we drive the British out of the Quaker City then we''ll apply for a furlough, eh, Angus?" |
29589 | Where did you learn? |
29589 | Where in the world did you come from? |
29589 | Where''s yer Fidus-- what''s his name, that Lovell boy? |
29589 | Whereabout did ye find the handle o''me name, lad?" |
29589 | Who was that haggard fellow with bare feet wrapped in rags and little but an old horse blanket to keep out the wintry wind? |
29589 | Who''ll go with me to find the laddie? |
29589 | Who''ll rescue my abused hat from the dragon?" |
29589 | Who''s the tyrant? |
29589 | Who?" |
29589 | Why do n''t we settle on it? |
29589 | Why do they not return the fire? |
29589 | Why might he not secure that? |
29589 | Why need he say anything about the affair? |
29589 | Why their haste? |
29589 | Why, Rodney, where did you find Nat? |
29589 | Will Lord North''s hand be strong on the helm and what have we to fear from that arch demagogue, Pitt?" |
29589 | Will you go with me?" |
29589 | Wo n''t you gentlemen remain to see that I pluck the winner fairly?" |
29589 | Would Little Knife do as much?" |
29589 | Would he be able to endure the torture? |
29589 | Would he find them as he had left them, mother, and''Omi, and Zeb, and Mam, and Thello? |
29589 | Would her cousin tell her father? |
29589 | You believe me, do n''t you?" |
29589 | You do n''t want to turn back?" |
29589 | You must have known her? |
29589 | You wo n''t miss me, will you? |
29589 | You''ve heard about Stark and the battle at Bennington, of course?" |
29589 | and how did you come by Nat? |
29589 | is it you, Rodney Allison, or your ghost?" |
29589 | was it? |
39965 | Where? |
39965 | --But what''s that? |
39965 | But to hit fatally? |
39965 | But what if the latter were not dead? |
39965 | But what mattered it when we were at concert- pitch, and bears for the tune? |
39965 | Did any one ever see a horse- wrangler who was not looking for missing stock? |
39965 | Goats, did I say? |
39965 | Has he taken the alarm and gone back? |
39965 | How every noise-- the crackling of a twig-- startled you? |
39965 | Ought I to have bellowed at him, and at least have got him on his legs? |
39965 | The Blackfeet ask,"What one of all the animals is most sacred?" |
39965 | The question was, had winter come in the park above, for which we were heading? |
39965 | What are we going to do with them? |
39965 | What has become of him? |
39965 | What has become of him? |
39965 | With what superstitious dread you looked cautiously around, expecting a hobgoblin at any moment to rise out of the ground? |
26077 | ''A shape''s hid is it? |
26077 | ''Allwise, Tenant& Co., eh? |
26077 | ''An''would ye strike a man lying down?'' |
26077 | ''And Joe is your overseer?'' |
26077 | ''And how did he pick up so much information?'' |
26077 | ''And how is it with you? |
26077 | ''And you are Joseph the Second, eh?'' |
26077 | ''And you did it?'' |
26077 | ''Bees you a poor- trait bainter?'' |
26077 | ''But do you learn all your negroes to read?'' |
26077 | ''But, you''ll let me keep the pony, wo n''t you, father?'' |
26077 | ''By the way, Bridget, have you ever cooked a sheep''s- head before?'' |
26077 | ''Does he preach every Sunday?'' |
26077 | ''Does your lordship measure consciences by beards?'' |
26077 | ''For a family of two adults and three children?'' |
26077 | ''Good as black jack, eh, uncle?'' |
26077 | ''Ha, what have we here?'' |
26077 | ''Have you conscientious scruples against fighting?'' |
26077 | ''How many have you?'' |
26077 | ''Knowest thou, O Editor LELAND, of aught such,_ where the board is cheap_? |
26077 | ''May I come in?'' |
26077 | ''Mossu, how you lak Detroit?'' |
26077 | ''Nam nudâ poteris ignea ferre manu? |
26077 | ''Not worth so much-- why not?'' |
26077 | ''Of what?'' |
26077 | ''Oh-- a_ goatee_, I suppose, on his chin?'' |
26077 | ''Or a bust?'' |
26077 | ''Or a drawing?'' |
26077 | ''Or an engraving?'' |
26077 | ''Pshaw, you drunken fool, do you s''pose dese darkies would tell on_ me_? |
26077 | ''Sure, Paddy, if ye carry me, do n''t I carry the barrel of whiskey, an''is n''t that fair and aiquil?'' |
26077 | ''That is true,''replied Preston;''but Joe has stated the case correctly,_ What shall we do?_''''One of two things. |
26077 | ''Then he does pray better for a little whiskey?'' |
26077 | ''Then how do the majority of turpentine planters in this section make money? |
26077 | ''Then you mean to say you ca n''t apply humane principles to slave labor, in an old district of country, and make money?'' |
26077 | ''Well, have you a photograph of him?'' |
26077 | ''Well, it_ is_ wrong, but how can we help it? |
26077 | ''Well, then-- what have you got?'' |
26077 | ''Well, what was the end of it?'' |
26077 | ''What do you say to that, Joe?'' |
26077 | ''What do you think of soldiers who can endure such wounds?'' |
26077 | ''What does your majesty think of the men who gave the wounds?'' |
26077 | ''What is it?'' |
26077 | ''What is that?'' |
26077 | ''What_ is_ their business?'' |
26077 | ''Why not drop turpentine, and cut shingles from the swamp? |
26077 | ''Why? |
26077 | ''Will ye get up till I bate yees?'' |
26077 | ''You have no acquaintances in the city?'' |
26077 | ***** READER-- you have travelled? |
26077 | ***** Reader-- do you want SOMETHING NEW FOR DINNER? |
26077 | After a while questions began to be asked:''Who is this new comer, so constant, so devout, and so exemplary?'' |
26077 | An''who do you tink wus a talkin''dar, to all dem great people? |
26077 | An''who do you''spose he wus? |
26077 | And Swift? |
26077 | And being asked why? |
26077 | And could we see them torn from around that sacred banner, and move not to their rescue? |
26077 | And could we stand with folded arms, and behold the Union dissolved? |
26077 | And is nullification constitutional in Carolina, but unconstitutional in Pennsylvania? |
26077 | And is the Union indeed to fall? |
26077 | And laughter? |
26077 | And shall Carolina dissolve the Union? |
26077 | And what was the consequence? |
26077 | And why fallen? |
26077 | And why not? |
26077 | And will Mississippi receive the bribe thus offered to dissolve the Union? |
26077 | And will not_ that_, with mere waiting, prove a complete victory? |
26077 | And, gracious Heaven, for what? |
26077 | Are not similar influences operating on the Southern mind, and forcing it, with a compulsion equally inexorable, into the fatal current of civil war? |
26077 | Are they to lose the great imperial railways destined, under the Union, to connect them with the valley of the Mississippi and the Atlantic? |
26077 | Are we to have the Empire of Rome or of Charlemagne over again? |
26077 | As he was leaving the room, I asked,''Do you preach to- morrow?'' |
26077 | Besides, I like his face?'' |
26077 | Bringing no healing with their torrent streams? |
26077 | But how is the exhausted, ruined South to arise, save through Northern aid? |
26077 | But if the cause of patriotism and civilization should fail in this struggle, what will be the consequences? |
26077 | But is there not still a worse devil to be cast out? |
26077 | But surely, the great sage of humor, glorious Father Rabelais, of later days, was an exception to the prevailing rule of joyousness in literature? |
26077 | But what States will unite in this convention? |
26077 | But what did Hiram want of Hill? |
26077 | But whither shall they go? |
26077 | But who were the two? |
26077 | But, could this General Government exist without the authority to give one uniform effect to the execution of its powers in all the States? |
26077 | By what reasoning is nullification denounced, and secession supported, as a constitutional remedy? |
26077 | Can Carolina compel them to receive all foreign imports free of all duties? |
26077 | Can they, if they would? |
26077 | Can we yet save the Republic? |
26077 | Could we submit to this? |
26077 | D''yees take me fer a haythen? |
26077 | DEAR CONTINENTAL: Did you ever study the language of signs? |
26077 | Did she establish her own independence? |
26077 | Did the States form it as governments? |
26077 | Dissolve this Union, and let each State become, as Mr. Jefferson truly tells us it would, a separate government, could we preserve our liberties? |
26077 | Do you know,_ I_ think he is real handsome?'' |
26077 | Does this mean, as General Hayne tells us in his proclamation, to execute the laws against insurgents not sustained by any law of the State? |
26077 | For in his mind''s eye he saw some of them in_ his_ employ; but which? |
26077 | Free on paper, if you will-- theoretically free; but is_ that_ nothing? |
26077 | Has it any powers, and what are they? |
26077 | Have we three such men left? |
26077 | He kept on counting the minutes, and gave no heed to his master''s approach, till Preston said:''Joe, what''s to pay?'' |
26077 | His only inquiry must be, What will save the nation? |
26077 | How can we pay it, Joe?'' |
26077 | How do you manage?'' |
26077 | How would we reach them? |
26077 | I am asked, can not the people of a State abolish their form of government? |
26077 | I asked him why he did so? |
26077 | I wonder who he is?'' |
26077 | If so, did you ever suffer from too much landlord? |
26077 | In the language of Chief Justice Marshall, in this case,''And can this make any real difference? |
26077 | Is New England to be re- colonized, and the British flag again to float over the chosen domain of freedom? |
26077 | Is ambitious and reckless demagoguism to be apprehended? |
26077 | Is it possible I must sit under this man''s preaching? |
26077 | Is it to be cut off from the seaboard, and rendered tributary to the maritime power? |
26077 | Is it wise to commence the effort, confined to our weakest securities, now below par? |
26077 | Is the one a_ sovereign_ and the other a_ subject_ State? |
26077 | Is the proposition to be maintained that the Constitution meant to prohibit names and not things?'' |
26077 | Is there a morbid growth-- a cause of irritation and disease tending to dissolution? |
26077 | Is there anything in the way of this union? |
26077 | Is there now such a case? |
26077 | Is this democracy? |
26077 | Is this the proposition of Carolina? |
26077 | Is''nt_ that_ a frantic conciliation of differences, and one which might have done honor to Petrus d''Abano, the Conciliator, himself? |
26077 | It is true the Union is in danger, but are not the credit of State banks and State bonds of higher value than the Union? |
26077 | It is true, we find nullification declared in the Kentucky resolutions to be a rightful remedy-- but nullification by whom? |
26077 | It''s a good story, Kirke; did I ever tell it to you?'' |
26077 | Kin_ dey_ come to dis beautiful country?'' |
26077 | Kirke,''said Joe,--''you''ll take no''fence, master Robert, if I says dis?'' |
26077 | Liberty, when was thy sacred temple profaned by deeds like this? |
26077 | Louisiana asserts no such doctrines; but, if she did, could Mississippi, could the West admit them? |
26077 | May it lay a tariff in one State, and not in another, and yet this tariff required to be uniform in every State? |
26077 | Must anarchy govern? |
26077 | Must it possess one set of powers in one State, and another and wholly opposite set of powers in another State? |
26077 | Must it stop at the boundary of each State, and ask what power it possesses, and act upon the contradictory responses of each State? |
26077 | Or of the American public functionary, who said that his annual gains were''one thousand dollars salary, besides the cheatage and stealage?'' |
26077 | Or would they enforce the payments of the duties in New York and not in South Carolina? |
26077 | Quid facies igitur, Anus inquit? |
26077 | Reader, did you ever try to work your way through the hard loaf of the peasant''s fare? |
26077 | Seeing the latter weeping, he exclaimed,''Why are you so troubled-- I give you your freedom?'' |
26077 | Shall the one submit to the laws of the Union, and not the other? |
26077 | Shall they be vainly shed-- The blood and tears that wash our stricken soil? |
26077 | Shall this be? |
26077 | Shall we calculate its value? |
26077 | South Carolina declares the Tariff unconstitutional-- Kentucky declares it valid; is it nullified or not? |
26077 | Such are the opening scenes of nullification; and, if not arrested, where or how will the drama close? |
26077 | The Crow inquired:''Who ever heard The Raven was a stealing bird? |
26077 | The negroes? |
26077 | The present Congress may save us; but what of the next? |
26077 | Through the outlet of the Mississippi? |
26077 | To which Conrad replied:''Wilt thou do me no injury until I stand up and am ready for fight?'' |
26077 | Under what standard would we rally to preserve our liberty? |
26077 | Vain the long requiem for the noble dead-- Vain all the agony and all the toil-- The soldier''s dreams-- The patriot''s thought and care? |
26077 | WAS HE SUCCESSFUL? |
26077 | Was it then a league only? |
26077 | What American would wish to live, and encounter such a destiny? |
26077 | What do you calculate on to pay it, Preston?'' |
26077 | What is a jest? |
26077 | What is it we are asked to abandon, and for what? |
26077 | What is it? |
26077 | What is the meaning of the clause''or to the people,''as contradistinguished from''the States''? |
26077 | What is the only commerce we could carry on with her? |
26077 | What of the States of the Pacific? |
26077 | What of the West? |
26077 | What then are to be the results of great efforts and sacrifices in a cause which, though we believe it to be bad, they consider holy? |
26077 | What then becomes of the ultimate judgment of Kentucky? |
26077 | What then is the remedy for our depreciated and depreciating national currency? |
26077 | What then must be done to avert the dread catastrophe? |
26077 | What will FLOYD say for BUCHANAN? |
26077 | What, den, shill we do?'' |
26077 | What, then, are the powers reserved to the State? |
26077 | What, then, can Congress do? |
26077 | When my merriment had somewhat subsided, I said:''Joe, what would you do to mend this state of affairs?'' |
26077 | Where would be the army and navy and seamen of the State of Mississippi? |
26077 | Who can answer? |
26077 | Who could he be? |
26077 | Who do you tink wus fought good''nuff to stan''by de side ob de blessed Saviour? |
26077 | Who do you''spose he wus?'' |
26077 | Who knows what those fresh men might not have done? |
26077 | Who made the right of secession as a constitutional right of every State an article in the creed of the Democratic party, and by what authority? |
26077 | Who more constant at church and evening meetings; who prays longer and more vigorously than he? |
26077 | Who would respect her flag, who recognize her as a nation-- and how would she punish aggressions upon her rights, on the ocean or the land? |
26077 | Why apologize for treason, Or for stealing give a reason? |
26077 | Why is it, then, reader, you have already taken such a prejudice against Hiram? |
26077 | Why then ask any other remedy than revolution for a case where revolution would be unavoidable? |
26077 | Why this discrimination? |
26077 | Why, then, is General Jackson denounced as a tyrant, for doing that which his oath and the Constitution compel him to do? |
26077 | Why, then, issue a stock of less value, which may fail to accomplish the great object, when a better security would certainly succeed? |
26077 | Why, then, it is asked, not continue and extend that system, rather than adopt the plan recommended by the Secretary? |
26077 | Will Mississippi submit this question to Massachusetts or Carolina, or is a government created whose powers can not be ascertained? |
26077 | Will its poor whites labor in factories? |
26077 | Will the men who have shed their blood freely to destroy the Union ever again be brought to sustain it with sincerity and zeal? |
26077 | Would it not be better to employ a governess to instruct them? |
26077 | Would they, if they could? |
26077 | Would we move up the Mississippi or Ohio to reach the ports of Carolina, or any other market? |
26077 | Yas, my friends, yere we kin fine out de road to de lan''ob Canaan; an''do ye know what dat lan''ob Canaan, dat''m waitin''fur de brack man, am? |
26077 | Yet, why speak of_ great_ scenes, when humanity and Nature are always great-- great in small things even, far beyond our utmost power of apprehension? |
26077 | You''ll come dar, sar? |
26077 | _ Not while the West contained a gun to use, or a man to shoulder it._ And may Carolina secede and establish an independent government? |
26077 | and, in the last resort, would not the Government_ force_ a passage for our imports and exports by the_ sword_? |
26077 | asked his father;''would you like to come home, and have a woman teacher?'' |
26077 | by a single State? |
26077 | by enforcing the payment of the bonds given in Carolina? |
26077 | do n''t you let Joe whip the negroes?'' |
26077 | how to be procured, and how to be maintained and paid? |
26077 | if so, which or all of the departments of any State subscribed or ratified the compact? |
26077 | is it void or valid? |
26077 | monsieur, qui est- ce qui vous y obligeait?_''The jest is''old as the hills''--it was old before Dumas was born. |
26077 | or must the same law be enforced in one State and disregarded in the other? |
26077 | said they-- was there no more to do but to lose a hatchet to make us rich? |
26077 | whar de fever will burn in our veins, an''de nager will rattle our bones as de corn am rattled in de hopper? |
26077 | whar we''ll wuck till we drop down; whar we''ll hunger an''furst? |
26077 | why do you act so? |
26077 | why look at any of the bleeding and mutilated fragments, when all will be involved in a common ruin? |
32438 | ''What shall we do with the money?'' 32438 ''Yes, is n''t it the answer to our prayer?'' |
32438 | And if I do sell, somebody else will lose instead of me? |
32438 | And supposing I do n''t sell, what then? |
32438 | And what would be the good? 32438 Are you setting yourself up to judge your father and mother, young man?" |
32438 | But what of your$ 35,000 income? |
32438 | But why did n''t you tell your father? |
32438 | Do n''t you see you are making a fool of yourself? |
32438 | Do you call that recent? |
32438 | Do you mind telling me now what you did with the money? |
32438 | Do you suppose Jesus Christ would sell out? |
32438 | Does every traveler see all he describes? |
32438 | How can we? |
32438 | How could I think of anything but service at the front? |
32438 | How could we succeed with that man watching us? |
32438 | How do you explain your ability to go on with your studies? |
32438 | I hope you are not to lose a connection in Chicago? |
32438 | In good health? |
32438 | Make God my friend? |
32438 | Oh, you mean the colleagues who took over my patients? 32438 Pocketing yourself, are you?" |
32438 | The man who has the largest bank account? 32438 Was n''t that just like him?" |
32438 | Was the sacrifice necessary? |
32438 | What are you doing? |
32438 | What are you going to do? |
32438 | What is the use of traveling to one who can not see? |
32438 | What made you do it? |
32438 | What train is that? |
32438 | What useful work can he do, handicapped as he is? |
32438 | What was it to be? |
32438 | What''s that? |
32438 | What''s the matter with that? |
32438 | Where did you get that? 32438 Where?" |
32438 | Who is the most successful business man? |
32438 | Who was Elihu Burritt? 32438 Why do n''t you have done with that half- way patriotism?" |
32438 | Why do n''t you pause long enough to call on B----? |
32438 | Why pay so much attention to detail? |
32438 | Why should I bother about Nature when Nature does nothing but thwart me? |
32438 | Why, in the name of reason, do you walk a mile in the rain for a perfectly unimportant thing? |
32438 | Why? |
32438 | You wonder what has happened here, do n''t you? |
32438 | ''$ 12 for a day''s work? |
32438 | ''What does this mean?'' |
32438 | A CHAPTER OF-- ACCIDENTS? |
32438 | Am I conforming to it? |
32438 | An earthly father knows how to give good things to his children; shall not the Heavenly Father do as much and more? |
32438 | And when the time for separation came, one said to the other:"Will you please give a message to your wife? |
32438 | Asked how long he was laid up, the surprised answer was:"Laid up for that? |
32438 | At first he laughed at the idea; had he not been told that he could never hope to do anything useful? |
32438 | But are we any worse than our fathers were? |
32438 | But are we to stop with quickened heartbeats and gratitude for the greatness of heart shown by others? |
32438 | But do they not do more? |
32438 | But what of it? |
32438 | But why unbelievable? |
32438 | But would it not be worth while to miss one of the meetings when he did not see how he could well arrange for both? |
32438 | Can you imagine my joy when, from the day school opened, I had no recurrence of my trouble? |
32438 | Charles, when you get to be a man, do you suppose you will always be so careless of how others may misunderstand you?" |
32438 | Comfort of service? |
32438 | DID HE GO TOO FAR? |
32438 | Do n''t they? |
32438 | Ease, or honorable performance of duty? |
32438 | Fine story, is n''t it? |
32438 | God does n''t bother about me; why should I bother about Him?" |
32438 | God was by his side; then why should not he talk to God, by ejaculation as well as by more formal utterance? |
32438 | He said,''Want something, lad?'' |
32438 | His first question was not,"Does the public need this invention?" |
32438 | Holding it first with one hand, then with the other, to rest her little arms, she called down to her brother,"Does it hurt you, Willie?" |
32438 | How about Henry Nasmyth, the English inventor of the steam piledriver, whose ideas were stolen by French machinists? |
32438 | How can the wanderer in field and forest forget that God is love? |
32438 | How could Paul bear all these things? |
32438 | How could he stand up against the older students? |
32438 | How is it possible to make the memory a helpful servant unless nothing is allowed to find lodgment there that is not worth while? |
32438 | How is the needed courage to be secured? |
32438 | How long do we intend to persist in treasuring the grudge that has perhaps already caused sorrow that can not be measured? |
32438 | How would the courageous man receive an announcement like that? |
32438 | How would you receive it? |
32438 | III COMPANIONSHIP WITH THE PAST What, courage from companionship with the past? |
32438 | IV DID HE GO TOO FAR? |
32438 | If he had taken it, what of his touch with the Cincinnati meeting? |
32438 | If you had been a judge in that contest, would you have felt like giving the prize to a paper that suggested such an omission? |
32438 | Impossible and impracticable? |
32438 | Instead he asks,"Is this necessary? |
32438 | Is it God''s will that I should return and that there should be better paid work? |
32438 | Is it any wonder that the lives of so many everywhere are empty? |
32438 | Is it worth while to ask God to look out for the everyday needs of His people? |
32438 | Is n''t it involved in courageous following of Christ? |
32438 | Is n''t that good news?" |
32438 | It will take you a week, wo n''t it? |
32438 | More of it? |
32438 | More school- houses? |
32438 | Naturally there were those who asked,"Was such a sacrifice necessary?" |
32438 | Necessary? |
32438 | New houses for workers?" |
32438 | Now the practical question is, What is God''s will? |
32438 | Suppose you had the task of cutting your budget, would you feel like revising downward the provision for giving? |
32438 | That is the attitude toward life of the worker worth while; he does not stop to ask,"Is this easy?" |
32438 | The desire for popularity, or the purpose to be of use? |
32438 | The question flashed across his mind,"Might I not make more of my life than by remaining here?" |
32438 | Then how about the nephew of whom Dr. Alexander MacColl told at Northfield? |
32438 | Through lack of faith am I failing to receive and appropriate for myself and Satara what I and Satara need? |
32438 | VI A CHAPTER OF-- ACCIDENTS? |
32438 | What are some of the results of courage? |
32438 | What are the springs of courage? |
32438 | What could he do for others? |
32438 | What do you say to coming to me the first thing in the morning? |
32438 | What if I do have to start all over again when I come home? |
32438 | What if this letter writer had become discouraged before he wrote this final letter? |
32438 | What shall we choose? |
32438 | What was he to do on this occasion? |
32438 | Which is the path of courage? |
32438 | Why did he succeed? |
32438 | Why not let economy begin there? |
32438 | Why not try it? |
32438 | Will it be helpful?" |
32438 | Would he ever be done? |
32438 | Would it hurt anything if he should make an exception in favor of this customer who could not be expected to understand his scruples? |
32438 | but"Is there money in it?" |
40769 | ; and Lake Michaelson( 12,700 ft.?) |
40769 | As a sarcastic protest against cock- fighting in England, he declared that he had witnessed in Sligo(?) |
40503 | ''Well done, boys,''shouted Grover,''you have given it to them this time; now, what''s the news?'' 40503 But will the progress of California be less rapid in consequence of this? 40503 Could any combination of affairs try a man''s fidelity more than this? 40503 For, what State has such united commercial facilities and vast resources? 40503 It is an interesting inquiry-- what was the amount of the golden treasure collected during the years 1848 and''49? 40503 Where are such internal wealth and such splendid harbors to be found united? 40873 Whither is the paleface going?" |
40873 | But may we not believe that the great watersheds were to them what they have been for every other race which has occupied this land? |
40873 | asked an old Seneca chieftain of the indomitable Zeisberger;"why does the paleface travel such unknown roads? |
35576 | And who is that? |
35576 | Are you so sure, Edward, that she will be a sovereign? |
35576 | But could it perhaps be unpacked? |
35576 | But is it not the day of the military review on Hounslow Heath? |
35576 | But what of our English and Egyptian garrisons in the Soudan? |
35576 | But which of us shall be Sunday? |
35576 | But would the Emperor Alexander be pleased? |
35576 | Can you bear to play on the piano yet? |
35576 | Can you not save him? |
35576 | Did ever you see a man so fond of his child as the Duke? |
35576 | Did you ever see such bright blue eyes? 35576 Do the English like him? |
35576 | Do you say that? |
35576 | Do you think that my people will be pleased? |
35576 | Does anyone know exactly what Peel wants,queried another,"and how many ladies he demands shall be removed?" |
35576 | Does n''t she look like a queen? |
35576 | Does your doll have a red dress? |
35576 | Have n''t you any playroom? |
35576 | Have n''t you any sister FÃ © odore? |
35576 | Have you any means of speaking to these chaps? |
35576 | Have you not heard the news from London? 35576 Have you written any new songs? |
35576 | I have no small talk,he said,"and Peel has no manners?" |
35576 | I''ll be good, mamma,the little girl promised,"but wo n''t you please give me the box first?" |
35576 | If he is to be godfather, ought she not to be named for him? |
35576 | Is it as your Majesty would have it? |
35576 | Is it right for me to neglect my duties in Bavaria? |
35576 | Is it the will of your Majesty that the word''obey''be omitted from the promise that you make to the Prince? |
35576 | Is that the way every father behaves with his first baby? |
35576 | Is there another ward that I have not visited? |
35576 | It would give me the greatest pleasure,she wrote,"if you would come over for the wedding in our village church, but I fear you wo n''t do that? |
35576 | Should you like to hear her play? |
35576 | They ask many questions,he replied,"but perhaps the one I hear oftenest is,''Is your Queen very rich?'' |
35576 | To do? |
35576 | What do the people in the wilderness ask you? |
35576 | What has she to do,grumbled one,"but to wear handsome clothes, live in a palace, and bow to people when she drives out?" |
35576 | What is her name? |
35576 | What shall it be? |
35576 | What will the Princess do for you? |
35576 | What''s that thing ye''ve got on? |
35576 | Will the Duchess go back to her own land, think you? |
35576 | Will you give me those pretty flowers? |
35576 | Will you not play something for me? |
35576 | With what message does he come? |
35576 | Wo n''t you allow me to ride down the line,he asked the Queen,"so I can see my old comrades?" |
35576 | Wo n''t you let me have her? |
35576 | Yes,replied the Duke,"and where else should a soldier''s daughter be but at a review? |
35576 | You ought to sing one for him? |
35576 | You understand, and you will wait? |
35576 | A little later, he wrote again of his hope that he should soon hear the children say,"Do you know, papa, that the Baron is in his room below?" |
35576 | Are n''t they naughty?" |
35576 | But what do you want, Alix?" |
35576 | Does your Captain Wilkes do this on his own responsibility or on that of your government?" |
35576 | Does yours have a bonnet?" |
35576 | Ernie asked,''Why ca n''t we all die together? |
35576 | Everyone was longing to do something for her, but what should it be? |
35576 | For half a century England had been ruled by elderly men; how would it fare in the hands of a young girl? |
35576 | Have n''t you any ship or any doll- house?" |
35576 | He could not have held a review to save his-- What''s that?" |
35576 | He read them the Queen''s letter, and asked,"What shall we advise?" |
35576 | He was hardly over the threshold on his return before he called,"Where''s my daughter? |
35576 | If I should be proclaimed king, would you and your troop follow me through London?" |
35576 | If she only asked"Where were you wounded?" |
35576 | One day he asked the Duchess:"Was the Princess good while she was in the nursery?" |
35576 | Seven years earlier, she had said,"Trials we must have, but what are they, if we are together?" |
35576 | Shall I neglect Charles to care for Drina''s interest?" |
35576 | She wrote to Tennyson,"Was there ever a more terrible contrast, a wedding with bright hopes turned into a funeral?" |
35576 | Should you like to hear her?" |
35576 | The pursuivant entered, and the Lord Mayor demanded:"With what message do you come to the gates of the city of Dublin?" |
35576 | The story is told of the young girl''s taking some dainty from one of the pockets of her jacket and asking,"Ca n''t he eat this?" |
35576 | There is a story that the Queen had promised the little Beatrice a present, and that when she asked,"What shall it be?" |
35576 | There is a story that when she once went to visit the Duchess of Clarence, her aunt asked:"Now, Victoria, what should you like to do? |
35576 | What will be the greatest treat I can give you?" |
35576 | When she was saying farewell at the close of the three- days''visit, he asked,"What have you enjoyed most during your visit?" |
35576 | When the reading of the paper was finished, the Lord President asked:"Have we your Majesty''s permission to publish this declaration?" |
35576 | Where''s my queen?" |
35576 | Will he be popular?" |
35576 | Wo n''t you change them first? |
35576 | Would not England, then, help the seceders, put an end to the war, and have all the cotton that her mills wished to use? |
35576 | You have put down''Uncle King''as reigning, and you have written''Uncle William''as the heir to the throne, but who should follow him?" |
35576 | and when I say''Yes,''they ask,''How rich is she? |
35576 | begged Mendelssohn of the Prince, and added,"so I can boast about it in Germany?" |
35576 | how many cows does she own?''" |
35576 | questioned the Duchess;"to give up the regency of Leiningen? |
39068 | Did he preach-- did he pray? 39068 Why?" |
39068 | ''To whom?'' |
39068 | Are there such sights yet? |
39068 | But how was he to do this? |
39068 | Can no generous giver be found who will contribute the money necessary to bring the east window from London?... |
39068 | Do you believe you could bear that patiently? |
39068 | Does Isaac take learning freely? |
39068 | Has he become fond of school?" |
39068 | He called his place"Sherwood Forest,"with grim humor; for was he not an outlaw, in the opinion of the Whigs, just as really as was Robin Hood? |
39068 | How does she improve in her writing and reading? |
39068 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
39068 | It is an easy thing to correct this fault, and unless you do so, how can you be fit for law business?" |
39068 | Keep the ghost of that wife, foully slain, in your view-- And what could you, what should you, what would you do? |
39068 | Shall it appeal in vain?" |
39068 | Soon after I went in Mrs. V. says,''Well, Mr. Johns, what say you to a ride below with me, and bringing Miss Nancy up?'' |
39068 | The future President asked himself,"What is the best thing for dinner?" |
39068 | The outspoken preacher replied, so that every one could hear:"What is that if General Jackson has come in? |
39068 | Then came the question,"Where do you live?" |
39068 | Then came the strange marriage scene:"Can this be Martha Hilton? |
39068 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
39068 | What was the explanation of the father''s changed attitude to his son that led him to make his bequest in such unpleasant terms? |
39068 | What would they have? |
39068 | What, no? |
39068 | Who could withstand such a lover? |
39068 | Why do you go looking so? |
39068 | Why in such rash attempts engage As they can ne''er perform?" |
39068 | Why stand here idle? |
39068 | Will you have the goodness to send me some seed, both of the water and musk melons?" |
39068 | Would it be in the paper which his father had in his hand as he seated himself before the fire? |
39068 | afraid of what? |
39068 | of death? |
39068 | she asked;"because I am afraid? |
37910 | Did it ever flash? |
37910 | Have you a good rifle, my friend? |
37910 | Have_ I_ ever flashed but upon the Compensation Bill? |
37910 | If he reaches your shores, Mr. Clay,gravely inquired Lord Liverpool( one of the Ministers),"will he not give you a great deal of trouble?" |
37910 | Oh, Iole, how did you know that Hercules was a God? |
37910 | What did you do with it-- throw it away? |
37910 | Why? |
37910 | Will you throw me away? |
37910 | ''Are there none for me, sir?'' |
37910 | Ames?" |
37910 | But is not this a sound one,"The greatest good of the greatest number?" |
37910 | But what can I do? |
37910 | Clay?" |
37910 | Do you know who did?" |
37910 | Do you wonder that a boy of seven years of age, who witnessed these scenes, should be a patriot?" |
37910 | Errors of conduct he may have committed, for who is perfect? |
37910 | I often asked myself, as our carriages separated, whether that was the last sight I should ever have of you? |
37910 | It may even happen where the forms of law are maintained; but what shall be said when the majority resolves itself into a mob? |
37910 | It must be so, for can we conceive him blest without this? |
37910 | Jefferson''s conversation is described as the most agreeable and brilliant of his day; but was it this which gave him his personal power? |
37910 | Let me ask you, sir, what is the time for brave men to exert themselves in the cause of liberty and their country, if this is not? |
37910 | No, that is the worst of all, for it looks specious, while it is ruinous; for what is to become of the minority? |
37910 | The best saying of Mr. Adams was in reply to the inquiry, What are the recognized principles of politics? |
37910 | The young men were at once formed in a line and two questions--"Did you break the table? |
37910 | What if the historic truth had passed into a poetic fable? |
37910 | What learning or sense are we to expect from young gentlemen in whom a fondness for cards,& c., outgrows and chokes the desire of knowledge?" |
37910 | What more can any man ask in the partner of his bosom? |
37910 | What must the man have been, whom an age like this deliberately deifies? |
37910 | What pleasure can a young gentleman who is capable of thinking, take in playing cards? |
37910 | Who knows how much the good management of his household affairs had to do with Washington''s superiority to the temptations of gain? |
37910 | Who, that knew him, believes it?" |
37910 | Will he not consent, by way of a compromise, to a term of nine hundred and ninety- nine years instead of eternity?" |
37910 | and the son of man, that thou visitest him? |
37910 | changed to,( early companions? |
37910 | impracticable views he may have enunciated, for who is all- wise? |
14171 | Ai n''t this Quicksand Creek? |
14171 | Albeen heard him say it-- an''Dumont too? |
14171 | An''--an''--my marriage was all a lie? |
14171 | An''what if they mistook you for one of us? |
14171 | An''when you two went up Escondido Cañon after the Mescaleros that had captured Miss Roubideau? 14171 And Joe Yankie-- does he stack up A 1 too?" |
14171 | And then? |
14171 | And yore sister wo n''t see it that way? |
14171 | Any beard? |
14171 | Any news, dad? |
14171 | Anything wrong with that? 14171 Are n''t you takin''a heap of trouble on our account?" |
14171 | Are you crazy? |
14171 | Bad? |
14171 | Billie is n''t wounded? |
14171 | Billie, you''re sure, are n''t you? |
14171 | Billie-- Dad, know anything about this big red steer? |
14171 | But we ca n''t desert him, can we? 14171 Ca n''t you hear? |
14171 | Ca n''t you see she''s tryin''to save you from murder? |
14171 | Can we take the''Paches by surprise? 14171 Can you do it without being seen?" |
14171 | Cayn''t you- all hear? |
14171 | Clanton? |
14171 | Come a right smart distance, I reckon? |
14171 | Did Dave Roush an''Mysterious Pete seem pretty friendly? |
14171 | Did he really kill Dave and Hugh Roush? 14171 Did he?" |
14171 | Did n''t I tell you it was Billie Prince sent me? 14171 Did n''t you ever kill any one?" |
14171 | Did ye think Dave Roush would marry a Clanton? 14171 Did you do this, Brad? |
14171 | Did you ever hear this:''Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord''? |
14171 | Did you kill Homer Webb? |
14171 | Did you know that Dave Roush ruined his sister''s life in a fiendish way? |
14171 | Did you notice the brand on the horse you''re ridin'', Jim? |
14171 | Did you say he was n''t dead? |
14171 | Do I get a gun if it comes to a showdown, Billie? |
14171 | Do I look like a fool? |
14171 | Do n''t I make a good deputy, Billie? 14171 Do n''t you reckon it will be settled peaceably? |
14171 | Do n''t you reckon maybe you''ll have to feed me to the wolves after all, Billie? |
14171 | Do n''t you think we''d better get him to bed? |
14171 | Do n''t you? 14171 Do what?" |
14171 | Do what? |
14171 | Do you know how badly Clanton is hurt, Jack? |
14171 | Do you know where Jack Goodheart is? |
14171 | Do you mean that you think he''s going to die? |
14171 | Do you think I''m double- crossin''you? 14171 Do you think there''s a chance, Jim?" |
14171 | Do you want to do something for me? |
14171 | Does he look like a killer? |
14171 | Does your foot hurt you much? |
14171 | Even if I tell you to git out of the country? |
14171 | Ever meet a man named Micky Free out there? |
14171 | From anywhere but here,"Meanin''that you''re here to stay? |
14171 | Git my note? |
14171 | Goin''somewheres, kid, or just ridin''? |
14171 | Goin''to stick by Webb, are you? |
14171 | Gone back on yore father and taken up with Webb''s scalawags, have you? |
14171 | Had Clanton anything to do with it? |
14171 | Have n''t you had any bringin''up? |
14171 | Have you forgot who this guy is you''re arrestin''? 14171 Have you forgotten-- Polly?" |
14171 | He did n''t mention you, did he? |
14171 | He would n''t take it, would he? |
14171 | He''s yore old side kick, too, ai n''t he? |
14171 | How about a reward? 14171 How about pullin''a little strategy on Sanders, Jim? |
14171 | How about you? 14171 How do you know she loves me?" |
14171 | How do you know, son? |
14171 | How does it happen that Snaith''s outfit have let Jim stay here without gettin''after him? 14171 How in Mexico did he happen to light on Snaith- McRobert stock? |
14171 | How is he? |
14171 | How many of us are goin''? |
14171 | How many of''em do you make out? |
14171 | How old? |
14171 | How''s Billie Prince? |
14171 | How''s the game shoulder? |
14171 | Howcome you here? 14171 Howcome you to know so much about it, girl? |
14171 | Hungry, are you? |
14171 | I do n''t aim to be noways inquisitive, Go- Get-''Em, but how come you to wait long enough to take this hawss- thief captive? 14171 I see you know all about it?" |
14171 | I''m as stiff as a poker, am I? |
14171 | I''m the foreman, if that''s what you mean? |
14171 | If you get away, Jim, you_ will_ be good, wo n''t you? |
14171 | If you wo n''t guess I''ll have to tell you Ever hear of the Clantons, Ranse Roush? 14171 Is Roush goin''to live?" |
14171 | Is he badly hurt? |
14171 | Is he badly hurt? |
14171 | Is it generally known that Jim was the man who killed Warren? |
14171 | Is it that you are afraid of what I''m goin''to be? 14171 Is it?" |
14171 | Is it? |
14171 | Is that you over there, Lee? |
14171 | Is there goin''to be trouble between Mysterious Pete an''Jim? |
14171 | Is there-- some one else? 14171 Is yore paw home, Miss Lee?" |
14171 | It''s Billie Prince, then, is it? |
14171 | It''s a promise? |
14171 | Know Injuns, do you? |
14171 | Know it? 14171 Makin''up some lost sleep, Joe?" |
14171 | Me? |
14171 | Meanin''me? |
14171 | Meanin''that I''m a liar? |
14171 | Meanin''that you ca n''t protect me? |
14171 | Mind if I lock it? |
14171 | Must I go? |
14171 | Must n''t I? |
14171 | Need n''t we? |
14171 | Not Jim Clanton? |
14171 | Not goin''? |
14171 | Now, will you leave us? |
14171 | Of course, you''re not settin''yourself up to judge_ me_, Lee? |
14171 | Oh, does n''t he? |
14171 | Oh, you''re doin''this thing, are you? |
14171 | Only one? |
14171 | Ought n''t he? |
14171 | Plannin''a necktie party, are they? |
14171 | Pretty bad, is it? |
14171 | Same brand''s on your bay, Billie-- the Lazy S M. Did you tell that kid to steal us two horses? |
14171 | Say, Billie, how much bacon do you reckon we need to take with us? |
14171 | Say, Daniel Boone ai n''t got a thing on yore friend, has he? 14171 Say, is that any of yore business, Mr. Deputy Sheriff?" |
14171 | Say, what about Billie? 14171 Say, what are you insinuatin''?" |
14171 | Say, will you tell yore dad not to do that again? 14171 Seen anything of the old man, Jim?" |
14171 | Shoot- a- Buck Cañon-- how''ll that do for a name? |
14171 | Since when? |
14171 | Sure, Jack? |
14171 | Sure? |
14171 | That so? |
14171 | That''s a right good reason, ai n''t it? |
14171 | The bullet did not strike an artery, then? |
14171 | Then these are''Paches too? |
14171 | Then why do n''t you kiss me, goose? |
14171 | Think I was goin''to let''em plug Tim McGrath an''get away with it? |
14171 | Think I''m a quitter? 14171 Think we were born yesterday? |
14171 | Tickled to death, ai n''t you? |
14171 | Want a job? |
14171 | We got to save that girl for Billie, ai n''t we? 14171 Well, what did you do when you found Peg- Leg-- make him a visit for a couple of days?" |
14171 | Whad you want? |
14171 | What about this reward stuff? |
14171 | What about to- night? 14171 What are you doin''here, Dave Roush?" |
14171 | What are you goin''to do with me? |
14171 | What are you going to do, dad? |
14171 | What are you going to do? |
14171 | What chance did they give poor Tim, I''d like to know? 14171 What did you ever see me do to give you the notion that I was yellow, Bancock?" |
14171 | What do you mean, standing there and grinnin''at me like a wolf, Dave Roush? 14171 What do you mean-- trouble with the Snaith- McRobert outfit?" |
14171 | What do you want us for? |
14171 | What do you want with him? |
14171 | What for? |
14171 | What is it you want? 14171 What kind of a trial?" |
14171 | What will he do? |
14171 | What will you do with them, if you do? |
14171 | What you payin''? |
14171 | What''d you say your name was, sissie? |
14171 | What''ll you do to prevent my goin''? |
14171 | What''s got into you, girl? |
14171 | What''s that? |
14171 | What''s that? |
14171 | What''s the use of beefing? |
14171 | What''s this I hear about you, Jimmie- Go- Get-''Em? 14171 What''s this hyer garment?" |
14171 | What''s yore notion? 14171 What''s your name?" |
14171 | When did Yankie tell you that? |
14171 | When is it to be? |
14171 | Where are Albeen and-- Roush? |
14171 | Where are our boys holed up? |
14171 | Where are we, Billie? |
14171 | Where are yore folks? |
14171 | Where are you from? |
14171 | Where can I find Homer Webb? |
14171 | Where can I find Polly? |
14171 | Where did you come from? |
14171 | Where in Mexico did they come from? |
14171 | Where is Dave, Brother Hugh? |
14171 | Where is he? |
14171 | Where you from? |
14171 | Where you headin''for? |
14171 | Where''d we go? 14171 Where''s Billie?" |
14171 | Where''s dad? |
14171 | Where''s the money? |
14171 | Where? |
14171 | Which one was wounded? |
14171 | Who are you? 14171 Who from?" |
14171 | Who told you? |
14171 | Who''d be with me here? |
14171 | Who''s goin''to do all that? |
14171 | Who''s the big auger left? |
14171 | Who? |
14171 | Whose money? |
14171 | Why ca n''t you boys get along peaceable with Joe, I''d like to know? 14171 Why ca n''t you?" |
14171 | Why demand it? 14171 Why did n''t I take another crack at him when I had the chance?" |
14171 | Why did n''t you stay there? |
14171 | Why do n''t you act reasonable an''ride back to town, like a girl ought to do? 14171 Why do n''t you get back where you were? |
14171 | Why do n''t you keep his face sponged? 14171 Why not just arrest''em an''hold''em at Bluewater till we find whether their story is true?" |
14171 | Why not? 14171 Why would n''t he say so? |
14171 | Whyfor are you dodgin''back of the bar, Hugh Roush? 14171 Whyfor must I take you there if I tell you where to go?" |
14171 | Will he wait? 14171 Will it be dangerous?" |
14171 | Would I be likely to think that? |
14171 | Would a man have to wait for the reward until Clanton was convicted? |
14171 | Would n''t you? 14171 Would you like me to do it now?" |
14171 | Would you-- would you like to kiss me? |
14171 | Yankie up at the ranch? |
14171 | You ai n''t expectin''to ride our stock on this fool chase, are you? |
14171 | You ai n''t havin''no truck with Dave Roush are you? 14171 You boys ride for the Flying V Y, do n''t you?" |
14171 | You ca n''t stay there the rest of yore natural life, can you? |
14171 | You can read, ca n''t you, Sanders? |
14171 | You did n''t leave this man alone overnight with that bunch of beeves for Major Strong? |
14171 | You did? 14171 You know Billie?" |
14171 | You like me? |
14171 | You mean kissed you? |
14171 | You mean you''ve killed Peg- Leg Warren? |
14171 | You quit takin''chances with blizzards an''crazy gunmen an''--"--And horsethieves hidden in the chaparral? |
14171 | You thought.... How did you know they were comin''? |
14171 | You used to think Lee was the only girl, did n''t you? |
14171 | You was just kind o''jokin'', was n''t you? |
14171 | You were hiding in Live- Oaks? |
14171 | You wo n''t take that offer, then? |
14171 | You would n''t take advantage of me, would you? |
14171 | You''ll never forgit me, Bud? 14171 You''re bound to be in this, are n''t you?" |
14171 | You''re goin''down about this Webb murder? |
14171 | You''re threatenin''me, eh? |
14171 | You''re to get the reward, are n''t you? |
14171 | You-- you killed Ranse? |
14171 | Yours or mine? |
14171 | A girl like you, Miss Roubideau, has got no business stickin''up for a bad man who--""Did n''t you hear me? |
14171 | Ai n''t it mine?" |
14171 | Ai n''t odds of two to one good enough for you-- an''that one only a kid-- without you runnin''to cover like the coyote you are? |
14171 | An? |
14171 | And if they were convinced of its truth, what difference would that make? |
14171 | Another showdown?" |
14171 | Are n''t you doing it because you''ve been called to it and not because you like it?" |
14171 | Are these''Paches liable to make us any trouble?" |
14171 | Are you afraid of him?" |
14171 | Are you game to play a lone hand, kid?" |
14171 | Are you lookin''for trouble?" |
14171 | Are you never wrong yourself?" |
14171 | Are you the sheriff of Washington County, ma''am?" |
14171 | Are you with me, boys?" |
14171 | But do n''t you get lonesome?" |
14171 | But you do n''t suppose that would keep him from accepting the job, do you?" |
14171 | Ca n''t you make allowance for other folks''judgment being different from yours? |
14171 | Ca n''t you see that? |
14171 | Ca n''t you trust yore life with me? |
14171 | Can you keep a secret?" |
14171 | Cayn''t you get it through yore cocoanut that we''ve got to stand by our pardners?" |
14171 | Could you give me something to help him forget the pain an''the fever?" |
14171 | D''ye mean you''ve taken up with a pair of killers, of outlaws we''re goin''to put out of business? |
14171 | Did I fall off my hawss?" |
14171 | Did he dare to find amusement in her? |
14171 | Did n''t you have all the breaks? |
14171 | Did she love him? |
14171 | Did yore folks find him?" |
14171 | Did you, Dave?" |
14171 | Do n''t you know better than to ask such questions?" |
14171 | Do n''t you see that? |
14171 | Do n''t you- all nevah git tired?" |
14171 | Do you claim I rustled that bunch of beeves last night?" |
14171 | Do you hear?" |
14171 | Do you think you can get us horses an''some food without tellin''anybody what for?" |
14171 | Do you want an open an''shut cinch?" |
14171 | Do you want to be sheriff? |
14171 | Does Jack or the other guard sit up and watch you all the time?" |
14171 | Does that listen good to you?" |
14171 | Had he discovered that his prisoner was free? |
14171 | Had these men arranged to deliver him into the hands of Clanton? |
14171 | Have n''t I slept on their trail four years? |
14171 | Have n''t you noticed it? |
14171 | Have you got the makin''s with you, Billie?" |
14171 | He fought fair, did n''t he? |
14171 | Hit ai n''t likely, is it?" |
14171 | How are things a- stackin'', Joe?" |
14171 | How come you alive again? |
14171 | How could he tell Lee that Pauline had deliberately misled him to give Clanton a better chance of escape? |
14171 | How much of this buffeting, she wondered, could one endure and live? |
14171 | How''re you goin''to manage it?" |
14171 | If Roush was the man who had tiptoed toward the horse in the pines, why had he not made sure first by shooting Albeen while he slept? |
14171 | Is he up again?" |
14171 | Is it going to make you so awfully happy to spend your time running down outlaws for the good of the country? |
14171 | Is it true?" |
14171 | Is n''t that enough?" |
14171 | Is that it?" |
14171 | Is there a white man here that blames him for it?" |
14171 | Is there any other way into the cañon?" |
14171 | Is there some one else you love?" |
14171 | It is a name we shall remember in our prayers, n''est- ce pas, Polly?" |
14171 | It_ is_ the sixth, ai n''t it?" |
14171 | My little Polly, have you not save her? |
14171 | N''est- ce pas, Polly?" |
14171 | No matter what happens, you''ll-- you''ll not hate me?" |
14171 | Not meetin''up with him on the sly?" |
14171 | Now you slide out of the back door, slap a saddle on your bronc, an''hit the high spots out of here,""And Clanton?" |
14171 | Or ought n''t I to ask that?" |
14171 | Or was he a good man to let alone when one was looking for trouble? |
14171 | Or was it you?" |
14171 | Or would his obstinacy prevail? |
14171 | Say, ai n''t I due for one of them sleep powders Doc fixed up so careful?" |
14171 | Sheriff?" |
14171 | That right, Pete?" |
14171 | They ca n''t hang me if I ai n''t there, can they?" |
14171 | Think I''m goin''to lie down on you?" |
14171 | Un''erstand? |
14171 | Understand? |
14171 | Understand?" |
14171 | Want to go along?" |
14171 | Was he himself going to fall into the pit he had dug? |
14171 | Was he laughing at her? |
14171 | Was it his imagination that found in her an unwonted shyness of the dark eyes, a gentle timidity of manner when she looked at him? |
14171 | Was it likely that anything she could say would have weight with him? |
14171 | Was it reasonable to suppose that she would give her love to a penniless puncher of twenty- eight, lank as a shad, with no recommendation but honesty? |
14171 | Was she going to die? |
14171 | Was some one with you, sis?" |
14171 | Was this young Thursday a false alarm? |
14171 | We ca n''t let those red devils take her away, can we?" |
14171 | Webb, hard- eyed and stiff, looked at the young man,"Had a pleasant vacation, Clanton?" |
14171 | Well, what if you had n''t had any guns?" |
14171 | Whad you want?" |
14171 | What can we do about them?" |
14171 | What could two boys do against half a dozen wily savages? |
14171 | What did you do? |
14171 | What kind of a fellow do you think I am? |
14171 | What more do you want?" |
14171 | What motive could be powerful enough with a boy of fourteen to sway so completely his whole life toward vengeance? |
14171 | What plan have you to get away?" |
14171 | What right had he to ask those who remained loyal to him to sacrifice so often their sense of right in his favor? |
14171 | What right had he to cut her off from the things that made life tolerable? |
14171 | What then?" |
14171 | What''s ailin''you?" |
14171 | What''s one little-- bullet in the shoulder, Billie? |
14171 | What''s the sense of you comin''right up to me when you see they''re shootin''at me?" |
14171 | What''s troublin you, anyhow? |
14171 | What''s yore name, kid?" |
14171 | What''s yore name?" |
14171 | When?" |
14171 | Where did they hit you, Jim?" |
14171 | Where is Clanton''s hang- out?" |
14171 | Where''s Dave?" |
14171 | Where''s the other man?" |
14171 | Who are you?" |
14171 | Who is yore friend that saw the boys?" |
14171 | Who knows into what an agony of fear and remorse and black despair she fell? |
14171 | Who told you to do that?" |
14171 | Why did n''t your friends tell them so?" |
14171 | Why did they find him guilty?" |
14171 | Why do you load him down with chains? |
14171 | Why had he done this wanton and lawless thing? |
14171 | Why not just ask for it?" |
14171 | Why not throw off an''camp in the darkness? |
14171 | Why not?" |
14171 | Why should n''t I be here when Lee Snaith is lost?" |
14171 | Why? |
14171 | Why?" |
14171 | Whyfor ca n''t I climb on its back an''ride?" |
14171 | Whyfor should I take any chances with the Snaith- McRobert outfit when I ai n''t got a thing in the world against them?" |
14171 | Whyfor should you like me?" |
14171 | Will you come?" |
14171 | Will you nurse me real tender, ma''am, if I get stove up pullin''off a grand- stand play like they done?" |
14171 | Would Jack think that she had conspired against his honor in an underhanded way? |
14171 | Would he cast her off and have no more to do with her? |
14171 | Would he justify their faith in him? |
14171 | Would it stand without breaking this new test of its strength? |
14171 | Would the old man guess that he had been in the saddle all night? |
14171 | Would the wounded man accept his lead? |
14171 | Would they believe the story she told? |
14171 | You do n''t mean right away, Albeen, do you?" |
14171 | You feel that about him, do n''t you?" |
14171 | You know him, do n''t you, Jim?" |
14171 | You never have liked me very well, but--""Have n''t I?" |
14171 | You will, wo n''t you?" |
14171 | You wo n''t feel bad, will you?" |
14171 | You''ll not hate me-- you''ll remember I allus thought a heap of you, Jimmie?" |
14171 | You''ll use it, wo n''t you?" |
14171 | You''re at the Proctor House, are n''t you?" |
14171 | You''re givin''them their job, ai n''t you?" |
14171 | the sick man asked; then added:"How did we get away from''em?" |
39333 | And is that all you are come about? |
39333 | But how,said the duke,"came you by the knowledge of all these things?" |
39333 | Now what is the matter, master,said Little John,"that you sit thus by the way- side?" |
39333 | What knave art thou,said the outlaw,"that dare come so near the king of Sherwood?" |
39333 | Where is my friend? |
39333 | Your friend? |
39333 | ''What news? |
39333 | According to this story, Robin met him in the greenwood, and bade him good morrow; adding,"pray where live ye, and what is your trade? |
39333 | Among the rest was this: What is the square of 4001? |
39333 | Among those proposed to him at Boston, in the autumn of the year 1810, were the following: What is the number of seconds in 2000 years? |
39333 | And has he not within a year Hanged threescore of them in one shire? |
39333 | Another question was this: Allowing that a clock strikes 156 times in a day, how many times will it strike in 2000 years? |
39333 | Beronicius read them twice, praised them, and said,"What should hinder me from turning them into Latin instantly?" |
39333 | But what stays the savage arm? |
39333 | Did Quentin do it? |
39333 | Does one need to know anything more than the twenty- six letters, in order to learn everything else that one wishes?" |
39333 | For whom do you make such a feast, and of the king''s venison? |
39333 | How many hours in thirty- eight years, two months, and seven days? |
39333 | If a field be 423 yards long, and 383 broad, what is the area? |
39333 | If there is argument for God in a flower, how much more in a child of Zerah Colburn''s endowments? |
39333 | In considering whether to go to a ball, a soirée, or a jam, the deciding point of inquiry was,"Will Hunter be there?" |
39333 | Really, how should I know? |
39333 | The question has often been asked, What was the real character of John Dunn Hunter? |
39333 | What infidelity can withstand such an instance, and still say, there is no God? |
39333 | What is the product of 12,225, multiplied by 1,223? |
39333 | What is the square of 1,449? |
39333 | What sum multiplied by itself will produce 998,001? |
39333 | What was to be done now? |
39333 | What, then, is to become of that?" |
39333 | Which is the most, six dozen dozen, or half a dozen dozen? |
39333 | Who was his father?--who his mother? |
39333 | _ D._ And so, father, you think it is as well as you could have done yourself? |
39333 | _ D._ Is it as good as you could have done yourself, father? |
39333 | _ Daughter._ Who painted the insect? |
39333 | _ F._ Aye, girl, is that it? |
39333 | _ Father._ Tell me, child, who painted the insect? |
39333 | replied the duke;"do you understand geometry, Latin, and Newton?" |
39333 | what news?'' |
29991 | Across the river, over there under the arch of the bridge, do n''t you see that little curl of blue- white rising? |
29991 | And say, I did n''t get my drink of milk, either, did I? |
29991 | And that would spell ruin for all our plans, would n''t it? |
29991 | And you will allow us to go on when we choose, then? |
29991 | And,continued the Belgian lieutenant,"if the poor fellow should be nearly gone, what then? |
29991 | Are the Belgian troops coming, Rob? |
29991 | Are they showing any signs of going yet? |
29991 | Are you American boys, then? |
29991 | Are you sure they are Belgian aëroplanes? |
29991 | Bad time did you say, Rob? 29991 Blown up, do you mean, Rob?" |
29991 | Bottom knocked out of everything, is it, Rob? |
29991 | But how shall we catch the frogs, and then cook them? |
29991 | But if they come in here do we want to stay and be arrested for English spies? |
29991 | But just explain one queer thing, wo n''t you, please, Merritt? |
29991 | But there have been no battles on English soil, up to now, Merritt; tell me how the Boy Scouts of Great Britain could do things, then? |
29991 | But think of us, will you? |
29991 | But what can I do with the coat when it comes down to me? 29991 But what do you reckon they''re doing up there?" |
29991 | But what do you suppose all that bombardment means? |
29991 | But what''s that you''ve got in your hand, Tubby? |
29991 | But where could we hide? |
29991 | But why d''ye suppose they did n''t climb up before now, and tackle that monster Zeppelin, so as to put it out of business, or chase it off? |
29991 | But why should you do that? |
29991 | But wo n''t you try and get me up again, Rob? |
29991 | But, Rob, shall we have to swim across, or is there a sort of ford handy that we might use? |
29991 | Ca n''t you climb up again, Tubby? |
29991 | Can Rob reach that window from the limb? |
29991 | Can you blame them? |
29991 | Clasp your legs around the thing, ca n''t you, Tubby? |
29991 | Come on, here, what''s ailing you, Dobbin? |
29991 | Did they shoot down many of the poor villagers on account of that sniper? |
29991 | Did you see that little puff of what looked like smoke? 29991 Did you see that?" |
29991 | Do we have to get out at this terribly early hour? |
29991 | Do you mean Hoboken, New Jersey? |
29991 | Doing what? |
29991 | First of all----"Of course not, but----"And, if they discovered us, you know what it would mean? |
29991 | Frogs, is n''t it, Rob? |
29991 | Has he left Sempst, then? |
29991 | Has he sailed away yet, Rob? |
29991 | Have n''t we been through all sorts of tough times together in the past; and why should n''t we stand by our chum when he needs our help? 29991 Have you ever seen the goose- step before, Rob?" |
29991 | He acts kind of queer, does n''t he? |
29991 | Hey, Merritt, you give me a shiver when you say that, do n''t you know? |
29991 | How about this, Rob? 29991 How about you, Tubby?" |
29991 | How is it you know there is an ambuscade laid to catch us napping? |
29991 | How will it all end, I wonder? |
29991 | How, then, could we ever forgive ourselves for taking money from one who has saved our baby''s life? 29991 I do n''t seem to glimpse any cavalrymen around, do you, Rob?" |
29991 | I wonder what happened to the spy? |
29991 | I wonder what we''ll strike on the other side of this wood? |
29991 | Is the battle over, do you think? |
29991 | It must have landed by now, then, has n''t it? |
29991 | It''s got the wheels of an automobile; but say, notice how the body of the car has been built up with steel sides, will you? 29991 Just because I''m so well filled out, I suppose you mean, Rob? |
29991 | Listen to him, will you, Rob? |
29991 | Listen to them shouting, will you? |
29991 | Me? 29991 Our road will take us past that place where they are hiding, wo n''t it, Rob?" |
29991 | Rob, did you see that puff of smoke coming out of the house then? |
29991 | Rob, do n''t you see they''re heading right this way? |
29991 | Rob, tell us what it was all about? |
29991 | See here, you do n''t happen to have a lot of stuff hidden away on your person, do you, Rob? |
29991 | Settles what? |
29991 | So, that''s a real Zeppelin, is it? |
29991 | Sure it ai n''t poisoned, are you, Merritt? |
29991 | Tell us about it, wo n''t you, Rob? |
29991 | That must be because certain things are made there that they can use in their war game, eh, Rob? |
29991 | The old miner did that so if anybody got hold of him they would n''t be able to locate the secret mine-- wasn''t that it, Merritt? |
29991 | The question is, who could that message have been for? |
29991 | Then mebbe you''ve gone and got some wings hidden away, which we can use to fly across? |
29991 | Then please tell me what''s the program? |
29991 | Then that machine must have been one of the Taube aëroplanes they told us about? |
29991 | Then the scouts over in your country are also taught to be ready for any emergency, the same as the boys are in Belgium? |
29991 | Then you found that what I told you was exactly so? |
29991 | Then you must have noticed signs that told they were beginning to get ready to go? |
29991 | This? 29991 Want to break my neck, you animated skeleton? |
29991 | Was that an aëroplane, Rob? |
29991 | Well, do you think you could stand for another night in the hay? |
29991 | Well, do you wonder? |
29991 | Well, how about that drink of milk, fellows? |
29991 | Well, now, he must have guessed that when you said you''reckoned,''Rob,declared Merritt,"but how comes it you talk English, my friend?" |
29991 | Well, shall we get out of here? |
29991 | Well, shall we make a move? |
29991 | Well, what of that? |
29991 | What are you looking at now, Tubby? |
29991 | What d''ye reckon they find to do? |
29991 | What did you make up your mind was the cause of it? |
29991 | What do you call that, I wonder? |
29991 | What do you make of that flickering light over there, Rob? |
29991 | What do you take us for, I want to know? |
29991 | What does he mean, then? 29991 What for?" |
29991 | What if those awful Uhlans took our steeds away with them? |
29991 | What luck, Rob? |
29991 | What luck? |
29991 | What makes you say that? |
29991 | What makes you say that? |
29991 | What makes you think so? |
29991 | What makes you think so? |
29991 | What makes you think so? |
29991 | What will we do now? |
29991 | What would I look like trying that fancy step? 29991 What would we do without you?" |
29991 | What''s that man shouting, Rob? |
29991 | What''s that moving along away up near the clouds? |
29991 | What''s that moving away over there, Rob? |
29991 | What''s the idea of that? |
29991 | What''s the matter, Anthony? |
29991 | What''s the matter, now, Merritt? |
29991 | What''s the score? |
29991 | What''s there about a bridge to worry us, I''d like to know? |
29991 | What''s this coming up behind us? |
29991 | What''s this? 29991 What, already?" |
29991 | What-- a feast of frogs''legs? |
29991 | Where do I come in? 29991 Where was this, Rob?" |
29991 | Why is it? |
29991 | Why, you know how firemen stand and hold a blanket for people to jump into? |
29991 | Will you keep still, Tubby, and let''s see if he begins again? |
29991 | Would it be safe? |
29991 | Would it be wise for us to head over there now, Rob? |
29991 | Would you mind telling us how you know this? |
29991 | You do n''t expect they will turn back and give us trouble, do you, Rob? |
29991 | You mean drop a bomb down on it, do n''t you, Rob? |
29991 | You mean to start then for Sempst, do you? |
29991 | You mean we''re on fire, do you? |
29991 | You will not go ahead after learning what is waiting there, I suppose, Captain? |
29991 | ''unoccupied,''you said, did n''t you, Rob?" |
29991 | Ai n''t that the limit, now?" |
29991 | Am I on the right track, Rob?" |
29991 | And all the while she keeps on asking:''Sister Ann, Sister Ann, do you see anyone coming?''" |
29991 | And look how they''re holding her back, would you? |
29991 | And there are other ways in which boys in camp could be injured, you are telling me?" |
29991 | And there goes E, followed by W and S. What does that spell but NEWS? |
29991 | And what under the sun does he mean by''safe landing''? |
29991 | And you seem to be willing to take the risk?" |
29991 | Are those the works where the smoke is coming out of the stacks?" |
29991 | Are we going to be held up by a patrol? |
29991 | But do n''t you think we''d better try and get to sleep, for it''s growing late?" |
29991 | But how in the world can we cook them? |
29991 | But say, was that in German, or French, or English, I want to know?" |
29991 | But watch him boring up in spirals, would you? |
29991 | But we''re really getting there, ai n''t we, Rob?" |
29991 | But what are you doing here on this terrible field? |
29991 | But why have you done this for us, when you say, as Americans, you must be neutral?" |
29991 | But you do n''t think now that fellow away up there in the clouds would bother dropping explosives on our heads, do you, Rob?" |
29991 | But you never saw me show the white feather, did you?" |
29991 | Can you make it out? |
29991 | Did you hear anything suspicious? |
29991 | Do I have to come down to choosing between eating jumpers and starving to death?" |
29991 | Do any of you speak English? |
29991 | Do n''t you see how that sort of a movement relieves the leg? |
29991 | Do n''t you think we''ve got enough, Rob?" |
29991 | Do you happen to know any peculiarity about his looks or manner that would identify him?" |
29991 | Does the German see him, do you think, and is he beginning to skip out?" |
29991 | Had n''t we better make our way downstairs, Rob, and throw ourselves on the mercy of the Uhlans?" |
29991 | How about it, Rob?" |
29991 | How about that, Merritt?" |
29991 | How about that, Rob?" |
29991 | I do n''t seem to glimpse any big dirigible up there; do you, fellows?" |
29991 | I hope now you do n''t mean to tackle them raw? |
29991 | I may get in lots of scrapes, but somehow I always do manage to crawl out, do n''t I?" |
29991 | I''m tired; but I did n''t give up, did I, fellows? |
29991 | If he allowed the runaway to go by, and something dreadful happened, how could he ever reconcile his action with his vows as a true- blue scout? |
29991 | If they''re German raiders why do n''t they come across and interview us, I wonder? |
29991 | Is he trying to escape military duty, do you think, Rob? |
29991 | Is it a bargain, my boys?" |
29991 | Is it the same as the German word_ stein_?" |
29991 | Is n''t it in this country they make all that Limburger cheese; or over the border in Holland? |
29991 | Is n''t it terrible?" |
29991 | Is that all?" |
29991 | Is that the stuff, Rob?" |
29991 | Is there a German Zeppelin heaving in sight? |
29991 | It must be a serious motive that brings you into this wretched country?" |
29991 | It shows what training will do for a fellow, does n''t it?" |
29991 | It''s about the paper, also of Steven Meredith you''re curious to hear?" |
29991 | Just as if I could help that; can I, Rob?" |
29991 | Listen to the frogs croaking, will you? |
29991 | Look what''s bearing down on us, will you?" |
29991 | Mebbe you know of a henroost nearby, where we might find a tough old Dominick fowl that had been overlooked by the raider squads from the camp?" |
29991 | Now give us a pointer; what about getting some supper, and finding a place to sleep to- night?" |
29991 | Now what does that stand for, Rob? |
29991 | Now, had n''t we better be getting out of here?" |
29991 | Now, what can you tell us about him?" |
29991 | Now, what in the wide world was he in such a terrible hurry for? |
29991 | Only one show at the same? |
29991 | Rob, has our house taken fire yet?" |
29991 | Rob, see if we could do it, wo n''t you? |
29991 | Rob, you do n''t think they''ll come up here, do you?" |
29991 | Shall I take it and steal up close enough to whack a few of the jumpers on the head?" |
29991 | Tell me, can I not do something to prove that in Germany we look upon your country as our friends? |
29991 | Think of the battles we''ve been up against on the diamond and the gridiron; and did anybody ever hear us complain, or show a yellow streak? |
29991 | Think up some way to grab me out of this, wo n''t you, Rob?" |
29991 | Was there ever such great luck as this? |
29991 | What about Anthony, Rob?" |
29991 | What are all our troubles, I''d like to know, compared to those these poor people are suffering?" |
29991 | What could he have meant, Rob?" |
29991 | What if they take us for Germans, and open fire?" |
29991 | What makes you look at me like that, Rob?" |
29991 | What would n''t I give for an aëroplane to come along at this minute, and pick me up? |
29991 | What''coast is clear''? |
29991 | What''s a scout good for if he is ready to desert a comrade when the sky grows dark? |
29991 | What''s a scout wearing his khaki uniform for if it is n''t to remind him what he owes to his chums? |
29991 | What''s that other they roar out, Rob?" |
29991 | What''s that poor woman shouting now, Rob? |
29991 | What''s the program, Rob?" |
29991 | What''s the use of locking the stable door when the horse has been stolen?" |
29991 | What''s this?" |
29991 | When he came back it was getting near sundown; and of course the first thing Tubby asked was:"Did he say we could have it, Rob?" |
29991 | Where''s he gone to, do you think, Rob? |
29991 | Where''s the boat going to come from, somebody tell me quick?" |
29991 | Who so fit to solve it as a band of adventurous Boy Scouts? |
29991 | Why, ca n''t you see there''s good money in raising frogs? |
29991 | Why, did n''t that officer compliment us on the way we looked after his men, and the German spy they''d captured? |
29991 | Why, we''re miles and miles away from the sea- shore now, ai n''t we? |
29991 | Wo n''t you let me help?" |
29991 | Wo n''t you take our word of honor, sir?" |
29991 | Would you be willing to help us out; and do you think you could stand the awful sights and sounds of the battlefield?" |
29991 | Would you mind if I and my friend here looked at them? |
29991 | You remember what we heard in Antwerp about those three British cruisers that were just torpedoed in the North Sea by German submarines?" |
29991 | You will allow us to go on, then, I hope?" |
29991 | by the way, where are our horses?" |
29991 | called out Rob,"American boys, who belong to the scouts over in our country, you understand? |
29991 | can he have seen us?" |
29991 | dear, why do n''t you hurry and tell us the worst?" |
29991 | ejaculated Tubby helplessly,"and do you really expect to crawl over that swinging thing? |
29991 | get me up out of this, fellows, ca n''t you?" |
29991 | said Tubby,"when like as not if they said no they''d find a torch put to their house? |
29991 | snorted Tubby,"after Columbus had cracked the end of the egg and stood it up, did n''t those Spanish courtiers all say that was as easy as pie? |
29991 | so this is war, is it? |
29991 | sort of''trying it on the dog first,''eh?" |
29991 | three miles or more, on that animated saw- buck, eh? |
29991 | what are you going to do, Rob, Merritt? |
29991 | what is it?" |
29991 | what is that up there, and heading this way?" |
29991 | what wo n''t they do next in modern, up- to- date fighting?" |
29991 | what would I not do to show you how grateful I am for your brave act? |
29991 | why does n''t somebody run up and get the child out, if that''s so?" |
29991 | why, yes, how about that passport the burgomaster wrote out for us himself? |
41103 | Did n''t you ever hear of black murrain? |
41103 | Do n''t you know? |
41103 | What''s the matter with my sheep? |
41103 | ''Do you see this little chap?'' |
41103 | ''What is your lading?'' |
41103 | ''What''s your captain''s name?'' |
41103 | ''Where are you bound?'' |
41103 | Do n''t you, hey, Johnny?'' |
41103 | What do yer want with any more? |
41103 | Your livelihood is gained sometimes one way, sometimes another-- who questions? |
41103 | cried the victim;"and what''s the cure?" |
41143 | How long have you read law and what books have you studied? |
41143 | ''So,''says the son,''am I to be served thus for not doing what I am unable to do? |
41143 | B?] |
41143 | Because some of the relatives of the Indian chieftain Logan had been basely murdered, while intoxicated, on Yellow Creek? |
41143 | But what could be said if Virginia purchased the Indian''s claim? |
41143 | Could a king''s proclamation keep the Virginians from a territory to which, for value received, the Indians had given a quit- claim deed? |
41143 | Could she maintain it? |
41143 | How aware? |
41143 | Nor does it seem that there was much abatement during the more inclement( safer?) |
41143 | Where is even the Kentucky historian who has done his state justice in telling the story of Kentucky''s conquest of Ohio and Indiana? |
41143 | Who composed the armies of McIntosh, Brodhead, Crawford, Harmar, St. Clair, and Wayne but these rough, wild- looking men who first entered the West? |
41143 | an assurance that"to him that hath shall be given?" |
31709 | ''What are you doing there, my friend?'' 31709 Air ye plumb bereft?" |
31709 | Any danger of this roost being blown off the mountain? |
31709 | Are back teeth extracted in that way? |
31709 | Are ye fixin''to go squirrelin''? |
31709 | Bad roads? |
31709 | Ca n''t we hunt down on the Carolina side? |
31709 | Can I borry a race of ginger? |
31709 | Did n''t hurt, eh? |
31709 | Do they shoot a revenue officer at sight? |
31709 | George Washington? |
31709 | Has the young dog ever fought a bear? |
31709 | Have these dogs got the Plott strain? 31709 How far is it to the next house?" |
31709 | How is that? 31709 How many bakin''-powders has you got?" |
31709 | How''s this? 31709 Howdy?" |
31709 | John, what do those two words mean? |
31709 | John, what was that dream of yours? |
31709 | Kill the nerve? |
31709 | Kirby? 31709 Me? |
31709 | One of your boys? |
31709 | Reckon Pete was knowin''to the sarcumstance? |
31709 | Stranger-- meanin''no harm--_whar_ are you gwine? |
31709 | Then what? |
31709 | Then where did you get your bear? |
31709 | Then why do n''t you go? |
31709 | Then you''ll rotate, and grow corn again? |
31709 | Waal, who dreamt him a good dream? |
31709 | Was the bear alive? |
31709 | Whar''s that brekfust you''re yellin''about? |
31709 | What class of people does the informing? |
31709 | What did you say your name was? |
31709 | What does man need of a clock when he has a good- crowin''rooster? |
31709 | What does the sheriff get for coming away up here? |
31709 | What good would that do? |
31709 | What is the reason, John? |
31709 | What mought you- uns foller for a living? |
31709 | What''s the matter with it? |
31709 | Where is your mother? |
31709 | Who got to beat? |
31709 | Who lives here? |
31709 | Whose is this? |
31709 | Whose pig was it? |
31709 | Why is it agin them? 31709 Why? |
31709 | Will the tooth come at the first lick? |
31709 | Wo n''t this spoil him for hunting hereafter? |
31709 | Wo n''t ye stay the night? 31709 Yes?" |
31709 | _ What_ fer? |
31709 | ''Any Episcopalians around here?'' |
31709 | ( Can a suicide enter the kingdom of heaven?) |
31709 | ***** One day I asked a mountain man,"How about the revenue officers? |
31709 | A stranger whose calked boots betrayed his calling stopped at Uncle Mark''s to inquire,"Can I git to stay all night?" |
31709 | A verb will be coined from an adverb:"We better git some wood, bettern we?" |
31709 | And it chanced( or was it chance?) |
31709 | And these silly, stuck- up strangers who brag and brag about"modern improvements"--what are they, under their fine manners and fine clothes? |
31709 | As regards the valuation of human life, what was that point of view? |
31709 | At thirty or thirty- five a mountain woman is apt to have a worn and faded look, with form prematurely bent-- and what wonder? |
31709 | Baker, why do n''t you leave this miserable country and escape from these terrible feuds? |
31709 | Bill Cope,"put in"Doc"Jones,"whut do you- uns know about windstorms? |
31709 | Bill sung out''Is it fur down thar?'' |
31709 | But the fittest for what? |
31709 | But what is refinement? |
31709 | But who ever seen luxury cavortin''around in these Smoky Mountains?" |
31709 | But, first, how comes it that the mountain folk have been so long detached from the life and movement of their times? |
31709 | But, really, does n''t that seem rather childish? |
31709 | CHAPTER XVI WHO ARE THE MOUNTAINEERS? |
31709 | Cocking his head to one side he challenged peremptorily:"Who are you? |
31709 | Corsican vendetta or Kentucky feud-- what are language and race against age- long isolation and an environment that keeps humanity feral to the core? |
31709 | Dangerous business? |
31709 | Did n''t you give Preacher X---- a good character, in your testimony? |
31709 | Do they sleep in one State and eat in the other?" |
31709 | Do you consider it consistent with his profession as a minister of the Gospel to forge corner- trees?" |
31709 | Do you wonder that one of these men should say, with a sigh-- should say this? |
31709 | Does this mean, then, that Poe''s characterization of the mountaineers is out of date? |
31709 | Ever note that? |
31709 | From William the Conqueror, you? |
31709 | Had you no rations at all?" |
31709 | He smiled as though I looked good to him, and asked with some eagerness,"Can I buy something to eat here?" |
31709 | Hence the saying:"Have you come to borry fire, that you''re in sich a hurry you ca n''t chat?" |
31709 | Here, then, is a conundrum: How does it happen that moonshining is distinctly a foible of the southern mountaineer? |
31709 | How much money do you make? |
31709 | I gather the corn, and shuck hit and grind hit my own self, and the woman she bakes us a pone o''bread to eat-- and I do n''t pay no tax, do I? |
31709 | I repeated to myself:"Why, then, so little known?" |
31709 | If a feud were raging in the land, how would a stranger fare? |
31709 | If one goes alone into the mountains, does he run any risk of being robbed?" |
31709 | In some places pine needles are called twinkles, and the locust insect is known as a ferro( Pharaoh?). |
31709 | Is Mr. Kirby about?" |
31709 | Is it not he of the long rifle and peremptory challenge? |
31709 | Is the case of our mountaineers so much worse than that of the Scotch highlanders of two centuries ago? |
31709 | Is your father at home?" |
31709 | It is a far cry from the Mediterranean to our own Appalachia: so why this prelude? |
31709 | It will be asked, Why did not this overplus do as other crowded Americans did: move west? |
31709 | Left and back and how are you? |
31709 | Need these razors be used to cut grindstones? |
31709 | Now d''ye see? |
31709 | Now what is your excuse for defying the law? |
31709 | Now, hist''ry says that Washington was the Father of his Country; and I reckon he was the_ greatest_ man that ever lived-- don''t you?" |
31709 | On cross- examination he was asked:"You admit that you and Preacher X---- forged that corner- tree? |
31709 | One naturally asks,"How so?" |
31709 | Or was it a charm to keep off evil spirits? |
31709 | Right hands across and howdy do? |
31709 | So they do; but_ who gits it_?" |
31709 | So why should they murder you and get hung for it? |
31709 | Stump? |
31709 | Stump? |
31709 | That fifty- story building they tell about, in their big city-- what is it but another Tower of Babel? |
31709 | The latter, annoyed by the boy''s vacuous stare, spoke up sharply:"What do you want?" |
31709 | Then there were round knobs-- and who can tell where the highest ridge lies on a round mountain or a ball? |
31709 | Then why ca n''t I make some o''my corn into pure whiskey to drink, without payin''tax? |
31709 | Then, if I stirred the mash and sampled their liquor, nobody would be likely to mistreat me?" |
31709 | Very well; how many other ancestors of yours were walking about England and elsewhere at the time of William? |
31709 | WHO ARE THE MOUNTAINEERS? |
31709 | Was he self- conscious, bashful? |
31709 | Was it a reconciliation cemented by the very life of their blood? |
31709 | Was n''t that a lovely dream?" |
31709 | Whar''s you- uns a- goin''ter?" |
31709 | Whar''s your old woman?" |
31709 | What causes feuds? |
31709 | What did that pottering vagabond mean by arousing us in the middle of the night? |
31709 | What do they learn of the real mountaineer? |
31709 | What is morality? |
31709 | What is the good of all this fuss and fury? |
31709 | What is the secret of their belatedness and isolation? |
31709 | What magic had flashed such pictures upon a remote summit of the Smoky Mountains? |
31709 | What matter that the plenteous roughs about us were branded with rude or opprobrious names? |
31709 | What sort of men are they?" |
31709 | What was going on"up yan"? |
31709 | What were they before civilization reached them? |
31709 | What would they do?" |
31709 | When Long John asks,"What you aimin''to do up hyur? |
31709 | Whence came they? |
31709 | Where else can we hear to- day a phrase that passed out of standard English when"villainous saltpetre"supplanted the long- bow? |
31709 | Who are these southern mountaineers? |
31709 | Who knows what a toddick or taddle is? |
31709 | Whut you reckon ails me?" |
31709 | Whut''s you- unses name? |
31709 | Why are they so foreign to present- day Americanism that they innocently call all the rest of us foreigners? |
31709 | Why so? |
31709 | Why, man, whut could they gain by hurtin''you? |
31709 | Why, then, so little known? |
31709 | Woods afire?" |
31709 | Your hostess, proffering apple sauce, will ask,"Do you love sass?" |
31709 | _ Me?_ Huh! |
31709 | whar was you fotch up? |
31709 | what makes you so blamed contentious?" |
40919 | Are your chipmunks still alive? |
40919 | Did he die? |
40919 | Does aught lie on it? |
40919 | How big do they grow? |
40919 | Is n''t it possible,he demanded bitterly,"that a well- behaved meadow mouse may make a neighborly call on a marsh wren?" |
40919 | Not Chippy- Nipmunk? |
40919 | Well, how about my friend? |
40919 | Well, how was it? |
40919 | What about James? |
40919 | What makes your arm shake so? |
40919 | What time does the train start? |
40919 | Whiskey? |
40919 | You are n''t afraid of an old screech- owl, are you? |
40919 | You''re not scared, are you? |
40919 | ***** Sweetest of all the singers, the thrush- folk-- what shall I say of them? |
40919 | *****"Can you go to Maryland to- day on a bird- trip?" |
40919 | How would a few fried cakes and some cider go?" |
40919 | It is a far cry to Ephesus, and whether the Seven still sleep there, who may say? |
40919 | Perhaps it was the wind; but why did not the tree- tops sway instead of standing in frozen rows? |
40919 | So what do you suppose he did?" |
40919 | Who keeps them open? |
40919 | Who made them? |
40919 | Why may they not meet on some common plane? |
26367 | A blanket, a quilt, and an eiderdown quilt each? |
26367 | All for what, if it was n''t for America, and for what America was meant to be, and for what America was and is? 26367 All right, son?" |
26367 | And all for what? |
26367 | And how far have we come, say to the Three Forks, just above here? |
26367 | And that was the real start, was n''t it, Uncle Dick? |
26367 | And we do n''t have to suppose a hundred years have elapsed? |
26367 | And we''ll always know where we are? |
26367 | And when did it end? |
26367 | And which way would you head if you wanted to find the head of the true Missouri and get on across the Rockies? 26367 Anxious times about now, eh? |
26367 | Are we going to stop at Omaha, sir? |
26367 | Are you about done with the painting, Rob? |
26367 | As which, sir? |
26367 | Buffalo hair? |
26367 | But about how big a boat do you think this particular family, just after the war, can afford? |
26367 | But have they got them all? |
26367 | But how about the Beaverhead Rock? |
26367 | But how did you get here so soon? |
26367 | But how will you sleep, outside? |
26367 | But they come down here from Butte, do n''t they? |
26367 | But what''ll we do with our boat? |
26367 | But when did they first find the buffalo? |
26367 | But, Jesse, have n''t I told you always in new country to travel with matches and a hatchet, or at least a knife? 26367 By the way, Johnson, which is the best outfitting store in Westport?" |
26367 | Ca n''t you see the sunset? 26367 Can we get across, south from here, into Henry''s Lake, Billy?" |
26367 | Can we see much of the trail, if we go over with the pack train? |
26367 | Did they get them along the Missouri? |
26367 | Do we wade over there, in that stream? |
26367 | Do you boys want to go up? |
26367 | Do you mean altitude, or distance, sir? |
26367 | Do you suppose he''ll keep for three days, a hundred and fifty miles? 26367 Do you think we can row to the head of the Missouri and get back by September?" |
26367 | Does it check up, boys? |
26367 | Does it? 26367 George Shannon, eh? |
26367 | George Shannon? |
26367 | He''s fat and strong, is n''t he? 26367 How about the grease list?" |
26367 | How about you boys-- can you all ride? 26367 How did they know? |
26367 | How do you check up on the distances with Clark? 26367 How do you mean, sir?" |
26367 | How far did they go each day? |
26367 | How far did they go? 26367 How long would it take?" |
26367 | How many miles a day must we average? |
26367 | I suppose you did that to get more of a mattress? |
26367 | I wonder what would have happened to them people, now, if they all had picked the wrong branch and gone up the Madison? 26367 Ice cream?" |
26367 | Is he hurt any? |
26367 | Is that so? 26367 Is there any fishing?" |
26367 | It was a whole month? |
26367 | Lead my horse, John? |
26367 | Nine thousand, ninety- five hundred-- isn''t that about average timber line? 26367 No? |
26367 | Not the mosquito tent? |
26367 | Nothing happens? |
26367 | Now what do you say, boys-- hasn''t this been one exciting finish? |
26367 | Now what shall we do, sir? |
26367 | Now what would you do, if you was Lewis? |
26367 | Now when you come to make all these things tally out on the ground, it is quite a proposition, is n''t it? |
26367 | Now, what''s the best point to head for, Billy, for a sort of central camp? 26367 Oak tree, did you say, John? |
26367 | Of course, Rob, you know the incident of the Three Flags? |
26367 | Of course, we take our maps and books and papers, in a valise? |
26367 | Oh-- because Lewis and Clark changed here? |
26367 | On our way? |
26367 | See anything particular from this side the hills? |
26367 | See what, Uncle Dick? 26367 Shall we get as far as Charette to- day, Uncle Dick?" |
26367 | Shall we get to see a grayling? |
26367 | So there you are, eh? |
26367 | So this is old Sleepy? |
26367 | So? 26367 That is,"he added,"where they were?" |
26367 | That''s your first grayling, is n''t it? |
26367 | The''old way,''Rob? |
26367 | Then I take it that you are going on up the river soon, sir? |
26367 | There were British traders among them, were n''t there? |
26367 | They did n''t have as good a boat as ours, did they? |
26367 | Was Clark on his''Indian road''all the time? |
26367 | Was your father a Vigilante, sir? |
26367 | We can get a trailer here, ca n''t we? |
26367 | We could n''t so well take her along, could we? |
26367 | We finish things faster than Lewis and Clark, do n''t we? |
26367 | Well now, well now,he drawled,"where shall I put this?" |
26367 | Well now, what did they do? 26367 Well, Richard, what is it this time?" |
26367 | Well, anyhow,commented their leader,"though not as good as venison, it''s wild game, eh? |
26367 | Well, but Dorion knew this country, then? |
26367 | Well, how far is it? |
26367 | Well, our fellows were up in there all alone, were n''t they? |
26367 | Well, since we are so near the end of the trail, young gentlemen,began Uncle Dick, at this point,"what do you say we ought to do?" |
26367 | Well, then suppose we call that a go? 26367 Well, then?" |
26367 | Well, what do you think? 26367 Well, what do you think?" |
26367 | Well, what kin I do fer ye here? |
26367 | Well, why should n''t we? |
26367 | What about it? |
26367 | What becomes of any house built of cottonwood logs in ten or twenty years? |
26367 | What do you say, John? 26367 What do you say, Rob?" |
26367 | What do you say, Uncle Dick? |
26367 | What do you say, boys? 26367 What do you see out there, anyway?" |
26367 | What do you think? 26367 What do you vote, fellows?" |
26367 | What do you want to do, Billy? |
26367 | What have you got on, John? |
26367 | What is it-- a gold nugget? |
26367 | What kind of a grub list did they have? |
26367 | What made you want to get to this place, Uncle Dick? |
26367 | What say, Rob? |
26367 | What you got, Rob? |
26367 | What''ll we need to take? |
26367 | What''s that? |
26367 | What''s the matter? |
26367 | What''s wrong, old top? |
26367 | Whatever can you mean? |
26367 | When? |
26367 | Where is it? |
26367 | Where was he when they found him? |
26367 | Where were their horses all the time? |
26367 | Where''d I drop from? |
26367 | Where''s that? |
26367 | Which way are we going from Billy''s, Uncle Dick? |
26367 | Which way shall we go? |
26367 | Which way, sir? |
26367 | Whom are you speaking to, Uncle Dick? |
26367 | Why should n''t I? 26367 Why, how''s that?" |
26367 | Why, what do you mean? |
26367 | Why, what sort of people were they, could n''t spell any better than that? |
26367 | Why, what you talking about, Billy? 26367 Why, would you dare tackle a grizzly?" |
26367 | Why? |
26367 | Whyn''t they bust into''em with the swivel gun? |
26367 | Would you say so, sir? |
26367 | Yes, Jesse; but what is the only thing? |
26367 | Yes; and where''d we get any cottonwood tree around here, to cut off wheels for our boat wagon? |
26367 | Yes? 26367 Yes? |
26367 | Yes? 26367 You did n''t think I''d shoot''em anywhere but through the head, did you?" |
26367 | You mean about Sacágawea? |
26367 | You mean elk, buffalo? |
26367 | You mean that I shall bring up the Clark story? |
26367 | You mean, after Captain Lewis started west from here to cross the summit? |
26367 | You see? 26367 You would n''t think that arrowhead was going to take you to the true head of the Missouri, and to good fishing for trout and grayling, would you?" |
26367 | You''d think that was asking us to believe enough? 26367 You''ll be going by rail?" |
26367 | You, Jess? |
26367 | And all the time they are mentioning turkeys and geese and beaver-- isn''t it funny that all those creatures then lived in the same place? |
26367 | And are n''t you afraid he''ll run away? |
26367 | And ca n''t you see Will Clark, his tongue on one side, frowning as he wrote by the firelight? |
26367 | And if I put on ears, how''d you know I did n''t mean''deer with- big- ears,''or''mule deer,''and not''mule''? |
26367 | And look, in John''s book-- here he says''I found a verry excellent froot resembling the read Current,''What was it-- the Sarvice berry? |
26367 | And the very next day, do n''t you remember, you saw great herds of buffalo? |
26367 | And there what do you suppose they found? |
26367 | And there''s a lot of river between here and Great Falls, too-- bad water, you say?" |
26367 | And we''ll try to put in all the things they saw, try to understand what the country must have been at that time? |
26367 | And what if the buffalo had cut up the ground in rainy times, so it dried in little pointed lumps like so many nails-- how''d that go in moccasins? |
26367 | And you all have your match boxes?" |
26367 | And you say you made it in forty- nine days? |
26367 | And you want to know, if a boy of your size could catch fifteen head of fish in eight days, how many could we all catch in thirty days? |
26367 | Any harm about that, what?... |
26367 | Are you afraid of him now?" |
26367 | Are you going to take it back? |
26367 | Are you satisfied with the trip thus far?" |
26367 | But Jesse, how can you complain of being bored when right now you are standing where Will Clark come pretty near being killed by the Teton Sioux? |
26367 | But you''ve got some good ones, have n''t you? |
26367 | CHAPTER IV THE EARLY ADVENTURERS"Well, are you all set, fellows?" |
26367 | CHAPTER XXIV NEARING THE SOURCE"Well, Jesse, how''d you sleep last night?" |
26367 | CHAPTER XXV BEAVERHEAD CAMP"It''s quite a bit of country, after all, between the Forks and the head, is n''t it?" |
26367 | CHAPTER XXX SPORTING PLANS"Let''s see, Rob-- what day of the month is this?" |
26367 | Ca n''t you see our men of the fur posts, paddling, rowing, sailing, tracking-- getting up the Missouri? |
26367 | Ca n''t you see the Mormons going west, with their little hand carts, and their cows hitched up to wagons with the oxen? |
26367 | Can we take all your stuff?" |
26367 | Can you show us where the old Lewis and Clark winter quarters were?" |
26367 | Clean nerve, eh? |
26367 | Come on up to my house, wo n''t you, and spend the night? |
26367 | Culver?" |
26367 | Did Lewis and Clark have eiderdown?" |
26367 | Did he do it? |
26367 | Did he have his wish?" |
26367 | Did n''t you notice that?" |
26367 | Did n''t you see them pass our camp just now?" |
26367 | Did you know that wild turkeys ranged so far north? |
26367 | Did you know that? |
26367 | Did you know that?" |
26367 | Do n''t you see them, too?" |
26367 | Do n''t you wish we''d been along? |
26367 | Do you begin to see what a man must be, to be a leader? |
26367 | Do you see how that began to work out? |
26367 | Do you see that grayling between the bridge there, over the white bar? |
26367 | Do you suppose it was right here that they stood?" |
26367 | Do you think we can make it-- say forty- odd miles a day-- or even thirty?" |
26367 | Do you think you could get up over the mountain, the way we did?" |
26367 | Do you, Chet?" |
26367 | Eh, Billy?" |
26367 | Eh, Rob?" |
26367 | Eh, boys?" |
26367 | Eh, what?" |
26367 | Er maybe ye''d like a taxi?" |
26367 | Got it?" |
26367 | Has it served its purpose in teaching you something about your own country?" |
26367 | Have you got all the eggs and butter and bread and fruit you want-- oranges, lemons, melons?" |
26367 | He left a letter for them, did n''t he?" |
26367 | How do these boys stand it the way they do?" |
26367 | How do we know this is the big portage of the Missouri at all? |
26367 | How do we know this is the place?" |
26367 | How do you mean?" |
26367 | How does that strike you?" |
26367 | How far do you think we''ve come in the three days, Rob?" |
26367 | How far''s that from here, Billy?" |
26367 | How high up are we here?" |
26367 | How long did it take them to get this far?" |
26367 | How long ye been-- a month or so?" |
26367 | How many would it be, Rob-- not forgetting the two captains and the negro York, Clark''s body servant, who is not mentioned in the list?" |
26367 | How shall we get down south, two hundred miles, and back to the Three Forks? |
26367 | How''d that be?" |
26367 | How''d that do? |
26367 | How''d''Adventurer, of St. Louis,''do?" |
26367 | How''ll you go from there-- boat?" |
26367 | How''s that?" |
26367 | How? |
26367 | I think that was near the mouth, on the banks of the Nishnabotna River, but I do n''t suppose a fellow could find it now, do you?" |
26367 | I''d say off to the right a little now, would n''t you, Billy, till we raised the Hole for sure?" |
26367 | If I had to select just one date in Western history, do you know what that would be?" |
26367 | Is it any wonder that Will Clark got worked up over some of the views he saw from high points on the river bends? |
26367 | Is n''t he a whale? |
26367 | Is n''t that about the way Lewis and Clark were fixed, only all the way across?" |
26367 | Is that agreed?" |
26367 | It was the big waterways that made the roads into all the wilderness; we certainly learned that up in the Far North, did n''t we? |
26367 | Jesse, take down your Flag from the bow staff-- don''t you know the Flag must never be allowed to fly after sunset?" |
26367 | John shook his fingers, loosely, to say,"What''s that?" |
26367 | Look at that, hey?" |
26367 | Look how they fought? |
26367 | Louis?" |
26367 | Mighty risky and adventurous, is n''t it? |
26367 | Nasty and noisy, but nice, eh?" |
26367 | Not so very conceited, was he? |
26367 | Now, how long did it take a steamer in those days to make the run, say, from St. Louis to the mouth of the Yellowstone?" |
26367 | Oak tree this far north?" |
26367 | Picture this place as it then was-- full of the ox teams going west----""Oh, ca n''t we go over the Oregon Trail, too-- next year, Uncle Dick?" |
26367 | Portage? |
26367 | Quite homey, eh? |
26367 | Railway train, down at the Red Rock, and fly south, say to Monida on the line between Montana and Idaho? |
26367 | Rob, who taught you to paddle on the up side when crossing a current?" |
26367 | Say we get back into the side creeks a little and pick up a mess of fish now and then, and make the Beaverhead a couple of camps later? |
26367 | See what you got?" |
26367 | See? |
26367 | Set?" |
26367 | Shall we go south to the head with Billy?" |
26367 | Shall we travel by rail or pack train now?" |
26367 | Suppose we kept our Monida car that far, and then sent it back home? |
26367 | That looks sort of like headquarters, does n''t it?" |
26367 | That''s above Mandan, South Dakota-- a thousand miles or so, eh?" |
26367 | That''s not scamping it, all things considered, is it?" |
26367 | The question was, what would be the best route and what would be the transportation? |
26367 | There were forty families settled there, six miles up the river, and one of those farmers was-- who do you think?" |
26367 | Want to see the big dam at the head, at the old ferry?" |
26367 | Was Clark there ahead of them, or was Lewis to wait for Clark?" |
26367 | Was it enough, all this, as the result of one young man''s wish to do something for the world? |
26367 | Was n''t the war enough?" |
26367 | We saw that on the Peace River and the Mackenzie, did n''t we?" |
26367 | We''ll get to fish some, wo n''t we?" |
26367 | We''re all ready, now? |
26367 | Well, I reckon they had a good run for their money, eh?" |
26367 | Well, something of a walk for George, eh?" |
26367 | Well, that''s the sort I''ve got along with me, what?" |
26367 | What are you writing down, Jesse?" |
26367 | What boy would n''t be, if he were a real boy and a real American? |
26367 | What boy would n''t?" |
26367 | What do they do? |
26367 | What do you say, Billy?" |
26367 | What do you say, Uncle Dick?" |
26367 | What do you say, young gentlemen?" |
26367 | What do you say-- shall we leave our horses and walk it, or try on up in the same way?" |
26367 | What do you say?" |
26367 | What do you think, Rob?" |
26367 | What if we''d been in moccasins? |
26367 | What if we''d been packing a hundred pounds or dragging at a hide wagon rope? |
26367 | What is it-- same_ Journal_ of Lewis and Clark?" |
26367 | What is it?" |
26367 | What makes him look so sad? |
26367 | What more do you want, son?" |
26367 | What more natural than that the army of miners, with the decadence of the California fields, should search out virgin ground?... |
26367 | What shall we christen her?" |
26367 | What would you do? |
26367 | What you looking at, Rob?" |
26367 | What''s become of it?" |
26367 | What''s your pleasure now?" |
26367 | What, then?" |
26367 | Where''s it going to be?" |
26367 | Where''s the big tree with the black eagle''s nest? |
26367 | Which river would you take?" |
26367 | Which side of the robe would you wear outside?" |
26367 | Which would you rather do?" |
26367 | Who found it first? |
26367 | Why do we need study the old passes over the Rockies, Richard? |
26367 | Why, that''s-- how many miles a day?" |
26367 | Why? |
26367 | Why?" |
26367 | Would you like to see my pressed flowers and my other things?" |
26367 | You ever wade a trout stream, you boys?" |
26367 | You folks going to take that trip? |
26367 | You''ll be here over the Fourth, at least?" |
26367 | You''ve traveled like that? |
26367 | demanded Jesse,"and how often did they eat?" |
11106 | Always? |
11106 | And are the doors and windows all fastened and locked downstairs? |
11106 | And did you give your sister a drive in the gig? |
11106 | And have you pillows enough? |
11106 | And how are you getting on, Michael? |
11106 | And how will his sister like that? |
11106 | And she cooked that meal? 11106 And sleep?" |
11106 | And they were not little sugar pills? |
11106 | And what have you to say against that? |
11106 | And what is the matter? |
11106 | And where have they gone? |
11106 | And where is the cook? |
11106 | And who may that be, please? |
11106 | And who was Judith Pacewalk? |
11106 | And why not? |
11106 | And would n''t you like to be standing by her? |
11106 | And you like it here? 11106 And you will not even go away to school?" |
11106 | And you, little one, would you like to have these ladies come to us? |
11106 | Are we nearly there? |
11106 | Are you coming back this way, doctor? |
11106 | Are you going to Dora Bannister''s again? |
11106 | Are you going to have strawberries? |
11106 | Are you sure the message was not prepaid? |
11106 | Are you sure, Mike,she asked,"that they are not engaged?" |
11106 | As good? |
11106 | But can it be possible,she asked herself, as a tear or two began to show themselves in her eyes,"that Ralph could be so cruel as that?" |
11106 | But can not somebody else be found to go to them? 11106 But do n''t you think they intend to marry, Mike?" |
11106 | But does n''t Miriam help you? |
11106 | But he has learned a great deal since then,pleaded Mrs. Witton"and if you do not want any new doctors, is n''t there something I can do for you? |
11106 | But what am I to do? |
11106 | But what can it mean? 11106 But where is the doctor?" |
11106 | But why did Phoebe leave you? |
11106 | But, madam, what is to become of the sewing Mrs. Tolbridge wants me to do? 11106 But, madam,"said La Fleur,"what''s to hinder their stopping here? |
11106 | But, madam,said young Bannister, when he had heard the alterations desired by Miss Panney,"is not this a little quixotic? |
11106 | Can I do anything? |
11106 | Catherine Tolbridge,said she,"do you know what will happen to you, if you do n''t look out? |
11106 | Did n''t you say you were engaged to him? |
11106 | Did she call it salary? |
11106 | Did the doctor have anything to do with this? |
11106 | Did you ever catch that delightfully obstinate creature? |
11106 | Did you ever see anything like this before? |
11106 | Did you get her address? |
11106 | Did you get the snowflake flour, as I told you? |
11106 | Do n''t Phoebe do that? |
11106 | Do n''t you honestly think you are too young to be called Miss Haverley? |
11106 | Do n''t you think there is danger that she may be too charming? |
11106 | Do n''t you think,interpolated Miriam,"that there is a great deal more said and done about eating than the subject is worth?" |
11106 | Do n''t you want a cup of tea? |
11106 | Do you believe,exclaimed Ralph, turning suddenly so that they stood face to face,"do you truly believe that we shall ever see her again?" |
11106 | Do you expect to have them much longer with you? |
11106 | Do you know,she said,"if Mr. Haverley has come home, and where I can find him? |
11106 | Do you like her? |
11106 | Do you mean Mike? |
11106 | Do you mean me? |
11106 | Do you mean to say, Kitty Tolbridge, that this sort of thing is going to happen three times a day? 11106 Do you suppose,"said he,"that he would take money from you?" |
11106 | Do you think I could go through that gate,asked Cicely,"and drive Mrs. Browning up that hill? |
11106 | Does she really want to see the doctor immediately? |
11106 | Good,he said;"do n''t you want to take hold of this mare by the forelock, as I am doing, and keep her here until I get a halter?" |
11106 | Have you anything to tie her with? 11106 Have you heard anything,"she asked,"of the young man who is coming to Cobhurst?" |
11106 | He ai n''t paid you nuthin''yit, thin? |
11106 | He found her asleep on the floor? |
11106 | He? 11106 Help Miriam, eh?" |
11106 | How are things going on at Cobhurst? 11106 How can you think of such a thing, Ralph? |
11106 | How d''ye do, Miss Panney? |
11106 | How d''ye do, ma''am? |
11106 | How did you come? |
11106 | How do you know I expect a''she''? |
11106 | How do you like me in the teaberry gown? |
11106 | How do you make your coffee? |
11106 | How far is it to Cobhurst? |
11106 | How is it,said she as they went down the stairs,"that you lived in the country, and do not know about country things?" |
11106 | How is she, Phoebe, and can I see her? |
11106 | How many times by night and by day has that woman called you away on a fool''s errand? 11106 How many?" |
11106 | How often do you bake? |
11106 | How old is Miss Haverley? |
11106 | How would it do to have the Dranes and the Haverleys here, and give them a first- class La Fleur dinner? |
11106 | How? |
11106 | I am merely stating your advice,he answered;"and now, Miss Drane, how does it strike you?" |
11106 | I ca n''t wait until to- morrow for that,said Miriam,"and is that tea or medicine?" |
11106 | I must take that train,cried Ralph,"what is the nearest station where it does stop?" |
11106 | I suppose I can have opinions without having them taught to me, ca n''t I? |
11106 | I think I should like to have your sister, Mike,she said;"what is her name? |
11106 | I wonder if those young Haverley people would take Mrs. Drane into their house for the rest of the summer? 11106 If I open its mouth, will you put in the end of that tube? |
11106 | If that is our horse and wagon, do n''t you really think that we ought to sell them? 11106 Indeed,"said the doctor;"and how is your general health?" |
11106 | Is it homeopathic or allopathic? |
11106 | Is it then such a great secret? 11106 Is that a sort of sheep farm?" |
11106 | Is that the man? |
11106 | Is that you, Miss Dora? 11106 Is the doctor at home?" |
11106 | Is there any chance of that? |
11106 | Is this a girl or a woman? |
11106 | Is you Mr. Hav''ley, sir? |
11106 | Is you all? |
11106 | It ca n''t be,said he,"that those people have come to visit Mike?" |
11106 | It does seem to be''cropsticks of flamingo,''but what can that mean? |
11106 | It has been something like that,answered Ralph;"but why?" |
11106 | It is not a bad one,she said;"but what would the daughter do? |
11106 | Kitty,said she,"is this the doctor''s birthday?" |
11106 | La Fleur,said she,"what is the name of that delicious dessert you gave us last night?" |
11106 | Madam,said he,"do you want all these peas shelled?" |
11106 | Mike,said Seraphina to her brother, who was now raking the grass near the kitchen window,"did you hear dat ar ole cook a talkin''jes''now?" |
11106 | Miriam,said he,"for how long have you engaged this woman?" |
11106 | Miss Drane,said he,"do you know that my sister thinks that I ought to marry you?" |
11106 | Miss Panney,said the doctor,"are you going crazy? |
11106 | Miss Panney,she said suddenly,"will you stay and take lunch with me? |
11106 | Now come, Phoebe,said she;"what on earth did she want you to do here?" |
11106 | Now then,said Miriam, when they had closed the door behind them,"how shall we explore the house? |
11106 | Now, my dear,said Miss Panney,"what did you come here for? |
11106 | Oh, have you seen them? |
11106 | On what? |
11106 | Only this,she said;"would you begin already to chafe and rebel if I were to ask you not to send that telegram? |
11106 | Or Molly Tooney? |
11106 | Ought I to let her go? |
11106 | Phoebe,said she,"when did you last see Mike?" |
11106 | Ralph,said Miriam, through the crack,"is there one of our horses which can be ridden by a lady?" |
11106 | Ramshackle? |
11106 | Shall I give you a cup of tea? |
11106 | She comes here to tell you how to cook for those people? |
11106 | She is small,answered Miriam,"but is n''t she pretty and graceful? |
11106 | That is nice,said Miss Panney,"and how do they like it at Mrs. Brinkly''s? |
11106 | That so, sure? |
11106 | The one--? |
11106 | Then why does n''t she get through? |
11106 | Then you think I''d better not let the cook warm it for me? |
11106 | To look after Mike? |
11106 | To whom did it belong? |
11106 | To whom? |
11106 | Upon my word,exclaimed the person in the bed,"is that you, Mrs. Tolbridge? |
11106 | Was not this the very woman you were looking for? 11106 Wear it, my dear?" |
11106 | Well, Kitty,said she,"what sort of a time did you have yesterday?" |
11106 | Well, Miss Panney,she said, rising,"what report shall I make?" |
11106 | Well, sir,cried the old lady,"and so you have decided to take a wife to yourself, eh?" |
11106 | Well, then, is your bed comfortable? |
11106 | Well, young woman,he said,"how is your mind by this time?" |
11106 | Whar''s the money the preacher pays you? |
11106 | What are the symptoms? |
11106 | What are? |
11106 | What can be the matter? |
11106 | What cook? |
11106 | What could I do with a woman like that? 11106 What did she say?" |
11106 | What did that matter? |
11106 | What do you mean,said she,"by bringing us in here?" |
11106 | What do you mean? |
11106 | What do you mean? |
11106 | What do you mean? |
11106 | What do you say, Ralph? |
11106 | What do you think of my clothes? |
11106 | What do you think, miss,said she,"that old bundle of a cook that was here this mornin''has been doin''? |
11106 | What do you want me to call you, my dear? |
11106 | What earthly difference does it make to anybody whether you are happy or not? |
11106 | What has happened to you? |
11106 | What in the world have you? |
11106 | What is it? |
11106 | What is the matter? |
11106 | What of that? |
11106 | What shall we do? |
11106 | What would she have said to my tall raspberry tarts? |
11106 | What? |
11106 | When did you become acquainted? |
11106 | When is she ever going to leave that table? |
11106 | Where are you going, driver? |
11106 | Where is Miss Panney? |
11106 | Who could have thought that? 11106 Who did this?" |
11106 | Who is sick, Miss Dora? |
11106 | Who is there? |
11106 | Who wants to go? |
11106 | Who? |
11106 | Why ca n''t you stay? |
11106 | Why did n''t you tell me this before? |
11106 | Why do n''t you go to Thorbury and telegraph? |
11106 | Why do you have to make your own bread? |
11106 | Why is it,he said to himself,"that I am so anxious to see her again, and to see her as soon as possible?" |
11106 | Why not, indeed? |
11106 | Why not? |
11106 | Why should that old person come in this very morning? |
11106 | Why, what can be the matter with her? |
11106 | Will you ask her to get ready? 11106 Will you take her with you to- day? |
11106 | Would they want to stay long? |
11106 | Would you like to go to your rooms afore supper? |
11106 | Would you like to make up a class? |
11106 | Would you mind my kissing you? |
11106 | You did go quickly, did n''t you? |
11106 | You do n''t mean to say,asked Miss Panney,"that nobody answered your advertisement?" |
11106 | You do not think he would have gone there on my account? |
11106 | You must be feeling very badly,said the meek and anxious Mrs. Witton"do n''t you think it would be better to send for a doctor?" |
11106 | You poor little thing, how came you to be so troubled? |
11106 | You were just on the point of jumping up and leaving the room without a word, were n''t you? |
11106 | You''re right,said Ralph, holding up the lamp, and looking about him;"but please tell me, where are the stairs?" |
11106 | You? |
11106 | Your meals? |
11106 | Yours then, perhaps? |
11106 | ''Now, Andy,''says she,''is that the case with you?'' |
11106 | An''who may you be, an''which do you want to see?" |
11106 | And how does she get on?" |
11106 | And now that you know the parties in question, what have you to say?" |
11106 | And now what is the trouble, Miss Panney?" |
11106 | And now while we are on the subject, let me ask you: Have you a new cook?" |
11106 | And now, before we say anything else, let me ask you a question: Have you had your supper?" |
11106 | And now, my dear child, where did you find that gay dress? |
11106 | Are you lookin''for any of the folks?" |
11106 | Are you the only servant in this house?" |
11106 | But how in the world did she come to stay on the garret floor all night? |
11106 | But now I have spoken of it, and how angry are you?" |
11106 | But now, Miss Panney, do n''t you really think that Boston would have been too rich a place for me? |
11106 | But she controlled herself, and looking up with a smile, said,"What time is it?" |
11106 | But tell me one thing; do you think that this Haverley- Drane combination is going to deprive me of La Fleur?" |
11106 | By the way, Mr. Haverley, do you like rolled omelets?" |
11106 | By the way, Mr. Haverley,"she said, turning toward him,"is there anything I can do to help you in shutting up the house? |
11106 | By the way, did you ever make rum- flake for the doctor when he comes in tired and faint?" |
11106 | By the way, have you heard any news from the Bannister family? |
11106 | By the way, how do you like this new business?" |
11106 | By the way, who is that young woman standing by the horse?" |
11106 | Ca n''t you go ask your boss for five dollars?" |
11106 | Ca n''t you wait a bit?" |
11106 | Can not you bring out here what you are doing?" |
11106 | Can you lend me a big apron?" |
11106 | Did n''t they pay your wages?" |
11106 | Did she come here, and did she act in that way?" |
11106 | Did you ever see such an old poke as we have, and such a bouncy, jolting rattletrap of a carriage? |
11106 | Did you ever think of that?" |
11106 | Did you see Mr. Haverley? |
11106 | Do n''t you see Mrs. Drane coming?" |
11106 | Do n''t you see that?" |
11106 | Do n''t you think so, Ralph?" |
11106 | Do n''t you think so, Ralph?" |
11106 | Do n''t you think that will be fun?" |
11106 | Do n''t you think you could bring her some wood? |
11106 | Do n''t you want me to drive you home?" |
11106 | Do n''t you want to let me help you at all?" |
11106 | Do n''t your boss ever sen''to the pos''-office, Mike?" |
11106 | Do the hens lay their eggs up there in your hay?" |
11106 | Do they do anything to support themselves?" |
11106 | Do you know to whom it used to belong? |
11106 | Do you know, my dear girl,"she said to Miriam,"that the doctor and I are going away? |
11106 | Do you like to give up things? |
11106 | Do you often find time to come out here to see them?" |
11106 | Do you really think you would mind it? |
11106 | Do you see that lap robe on the table? |
11106 | Do you suppose that they will remain here much longer?" |
11106 | Do you think he is really out of health?" |
11106 | Do you think she is anywhere in this glorious old barn? |
11106 | Do you think she is in danger, Miss Panney?" |
11106 | Do you think she was too sleepy to notice that, or is she accustomed to so much night air?" |
11106 | Do you want a saw or a pitchfork?" |
11106 | Doctor, what became of that book you wrote on the''Diagnosis of Sympathy''?" |
11106 | Does your mother object to your present quarters?" |
11106 | Flower,"he said presently,"she told you that, did she?" |
11106 | For one thing, where did you get that recipe for that delicious ice, flavored with raspberry?" |
11106 | Good?" |
11106 | Got any baggage, sir?" |
11106 | Has thim two, upstairs, got any money? |
11106 | Have n''t you sense enough to know that you are in her service, and that Miss Drane and her mother are merely boarders?" |
11106 | Have n''t you something I can slip on instead of this dress? |
11106 | Have we any horses?" |
11106 | Have you a fire in your house?" |
11106 | Haverley?" |
11106 | Haverley?" |
11106 | He was Ralph''s dog now, and she ought to send him back, but would she? |
11106 | He was filled by an all- pervading desire to do that; but how should he set about it? |
11106 | How are the Cobhurst people getting on?" |
11106 | How are you getting on, little one? |
11106 | How are you? |
11106 | How dare you tell me such a lot of lies?" |
11106 | How in the world did you get such a woman to come to you?" |
11106 | How is that, Kitty?" |
11106 | How is your kitten?" |
11106 | How long will they stay?" |
11106 | How many years has it been since you came to see me without being sent for?" |
11106 | How much should I pay you?" |
11106 | How old is she?" |
11106 | How were they all getting on together?" |
11106 | I do n''t mind the thing a bit, and wo n''t you let me take you home in the carriage?" |
11106 | I shall go on, of course, and you will go with me?" |
11106 | I want her here; do n''t you?" |
11106 | I wonder if your sister will ever ask me to take a drive with her in the gig? |
11106 | If this is good enough for you and Miriam, is n''t it good enough for Miss Panney?" |
11106 | Is it the estate as far as I can see?" |
11106 | Is it the gilt- edged butter you give him for his ash- cakes?" |
11106 | Is n''t it funny, Herbert? |
11106 | Is n''t it funny?" |
11106 | Is n''t that glorious?" |
11106 | Is n''t that to take place very soon, Michael?" |
11106 | Is n''t there somebody here who can''tend to it?" |
11106 | Is she as good as ever?" |
11106 | Is she still going to be the doctor''s secretary?" |
11106 | Is she working for anybody now?" |
11106 | Is there to be anything more, Kitty Tolbridge?" |
11106 | Is this a large farm, Michael?" |
11106 | Is this one gentle?" |
11106 | It seems--""Seems what?" |
11106 | Miss Panney must be dreadful afraid of our young lady, eh?" |
11106 | My wife will call on you very soon, and in the meantime, what is there that I can do for you?" |
11106 | Now is n''t that a fine thing?" |
11106 | Now tell me, young man, is it really the engagement rapture that has lasted all this time?" |
11106 | Now then, can you give me an idea about how angry you are?" |
11106 | Now was not that simply amazing? |
11106 | Now what are you going to do about it, Kitty? |
11106 | Now, do n''t you think it will be a great deal better for you to put that saddle on the horse, and ride him home, and then send the carriage for me? |
11106 | Oh, Ralph, is n''t it perfectly wonderful that we should have four horses? |
11106 | Once she broke in with a question:--"What kind of a person is Miss Bannister?" |
11106 | Ralph was on the point of saying,"What are we going to have for breakfast?" |
11106 | Shall I ask her?" |
11106 | Shall I go for hot water?" |
11106 | Shall I send it?" |
11106 | Shall I write that out for you, or will you remember it?" |
11106 | Shall we each take a lamp, or will candles be better?" |
11106 | She comes to me one day, more than six year ago, an''says,''Mike,''says she,''why do n''t you marry Phoebe Moxley?'' |
11106 | She had heard quite enough, but still she deigned to snap out:--"What was the matter with her?" |
11106 | She herself made all those things?" |
11106 | She pulled up when she seed me, and she calls out,''Andy, what''s the matter with that hoss?'' |
11106 | So, if you have a kitten--""Dr. Tolbridge,"cried Miss Dora, her eyes sparkling,"do you really mean that? |
11106 | Stone''s?" |
11106 | Suddenly she exclaimed,"Is it Susan Clopsey you expect? |
11106 | That is the pink dress that Dora Bannister wore when she was here, is n''t it?" |
11106 | That it would have expected too much of me, and that perhaps it would have done too much for me? |
11106 | That sounds hard and cruel, does n''t it? |
11106 | That would be very nice and convenient, but--""You hope it is not a cottage?" |
11106 | The main point to be decided upon was: what should he do about seeing her again? |
11106 | The place suits you?" |
11106 | Turning his head a little, he asked,"Now look a here, Molly; if a man''s a heretic, how can he be a Christian?" |
11106 | Were the Drane women still there? |
11106 | Were you took sudden?" |
11106 | What are they?" |
11106 | What color would you like the ribbon to be?" |
11106 | What did I tell you?" |
11106 | What did you see there?" |
11106 | What do you have here?" |
11106 | What do you mean by talking in that way? |
11106 | What do you say?" |
11106 | What do you think of that idea?" |
11106 | What does the master say?" |
11106 | What have you done? |
11106 | What kind of cows have you?" |
11106 | What made you pop off so sudden? |
11106 | What sort of a creature is she? |
11106 | What was it, Ralph, that you said you liked, made of raspberries?" |
11106 | What was the matter with them?" |
11106 | When did she come?" |
11106 | When he fust come here, I jes''goes to him, and ses I,''How''s you goin''to run this farm, sir,--ramshackle or reg''lar?'' |
11106 | When will any of them be ripe, do you think, George?" |
11106 | Where can I find the gig, Miss Haverley?" |
11106 | Where is the pain, Miss Panney? |
11106 | Where''s my cabby?" |
11106 | Who is it?" |
11106 | Why ca n''t she stay with me to- night? |
11106 | Why did n''t he marry and settle before he took a house to himself? |
11106 | Why did n''t you take her?" |
11106 | Will you walk into the parlor?" |
11106 | Would n''t you like to go with me? |
11106 | Would she ever be able to maintain her independence? |
11106 | Would you truly like to have an Angora kitten?" |
11106 | You are so kind and so considerate, but do n''t you think you ought to speak to Mr. Ames about it? |
11106 | You do n''t mind that, do you, Michael? |
11106 | You remember how much interest I used to take in things?" |
11106 | and how have you been during my absence?" |
11106 | asked Dora;"and why was it teaberry? |
11106 | asked Mrs. Tolbridge;"on horseback?" |
11106 | cried Miriam, when, with her young soul glowing in her face, she thrust the open letter into her brother''s hand,"may I go? |
11106 | cried Molly, who was engaged in washing dishes,"how did you git here at this time o''night?" |
11106 | cried Ralph,"do you suppose there was ever a man in the world who thought about all those things when he really loved a woman?" |
11106 | exclaimed Dora, in a tone of surprise and disappointment,"have you got back already?" |
11106 | exclaimed Dora,"what is a supper in comparison with such a jolly bit of fun as this? |
11106 | exclaimed Miss Dora;"what on earth do you mean?" |
11106 | exclaimed Miss Panney, who, with flushed face, was hurrying after the rest,"why did n''t he take it with him?" |
11106 | exclaimed Mrs. Drane,"what on earth are you working at? |
11106 | he asked,"the faithful Mike, who has been in charge here ever since Mr. Butterwood took to travelling about for the good of his rheumatisms? |
11106 | he exclaimed,"this is very discouraging; if I do not marry Dora, who is there that I can marry?" |
11106 | said Dora;"you think that?" |
11106 | she exclaimed,"are you here yet, Susan Clopsey? |
11106 | who on this earth told you that?" |
11106 | who?" |
36661 | A Dryad with her leaf- light trip? |
36661 | A Dryad''s lips, who slumbers in the shade? |
36661 | A Faun, who lets the heavy ivy- wreath Slip to his thigh as, reaching up, he pulls The chestnut blossoms in whole bosomfuls? |
36661 | A cricket dirging days that soon must die? |
36661 | A heart- sick bird that sang of happier hours? |
36661 | A sylvan Spirit, whose sweet mouth doth breathe Her viewless presence near us, unafraid? |
36661 | An Oread who hesitates Before the Satyr form that waits, Crouching to leap, that there she sees? |
36661 | And is''t her body glimmers on yon rise? |
36661 | And is''t her footfalls lure me? |
36661 | And, wildly clad, around the camp- fires''glow, The Shawnee chieftains with their painted braves, Each grasping his war- bow? |
36661 | Between the summons and the sacrifice One hour of love, th''eternity of an hour? |
36661 | Could I find it-- did I seek-- The old mill? |
36661 | Could I find the pond that lay Where vermilion blossoms showered Fragrance down the daisied way? |
36661 | Could I find the sedgy angle, Where the dragon- flies would turn Slender flittings into spangle On the sunlight? |
36661 | Do not the flow''rs, so reticent, confess With conscious looks the contact of a god? |
36661 | Does not the very water garrulously Boast the indulgence of a deity? |
36661 | Dost Thou not see our tears? |
36661 | Epics heard on the stars''lips? |
36661 | Flowers are not sweeter than your face is sweet-- What need I more to make my world complete? |
36661 | GENIUS LOCI I What wood- god, on this water''s mossy curb, Lost in reflections of earth''s loveliness, Did I, just now, unconsciously disturb? |
36661 | Have we not known Thee, God As Thy stars know Heaven? |
36661 | Have we not striven? |
36661 | II Does not the moss retain some slight impress, Green- dented down, of where he lay or trod? |
36661 | II The children of what fathers sleep Beneath these melancholy pines? |
36661 | INTIMATIONS I Is it uneasy moonlight On the restless field, that stirs? |
36661 | Is a door Opened in my soul? |
36661 | Is it a wash of the yellow moss, Or drift of the autumn''s gold, The mountain torrent foams across For the dead pine''s roots to hold? |
36661 | Is it the bark of the sycamore, Or peel of the white birch- tree, The mountaineer on the other shore Hath followed and still can see? |
36661 | Is it the dolorous water, That sobs in the woods and sighs? |
36661 | Its weather- beaten Wheel and gable by the creek? |
36661 | Moonrays or the splintered slip Of a star? |
36661 | O woman nature, love that still endures, What strength has ours that is not born of yours? |
36661 | Or Limnad, with her lilied face, More lovely than the misty lace That haunts a star and gives it grace? |
36661 | Or did the ghost of Summer wander by? |
36661 | Or dogwood blossoms snowing on the lawn? |
36661 | Or heart of an ancient oak- tree, That breaks and, sighing, dies? |
36661 | Or in the valley''s vistaed glow, Past rocks of terraced trumpet- vines, Shall I behold her coming slow, Sweet May, among the columbines? |
36661 | Or is it some Leimoniad In wildwood flowers dimly clad? |
36661 | Or just a wild- bird voluble with thanks? |
36661 | Or restless sunlight on the moss and weeds? |
36661 | Or troops of ghosts of blooms, that whitely wade The brook? |
36661 | Or under boughs, reclining cool, A Hamadryad, like a pool Of moonlight, palely beautiful? |
36661 | Or wild white meadow- blossoms The night- wind bends and blurs? |
36661 | Over the meadow and the wood What was the voice that filled her ears? |
36661 | Palenque? |
36661 | Perfume that leads me on from dream to dream-- An Oread''s footprints fragrant with her flight? |
36661 | Stars are not truer than your soul is true-- What need I more of heaven then than you? |
36661 | Sweetheart I called her.--When did she repeat Sweet to one hope or heart to one despair? |
36661 | Sweetheart? |
36661 | That made each bank, meseemed, and every bush Start into eagle- plumes? |
36661 | That sent into pale cheeks the blood, Until each seemed a wild- brier bud Mown down by mowing harvesters?... |
36661 | That the sassafras embowered With the spice of early May? |
36661 | The broad Ohio glitters to the stars; And many murmurs whisper in its woods-- Is it the sorrow of dead warriors For their lost solitudes? |
36661 | The stealthy whisper and the drip? |
36661 | To see the glimmering wigwams by the waves? |
36661 | UNREQUITED Passion? |
36661 | Uxmal? |
36661 | WILL O''THE WISPS Beyond the barley meads and hay, What was the light that beckoned there? |
36661 | Was it a voice lamenting for the flowers? |
36661 | Was it the boat, the solitude and hush, That with dead Indians peopled all the glooms? |
36661 | What is it in the vistaed ways That leans and springs, and stoops and sways?-- The naked limbs of one who flees? |
36661 | What is the murmur in the dell? |
36661 | What is the spice that haunts each glen and glade? |
36661 | What is this thing you tell me In tongues of a twilight race, Of death, with the vanished features, Mantled, of my own face? |
36661 | What spell dost bear from listening plant to plant, Like some white witch, some ghostly ministrant, Some spectre of some perished flower of phlox? |
36661 | Who waits for me, where, note for note, The birds make glad the forest trees? |
36661 | With a broken syrinx there, With bignonia overgrown, Is it Pan in hoof and hair, Or his image carved from stone? |
36661 | Yet my dreaming-- is it more Than mere dreaming? |
36661 | a curtain Raised? |
36661 | or Copan? |
36661 | or the sound Of airs that stir the crisp leaf on the ground? |
36661 | to let me see for certain I have lived that life before? |
36661 | what thing could save You then? |
41349 | Did you subdue the stranger? |
41349 | Why sound this call? |
41349 | 3 S. of R. 68 W. 6th P.M."? |
41349 | And is not this lingering fragrance the smell of the lotos- flower? |
41349 | Do you suppose that I can raise as many as that?" |
1261 | A letter W. Does that mean Wetzel? |
1261 | A little nervous, eh? |
1261 | A soldier? 1261 Alfred, what do you mean by hiding the belle of the dance away like this? |
1261 | Am I all right? 1261 Am I then, so distasteful to you that you would rather wait here and suffer a half hour longer while I go for assistance? |
1261 | And are you always sad when you are sincere? |
1261 | And do you think Tarhe, Wingenund, Pipe, Cornplanter, and all those chiefs will unite their forces and attack us? |
1261 | And how does Myeerah like the settlement by this time? |
1261 | And what good would your runnin''do? |
1261 | And you say you are a fisherman? 1261 Any sign of Wetzel or the Indians?" |
1261 | Are the Indians half as bad as they are called? |
1261 | Are the Indians on the way here? |
1261 | Are they not sweet? |
1261 | Are you Simon Girty? |
1261 | Are you afraid to touch him? |
1261 | Are you fond of canoeing and fishing? |
1261 | Bessie, has my sister indulged in any shocking escapade in my absence? 1261 Betty, I wish to know why you ignored Mr. Clarke this morning?" |
1261 | Betty, do you dare tell me now that you do not care for me? |
1261 | Betty, does it hurt much? |
1261 | Betty, what in the world could you have said to my husband? |
1261 | Betty, where are you goin''? |
1261 | Betty, will you fill my pipe? |
1261 | Betty, would you mind going over to the Fort and relieving Mrs. Martin an hour or two? |
1261 | But why? 1261 By what right does she come to free my captive?" |
1261 | Can an Indian Princess who has the blood of great chiefs in her veins prove her love in any way that she has not? 1261 Can it really be you? |
1261 | Can you find nothing better to talk about? |
1261 | Can you not speak? 1261 Col. Zane, do n''t you think Wetzel may be mistaken?" |
1261 | Dear me, is that all? |
1261 | Did Dan''s mother tell you that? 1261 Did he? |
1261 | Did n''t you want him to help you? |
1261 | Did they fight, or was Mr. Clarke stabbed in his sleep? |
1261 | Did you expect to go? |
1261 | Did you get more than one shot at them? |
1261 | Did you read my letter? |
1261 | Did you see any bars and bufflers? |
1261 | Did your brother tell you I wanted to see you this morning? |
1261 | Do n''t you think so, Lydia? |
1261 | Do you get homesick? |
1261 | Do you imagine I waylaid Mr. Clarke, and then sprained my ankle on purpose? |
1261 | Do you mean I am more thoughtful? |
1261 | Do you presume to criticise Wetzel''s judgment? |
1261 | Do you really mean that? |
1261 | Do you remember him? 1261 Do you remember when you used to lift me on your horse and give me lessons in riding?" |
1261 | Do you think it possible they might have fallen in with the Indians? |
1261 | Do you think the Fort can hold out? |
1261 | Does not Myeerah truly love you? |
1261 | Does the Indian boy think he can frighten a white warrior? |
1261 | Eb, what will Lew Wetzel do on a night like this? |
1261 | Ebenezer, what is all this confab about? 1261 For me? |
1261 | Go with you to the village of the pale faces, where Myeerah would be scorned, pointed at as your captors laughed at and pitied? 1261 Gone?" |
1261 | Gone? |
1261 | Has Jonathan heard it? |
1261 | Have you any more Indians with you? |
1261 | Have you become well acquainted with the boys? |
1261 | Have you come all the way over here without a gun? 1261 Have you ever seen Red Fox?" |
1261 | Have you more pets than Tige and Madcap? |
1261 | Have you not met Mr. Miller before he came here from Fort Pitt? |
1261 | Have you seen these chiefs? |
1261 | Hello, Betts, what''s up? |
1261 | Hello, Jack, where did you come from? |
1261 | Here? 1261 How are you?" |
1261 | How dare you? 1261 How did Myeerah learn of your capture by Cornplanter? |
1261 | How did you get up in the loft? |
1261 | How did you happen to git over here? 1261 How do you like the fort by this time?" |
1261 | How does it come that you have the Indian girl with you? |
1261 | How is he, Bessie? |
1261 | How long have I been home? |
1261 | How long have you been near the fort? |
1261 | How long will it be until I am big enough to go? |
1261 | How so? |
1261 | How would we ever reach the fort by the big river? 1261 Hurt? |
1261 | I beseeching? 1261 I can not persuade you to let me go?" |
1261 | I? 1261 If it be necessary that you use my name, and I do not see how that can be possible, will you please have courtesy enough to say Miss Zane?" |
1261 | If they meet again-- but how can you keep them apart? |
1261 | Is it not rather risky going down there? |
1261 | Is it? 1261 Is that all you remember?" |
1261 | Is that all? 1261 Is that all? |
1261 | Is the Indian Princess pretty? |
1261 | Is there any maiden in your old home whom you have learned to love more than Myeerah? |
1261 | Is there any other wound beside this one in his arm? |
1261 | Is there, then, no hope for me? |
1261 | Is this my Indian sweetheart? |
1261 | Isaac, Can you get Myeerah to talk? 1261 It is customary, is it not?" |
1261 | Jack, can you see anything? |
1261 | Let me go, brother, let me go? |
1261 | Lew, did you get my turkey? |
1261 | Lew, what do you mean? |
1261 | Lewis, did you ever have a chance to kill a hostile Indian and not take it? |
1261 | Look here, Lew, is that not a genuine call? |
1261 | Major McColloch, do you remember me? |
1261 | Major will you tell Captain Boggs to come over after supper? 1261 Major, from what hill did you jump your horse?" |
1261 | Martin shot? 1261 May I see him?" |
1261 | Me and him had a long talk last night and--"You did not go to him and talk of me, did you? |
1261 | Message? 1261 Miller, will you take a shot for the first prize, which I was about to award to Jonathan?" |
1261 | Miss Zane, will you dance with me? |
1261 | Mother, is that you? |
1261 | Mr. Clarke? 1261 Mrs. Martin, what shall I do?" |
1261 | My boy, did you not have Indians enough a short time ago? |
1261 | Myeerah, what do you mean? |
1261 | Myeerah, will you sing a Huron love- song? |
1261 | No, I suppose not, but are you entirely innocent of those sweet glances which you gave him this morning? |
1261 | Now, is n''t that too bad? 1261 Oh, is that all?" |
1261 | Oh, why did you not tell me? |
1261 | Papa, when shall I be big enough to fight bars and bufflers and Injuns? |
1261 | Remember Isaac? 1261 Sam, what did you do with a letter Mr. Clarke gave you last October and instructed you to deliver to Betty?" |
1261 | Saved your life? |
1261 | Say, Betts, what the deuce is wrong? |
1261 | So you have not forgotten me? |
1261 | Spoiled? 1261 Sullivan, in God''s name, what can we do? |
1261 | Then Col. Zane did not tell you? |
1261 | Then what did you mean? |
1261 | Then you are not glad to see Myeerah? |
1261 | Twice? |
1261 | Was not that delightful? |
1261 | Was not that little fellow cute? 1261 Well, Betty, what do you think?" |
1261 | Well, Girty, what is it? |
1261 | Well, Tige, old fellow, what is it? |
1261 | Well, what on earth have you been doing? |
1261 | Were those the words he used? |
1261 | Were you going to shoot? |
1261 | Wetzel, in your judgment, what effect will this massacre and Crawford''s death have on the border? |
1261 | Wetzel, what can we do? 1261 What ails the dog?" |
1261 | What are you talking about? |
1261 | What authority have you here? |
1261 | What can an Injun hunter say to amuse the belle of the border? |
1261 | What can that be? |
1261 | What did he mean, Betts? |
1261 | What did he mean? |
1261 | What did he say? |
1261 | What difference does that make now? |
1261 | What do I think? |
1261 | What do you care whether strangers believe or not? 1261 What do you mean? |
1261 | What do you mean? 1261 What else did he say?" |
1261 | What has he done that he be made the plaything of children? 1261 What has he in particular against you?" |
1261 | What has that to do with it? 1261 What have you there?" |
1261 | What in the world has happened? 1261 What is Lewis looking at?" |
1261 | What is it you are churning so vigorously? |
1261 | What is it, Sam? |
1261 | What is the matter with Tige? |
1261 | What is the nature of this excursion, and how long shall we be gone? |
1261 | What kind of a man was he? |
1261 | What letter? |
1261 | What possessed you to do this, Sam? 1261 What right have you to speak?" |
1261 | What shall Myeerah say? |
1261 | What shall we do with the horses? |
1261 | What the hell? |
1261 | What was that? |
1261 | What was that? |
1261 | What would I do if Mr. Simon Girty tried to make a squaw of me? |
1261 | What? |
1261 | When did he insult you? |
1261 | Where are Metzar and the other men? |
1261 | Where are you young people going? |
1261 | Where is Isaac? |
1261 | Where on earth have you been? |
1261 | Where were you headin''your pony? |
1261 | Where''s Betts? 1261 Where?" |
1261 | Who are you? 1261 Who is it?" |
1261 | Who is that tall man with her? |
1261 | Why can not you free me? |
1261 | Why did you not tell me that man was here again? |
1261 | Why do n''t they do something? |
1261 | Why do n''t they fire the cannon? |
1261 | Why do you ask? |
1261 | Why does not Clarke return? |
1261 | Why does the paleface hide like a fox near the camp of Cornplanter? |
1261 | Why not fight for her, then? 1261 Why so?" |
1261 | Why, Betty, what in the world do you mean? 1261 Why, Eb, what do you mean? |
1261 | Why, Lew, you do not mean you would shoot Madcap? |
1261 | Why, what is this? 1261 Why-- why are you in such a hurry to go?" |
1261 | Will Mr. Clarke live? |
1261 | Will she never tell me? 1261 Will the girls have a chance in these races?" |
1261 | Will there be any way to get news from Fort Henry while we are away? |
1261 | Will you call Betty here a minute? |
1261 | Will you let go of that bridle, or shall I get off and walk back for assistance? |
1261 | Will you surrender? |
1261 | Will you take this man to be your wedded husband, to love, honor and obey him all the days of your life? |
1261 | Will you take this woman to be your wedded wife, to love, cherish and protect her all the days of her life? |
1261 | Will you tell us? |
1261 | Will you-- please-- for some one? |
1261 | With you? |
1261 | With you? |
1261 | Would you expect Betty to fall into his arms? |
1261 | Would you mind being explicit? |
1261 | You are going to see if the Indians are making preparations to besiege the Fort? |
1261 | You are going to stay with us a while, are you not? |
1261 | You have learned to dance and ride and--"What? |
1261 | You think I had n''t ought to speak to him of you? |
1261 | You''re in love with Betty, ai n''t you? |
1261 | ****************"Bess, what do you think?" |
1261 | A woman-- what can she do? |
1261 | After all could there not have been some mistake? |
1261 | And how do you like the frontier? |
1261 | And the sprained ankle? |
1261 | And then in a lower tone she continued:"What did you mean about Mr. Miller? |
1261 | And what life could be freer than a Huron''s? |
1261 | And where did you get all that pretty fringe and those beautiful beads?" |
1261 | Anything else?" |
1261 | Are you coming?" |
1261 | Are you enjoying yourself?" |
1261 | Are you not entirely well?" |
1261 | Are you not going back to the Wyandots at a dangerous time?" |
1261 | Are you sure he spoke? |
1261 | Are you too off on a turkey hunt?" |
1261 | Been out for a ride?" |
1261 | Bessie, will not cold water do as well?" |
1261 | Betty, what have you done?" |
1261 | But for Heaven''s sake, Lew, how would he profit by betraying us?" |
1261 | But if this were true where was the clatter of the horse''s hoofs? |
1261 | But tell me, do n''t be angry, do n''t you think too much of some one?" |
1261 | But what can women do in times of war? |
1261 | But why do you ask?" |
1261 | By the way, what do you think of this Ralfe Miller? |
1261 | By what-- whom?" |
1261 | Can I go with you next time?" |
1261 | Can you do anything to get me out of this?" |
1261 | Can you expect a man to feel as I do and remain calm? |
1261 | Can you not realize that we would be happier if you would let me go? |
1261 | Can you understand that?" |
1261 | Can you, Jack?" |
1261 | Come over to see about the horses? |
1261 | Could anything be lovelier than that soft, dark brown?" |
1261 | Could she ever be happy? |
1261 | Could she ever forget? |
1261 | Could she not have averted all this? |
1261 | Did he call for any particular young lady? |
1261 | Did he take you in his arms? |
1261 | Did n''t he tell you?" |
1261 | Did you read it?" |
1261 | Do I know him? |
1261 | Do I look mussed or-- or excited-- or anything?" |
1261 | Do n''t you know we have had frost?" |
1261 | Do you hear that odd clicking noise? |
1261 | Do you hear? |
1261 | Do you not see that this will end in a tragedy some day? |
1261 | Do you think I am made of wood? |
1261 | Do you understand? |
1261 | Does she care for him?" |
1261 | Finally Silas Zane burst out:"Not find it? |
1261 | For now what could she give this man to whom she owed more than her life? |
1261 | For what might the morning sun disclose? |
1261 | For what? |
1261 | From Fort Pitt? |
1261 | From whom?" |
1261 | Getting ready to put on the harness, eh? |
1261 | Glad to see me? |
1261 | Going after that turkey? |
1261 | Had he run off with her? |
1261 | Had not Betty told them she did not care for Mr. Miller? |
1261 | Has he been good? |
1261 | Has she not suffered? |
1261 | Have n''t I been away as well as you? |
1261 | Have you anything to substantiate your words?" |
1261 | Have you anything to suggest?" |
1261 | Have you been doing anything with your traps?" |
1261 | Have you been hurt? |
1261 | Have you ever heard that long mournful howl Tige gives out sometimes in the dead of night?" |
1261 | Have you forgotten them?" |
1261 | Have you heard of Major McColloch''s leap over the hill?" |
1261 | How about the McCollochs? |
1261 | How are you? |
1261 | How could she? |
1261 | How dared he? |
1261 | How did he ever reach home?" |
1261 | How did he succeed in binding Tige?" |
1261 | How did she do it? |
1261 | How do you know?" |
1261 | How goes it at the south bastion?" |
1261 | How had he kept that promise made when Betty was a little thing bouncing on his knee? |
1261 | How had she ever been deceived in him? |
1261 | How long have you known Lew Wetzel?" |
1261 | I am very happy; but tell me, did a message come for me to- day?" |
1261 | I have left a fine old plantation, slaves, horses, a country noted for its pretty women-- for what? |
1261 | I wonder if he is still living?" |
1261 | I wonder what the deuce this is? |
1261 | Is he dead?" |
1261 | Is he going to Fort Pitt?" |
1261 | Is he not pretty?" |
1261 | Is it any wonder? |
1261 | Is it not enough? |
1261 | Is it not rather dull and lonesome here for you?" |
1261 | Is n''t he pretty? |
1261 | Is not all nature sad? |
1261 | Is she badly hurt? |
1261 | Is she here?" |
1261 | Is she not laughed at, scorned, called a''paleface''by the other tribes? |
1261 | Is she unhappy? |
1261 | Lew, did Slover know how many men got out?" |
1261 | Lewis, what can you make out?" |
1261 | Love her? |
1261 | Lydia slipped her arm affectionately around Betty''s neck and said,"Why did you not come over to the Fort to- day?" |
1261 | Marry the first man who asked her?" |
1261 | May I come over to see you to- morrow?" |
1261 | May I help you?" |
1261 | May I?" |
1261 | Mr. Clarke, will you say something appropriate?" |
1261 | Now what would you do if he caught you on one of your lonely rides and carried you off to his wigwam? |
1261 | Of course, you have read his books?" |
1261 | Oh, Lew, Mr. Clarke, can not you rescue him? |
1261 | Or must I take again those awful chances of escape? |
1261 | Perhaps she might have misjudged him? |
1261 | Please let me carry you?" |
1261 | Poor Clarke, what has he done now?" |
1261 | Shall I accept that incident as a happy augury? |
1261 | Shall I take her?" |
1261 | She gave him a little shake and said:"Noah, have you been fighting again?" |
1261 | Strange choice for a girl, was it not?" |
1261 | Surely she could not have trailed you?" |
1261 | Tell me, is it because we went off in the canoe and have been in danger?" |
1261 | That kind of gives me a right, do n''t it, considerin''it''s all fer your happiness?" |
1261 | Then, after a long silence, Alfred continued,"Will you go down to the old sycamore?" |
1261 | These make three, do they not?" |
1261 | To whom belonged that white face? |
1261 | Was he free? |
1261 | Was his finding you an accident?" |
1261 | Was it a bird or a squirrel? |
1261 | Was it an accident?" |
1261 | Was it necessary to keep me here all this time to explain that you were on duty?" |
1261 | Was n''t it dreadful, his carrying you?" |
1261 | Was n''t that a plucky thing?" |
1261 | Was not Girty, the white savage, the bane of the poor settlers, within range of a weapon that never failed? |
1261 | Was not the murderous chieftain, who had once whipped and tortured him, who had burned Crawford alive, there in plain sight? |
1261 | Was this his sister or-- someone else? |
1261 | We are happy to see you get back your old time spirits, but could you not be a little more careful? |
1261 | Well, Betty, how are you?" |
1261 | Well, he thought, what did it matter? |
1261 | Well, that is nothing to get alarmed about, is it? |
1261 | Were the Indians preparing for war? |
1261 | What are you driving at?" |
1261 | What can I do for you?" |
1261 | What could she do? |
1261 | What could she have thought of me? |
1261 | What did Colonel Ebenezer Zane tell him?" |
1261 | What did I miss?" |
1261 | What did he mean? |
1261 | What did my brother tell you?" |
1261 | What did my father say to you?" |
1261 | What did you do with it?" |
1261 | What did you tell him?" |
1261 | What did-- could you have said?" |
1261 | What do you make out?" |
1261 | What does it mean?" |
1261 | What does this mean?" |
1261 | What had awakened her? |
1261 | What had she done? |
1261 | What has happened? |
1261 | What has happened?" |
1261 | What has he to do with Betty? |
1261 | What has he to say?" |
1261 | What have you been doing all winter?" |
1261 | What have you been doing?" |
1261 | What have you meant all this winter? |
1261 | What have you to say of your father and the Major and John McColloch? |
1261 | What man?" |
1261 | What message?" |
1261 | What mysterious force thrilled through Alfred Clarke and made Betty Zane tremble? |
1261 | What right have you to detain me?" |
1261 | What right have you to say that? |
1261 | What say you, Wetzel?" |
1261 | What shall I do?" |
1261 | What shall we use for bait?" |
1261 | What the deuce is that? |
1261 | What was it that made his heart beat faster? |
1261 | What was the meaning of the arch glances she bestowed upon him, if she did not care for him? |
1261 | What was there so familiar in the poise of that figure? |
1261 | What were Indians and pioneers, forts and cities to it? |
1261 | What were the women sobbing and crying over? |
1261 | What will become of Myeerah if you leave her? |
1261 | What will he say about the massacre?" |
1261 | What would her girl friends say? |
1261 | What would she say? |
1261 | What would you have her do? |
1261 | What would you have me do?" |
1261 | What''s the row?" |
1261 | What''s this?" |
1261 | What''s to be done?" |
1261 | When did you first see this change?" |
1261 | When the dance ended Lydia and Betty stopped before Wetzel and Betty said:"Lew, are n''t you going to ask us to dance?" |
1261 | When will you return to the Fort?" |
1261 | Where are you going so early?" |
1261 | Where did you learn to steer a canoe?" |
1261 | Where is Betty?" |
1261 | Where is the Colonel?" |
1261 | Where shall I look? |
1261 | Who are you?" |
1261 | Who are you?" |
1261 | Who dared beard him in his den? |
1261 | Who dared defy the greatest power in all Indian tribes? |
1261 | Who is he?" |
1261 | Who is there to mourn for Logan? |
1261 | Who knows what will befall this little settlement? |
1261 | Who knows? |
1261 | Who made the suit? |
1261 | Who taught you?" |
1261 | Who was the Indian girl? |
1261 | Who was to tell her that he loved her? |
1261 | Who was to tell her that it was because his whole heart and soul had gone to her that he had kissed her? |
1261 | Who will volunteer?" |
1261 | Who''s this? |
1261 | Whom shall we send? |
1261 | Why are you not civil to Clarke?" |
1261 | Why could you not leave me in peace?" |
1261 | Why did n''t I pay more attention to Wetzel''s advice?" |
1261 | Why did n''t you keep on lettin''''em come in? |
1261 | Why did n''t you shoot him? |
1261 | Why did she think of him so often? |
1261 | Why did you not say so? |
1261 | Why do you ask?" |
1261 | Why do you ask?" |
1261 | Why not let the Indians kill me?" |
1261 | Why not try to win her?" |
1261 | Will it be declared?" |
1261 | Will you come in?" |
1261 | Will you ever free me? |
1261 | Will you forgive me and may we not be friends?" |
1261 | Will you go with me? |
1261 | Will you tell us one?" |
1261 | With only a few charges for their rifles and none for the cannon how could they hope to hold out against the savages? |
1261 | With the veil rolled away could you work as hard, accomplish as much? |
1261 | Would we ever see you again?" |
1261 | Would you care if I never returned?" |
1261 | Would you like to see them?" |
1261 | Would you wish her to be inconstant, like the moon?''" |
1261 | You do n''t care nothin''for Miller, do you Betty?" |
34344 | Ai n''t you Mr. O. K., that was out in Texas with Major J----? |
34344 | Are you both Yankee soldiers? |
34344 | Are you sure that your friends over there have not heard of your being in the army? |
34344 | Aunty,seeing that I was awake, came closer to my bed, and, in a kindly way, asked:"How is you dis mornin''?" |
34344 | But do n''t I have to pay something for the delivery? |
34344 | But, my dear boy, why did you refuse to take the oath of allegiance? 34344 But,"said the old scoundrel,"why did n''t you stay here last night?" |
34344 | Do you know Colonel Blank, of Baltimore? |
34344 | Does the Secretary want to procure any information as to General Patterson''s movements? |
34344 | How does a man feel in battle? |
34344 | How is it that your companion in the uniform ran away on the approach of our troops? |
34344 | How long have they been here? |
34344 | Is that so? 34344 It looks as if something was up, do n''t it?" |
34344 | Oh, you have passes, have you? 34344 Rd"did not seem to comprehend, and made the telegraphic signal for interrogation(?) |
34344 | Right away; do you hyar? |
34344 | Say, Baker, ai n''t you just playing off as a Dutchman? 34344 That''s enough, ai n''t it? |
34344 | What are they doing up there? |
34344 | What are they talking about so much; why do n''t they come on? |
34344 | What are you doing there? |
34344 | What did he say? |
34344 | What do they do with them? |
34344 | What regiment was your friend in? |
34344 | What shall I tell him? |
34344 | When did you see him? |
34344 | Where in---- are you going? |
34344 | Why,I said,"are we near the navy yard?" |
34344 | Yes, I know; but what soldiers? |
34344 | 121 The Sergeant kindly Gave Him the Steel 441"To Father: I am Safe; Are All Well at Home?" |
34344 | 282 Cavalry Picket on the Rappahannock 473"Colonel Mosby''s Soldiers, I Reckon, Sir?" |
34344 | 338"Bill, Ai n''t He the Fellow?" |
34344 | 66 An Interview with Parson Brownlow 304"Are You Union, or Confederate?" |
34344 | Addressing me courteously, he said:"What in the name of all that''s good brings you out on this road on such a dark night, disturbing our sleep?" |
34344 | Broome?" |
34344 | Ca n''t you go up there and see them for me?" |
34344 | Could I forget that banquet? |
34344 | Could it be possible that we were to be baffled at last? |
34344 | Dear me, what bass drums there were in General Patterson''s army; was n''t there one to each company? |
34344 | Did we catch any fish? |
34344 | Did you ever try to get into a hammock? |
34344 | Do n''t you see the''old man''is full?" |
34344 | Every person I have talked with for five minutes about Gettysburg, asks the question:"Were you there when Pickett charged?" |
34344 | He drew his chair right up in front of mine, looking me straight in the eye, as he said:"Now, my young friend, what is it that you propose?" |
34344 | He replied to my observation:"Yes; where did you come from?" |
34344 | Here are some Maryland secessionists being sent away down here to Tennessee to punish and coerce Unionists?" |
34344 | His reply to this put me off my pins entirely:"Well, why do n''t you all go to your own home in your own country?" |
34344 | How, then, could I explain this arrest to them? |
34344 | I asked only the one question--"Where do we go?" |
34344 | I made the signal for interrogation, or question, which all operators understand to mean,"I did not hear you,"or"What did you say?" |
34344 | I met at the hotel office my companion, the Colonel, who, upon seeing me, rushed over the office floor to say:"Why, where the devil have you been? |
34344 | I said more deliberately:"That message about Banks-- is there anything important?" |
34344 | I spoke first, with the desperation of an outlaw challenging a helpless traveler:"Are you Union or Confederate?" |
34344 | In a voice trembling with suppressed rage, he said, looking savagely at me:"Did n''t you see me at the theater the other night?" |
34344 | Instead of that, however, in a quiet, slow- speaking voice, I suggested involuntarily:"How about the Monitor and Merrimac?" |
34344 | Is n''t he just too nice?" |
34344 | It may also be asked why I bring this subject up at this late date, and after Hancock''s death? |
34344 | It must have been a violent shock to father, but why should I so write and rouse within all of you the bitter renewal of your grief? |
34344 | Making an appearance at the head of the stairway, she asked, pleasantly:"What in the world is the matter with you?" |
34344 | Never turning my head, I was walking on hurriedly when the blamed fool sang out after me so everybody could hear:"What?" |
34344 | Of course, I must have imagined the worst; who would not have done so under the same conditions? |
34344 | SKETCHING, ARE YOU?"] |
34344 | Sketching, Are You?" |
34344 | Superintendent here?" |
34344 | The Colonel said:"You have a letter to send home I am told?" |
34344 | The Colonel, who was the jolly fellow of this trio, said, laughingly:"Hello, boy, what have you been up to?" |
34344 | The General, without halting his slow movement, gruffly said:"Where is Slocum?" |
34344 | The first words the brass tongue of the instrument sounded to his startled ears were:"I am O. K."--this was my telegraphic signal--"Who are you?" |
34344 | The hint was sufficient, and to my hurried inquiry:"Are there any cavalrymen at the house?" |
34344 | The man on duty at the door looked at me with disgust as he said:"That''s no damned doctor, man; do n''t you know General Meade?" |
34344 | The officer now began to get mad and, in a commanding tone, inquired:"What is your business, sir, with the General?" |
34344 | The only consolation I got from the officer was,"Can your horse stand it? |
34344 | Then Lanyard with a contemptuous look, turned to Baker and said:"Say, Dutchy, you blasted rascal, you played me for a marine, did n''t you?" |
34344 | Then she added, laughing heartily as she spoke:"Did n''t you hear him slam the door?" |
34344 | Then taking my arm, familiarly, said:"Come along, the boys will all be glad to see you?" |
34344 | Then the old lady chipped in with:"Shall I send Mammy to help you bathe it with warm water, before you go to bed?" |
34344 | Then, in an undertone,"Are you all alone?" |
34344 | To gratify the General, and get around the question, I asked:"Is it''Rd?''" |
34344 | To his sleepy growl of"Who''s there?" |
34344 | Under the circumstances, what could I do? |
34344 | Under the circumstances, what else could I do but take this advantage of the good people? |
34344 | Was n''t there a Rebel camp near Leesburg, or was that the name of the town near that mountain? |
34344 | We passed the two men-- one of whom was in uniform-- and as we did so, I heard one of them, say:"That''s him, ai n''t it?" |
34344 | Were they going back to their Rebel camps? |
34344 | What are you doing? |
34344 | What can I do for you? |
34344 | What could I do? |
34344 | What could have been better for my purpose? |
34344 | What did I do? |
34344 | What did I do? |
34344 | What would have been the result,_ if_ Meade had been supported by Franklin, when he broke Stonewall Jackson''s line at Fredericksburg? |
34344 | What would you have done? |
34344 | When Covode crawled into the carriage, Mr. Moorehead said,"Well, what''s the programme?" |
34344 | When handing the paper back to the clerk, he remarked jocularly:"They have made you sign a mighty tight paper, have n''t they?" |
34344 | When he stopped his conversation long enough to hear me, he simply said, in his polite, kindly way:"Well, you come in and see me again, wo n''t you?" |
34344 | Where is Slocum now? |
34344 | Where is he?" |
34344 | Where shall your answer be delivered?" |
34344 | Who are you?" |
34344 | Who in---- are you, anyhow?" |
34344 | Who is it?" |
34344 | Why did n''t I get ahead of them? |
34344 | Why did n''t you say something to me before? |
34344 | Will you please give me your name?" |
34344 | With my own hand trembling on the telegraph key I sent my own message, as follows:"To father: I am here safe; are all well at home?" |
34344 | You do n''t know what that is? |
34344 | [ Illustration: TAPPING THE TELEGRAPH WIRE.--"ARE THE YANKS IN FREDERICKSBURG?"] |
34344 | [ Illustration: TO FATHER:"I AM SAFE; ARE ALL WELL AT HOME?"] |
34344 | [ Illustration:"ARE YOU UNION OR CONFEDERATE?"] |
34344 | [ Illustration:"BILL, AIN''T HE THE FELLOW?"] |
34344 | did n''t you tell me to keep close to you?" |
34344 | is a question often asked, or"Were you frightened the first time?" |
34344 | is that you, Yank?" |
34344 | now?" |
42112 | But how was it that the long period of the fur trade should have passed without disclosing this country? |
42112 | Might it not therefore be within the province of territorial legislation to furnish the necessary legal protection? |
42112 | The question then is, Do the people desire this kind of transportation? |
42112 | WHY SO LONG UNKNOWN? |
42112 | Was Colter to be slain by a single Indian after having distanced five hundred? |
42112 | Was it, as is generally supposed, a"superstitious fear"that kept them away? |
42112 | Was this a proper interpretation of"small parcels of ground,"as specified in the act? |
41501 | As Luther Burbank has said:"Heredity means much, but what is heredity? |
41501 | CHAPTER II THE INNER PHASE: CHARACTER Do you know what"character"is? |
41501 | Combe says:"This faculty prompts us on all occasions to ask,"Why is this so, and what is its object?" |
41501 | In studying voices it will help you to ask"What Quality or Qualities produce this voice?" |
41501 | It asks:''What is this?'' |
41501 | This Quality manifests in a strong desire to inquire into the"Why?" |
41501 | of things-- into Causes-- into the"Wherefore? |
39979 | A bad night this, strangers; how came you to be along the fence? 39979 And where is it?" |
39979 | And why to- morrow, Mr. Audubon? 39979 And why,"answered I,"have you left your quarters, where certainly you must have fared better than in these unwholesome swamps?" |
39979 | Are you hurt, sir? |
39979 | But how are we to get them out? |
39979 | How much? |
39979 | How, sir? |
39979 | My wife and I teach them all that is_ useful_ for them to know, and is not that enough? 39979 No?" |
39979 | Pray, friend, what have you killed? |
39979 | There,said he,"did not I tell you so; is it not rare sport?" |
39979 | Toby, come back; do n''t you know the stranger is not up to the woods? 39979 What now?" |
39979 | What now? |
39979 | All this raised my curiosity to such a height that I accosted him with,"Pray, sir, will you allow me to examine the birds you have in that cage?" |
39979 | But what is description compared with the reality? |
39979 | Can he swim well? |
39979 | Can you see the poor toad kicking and flouncing in the water? |
39979 | Do you paint, sir?" |
39979 | Have they told you that this boat was used, after the tedious voyage was ended, as the first dwelling of these new settlers? |
39979 | I nodded, and he continued,"What the devil do you know about birds, sir?" |
39979 | If our Congress will not allow our traders to sell whiskey or rum to the Indians, why should not the British follow the same rule? |
39979 | Now ought not this subject to be brought before the press in our country and forwarded to England? |
39979 | Now who will tell me that no animal can compete with this Fox in speed, when Harris, mounted on an Indian horse, overtook it in a few minutes? |
39979 | Shall I ever have the pleasure of seeing that good, that generous man again? |
39979 | Shall I speak to him, and ask him the result of this first essay? |
39979 | Shall I tell you that I have seen masses of these logs heaped above each other to the number of five thousand? |
39979 | The Indians, who were quite numerous, clustered about him, and asked him what the bird came to him for? |
39979 | The loss proved too much for him; he called his wife, and, after telling her what a faithful husband he had been, said to her,"Why should we live? |
39979 | Thirty, or thirty thousand? |
39979 | What do you think, reader, as to the number of Cod secured in this manner in a single haul? |
39979 | What sort of bed can you fix for them?" |
39979 | What''s that? |
39979 | Where now are the bulls which erst scraped its earth away, bellowing forth their love or their anger? |
39979 | Who could have heard such a tale without emotion? |
39979 | Who could not with a little industry have helped himself to a few of their skins? |
39979 | Who is he of the settlers on the Mississippi that can not realize some profit? |
39979 | Who knows but I may shoot a turkey or a deer? |
39979 | Who''s there? |
39979 | Who, in this world, man or fish, has not enough of them? |
39979 | [ Andrew?] |
39979 | all we cared for is taken from us, and why not at once join our child in the land of the Great Spirit?" |
39979 | ay and Ravens too? |
39979 | for to say,"What have you shot at?" |
39979 | what do you mean?" |
39979 | why did you kill so many Crows last winter? |
39979 | you''ve played us a trick, have you? |
16741 | ''Ah ma''am,''said Lucy,''what shall I do now she is gone? 16741 ''But do n''t the laws protect them?'' |
16741 | ''But what induced him, Lucy, to do such a wicked thing?'' 16741 ''But what induced you?'' |
16741 | ''But what made you get a black one,''said Harriet,''why did you not get a dark green or a brown one?'' 16741 ''For a horse and chaise, all day?'' |
16741 | ''Lor, ma''am, do you think I cared for that? 16741 ''Lucy,''I said,''when was that placed there?'' |
16741 | ''Miss Ellen,''says I,''as sure as there''s a God in heaven you are Mr. Lee''s wife, and why do n''t you say so, and stand up for yourself? 16741 ''Oh, master,''said Simon,''wo n''t you take me back? |
16741 | ''The deacon did not even give me a nod until he had scrutinized the condition of the horse and chaise, and then he said,''How are you?'' 16741 ''Well, Mrs. Brown,''said Arthur, for I was looking in the glass cases and under the counter for the pretty face,''have you any rusk?'' |
16741 | ''What do you mean?'' 16741 ''What is it, Miss Ellen?'' |
16741 | ''Where on earth has she put that cake?'' 16741 ''Where''s that''lection cake I told you to bring here?'' |
16741 | ''Why do n''t you make the boy clothes enough, Julia?'' 16741 ''Will you give us some, and some cakes, or whatever you have? |
16741 | ''Yes, Miss Janet, but if God give me a better life, shall I not esteem it a greater blessing? 16741 A great many of your slaves run away through the year, do n''t they?" |
16741 | Ai nt you ashamed to talk so about Miss Alice, when she''s always coming to you, bringing you something, and trying to do something for you? |
16741 | Alice, I charge you, as in the presence of God, to tell me truly: do you love Walter Lee? |
16741 | Alice, what is the matter? |
16741 | And are they such trouble to you, Arthur? |
16741 | And did you think I was going to steal besides running off from her and the poor baby? |
16741 | And how did they get them? |
16741 | And if such laws do exist,said Arthur,"where is the cause? |
16741 | Any thing the matter, Bacchus? |
16741 | Are you ill? |
16741 | Are you not a runaway? |
16741 | Are you talking of gloom? |
16741 | Art thou,said Paul,"called being a slave? |
16741 | Barbecue or campmeeting, Bacchus? |
16741 | Besides, Abel,continued Arthur,"what right have you to interfere? |
16741 | But am I one of the beloved? |
16741 | But can you advocate the enslaving of your fellow man? |
16741 | But how can I write to Arthur, when I know I am not treating him as I would wish him to treat me? |
16741 | But is not Walter our equal? |
16741 | But suppose he does not know how to do so,said Mrs. Moore,"what then? |
16741 | But that was doing very well,said Alice;"do n''t you think so, Aunt Phillis? |
16741 | But you love me, Alice; and will you see me go from you forever, without hope? 16741 But you must remember the_ spirit of the age_, Arthur, as Mr. Hubbard calls it?" |
16741 | But, do your laws always secure you from ill- treatment? |
16741 | But, my dear,said he,"do you think it right to give such things in charge of a servant?" |
16741 | Ca n''t you experiment upon us, Arthur; test us chemically? |
16741 | Can it be possible? |
16741 | Children,said Miss Janet-- for she had gently approached them--"do you know when and where happiness is to be found? |
16741 | Come back here,said Phillis,"you real cornfield nigger; you goin there naked?" |
16741 | Come in, child,said she,"and warm yourself; how is your cough? |
16741 | Could he die agin, Miss Janet? |
16741 | Dead, what do you mean? |
16741 | Dear Alice,said Ellen, fixing her large dark eyes on her;"how can I ever be grateful enough to you?" |
16741 | Did God make de nanny- goats, too? |
16741 | Did Lucy ever hear of her children? |
16741 | Did n''t he though? 16741 Did you bring Lucy home with you, Cousin Janet?" |
16741 | Did you ever hear de like? |
16741 | Did you hear what Cousin Janet said to Lydia, to- night, mother? 16741 Do n''t you hear the wind?" |
16741 | Do n''t you know your duty better than to be interfering in the concerns of these people? 16741 Do n''t you want some needles,"he said,"or a waist ribbon, or some candy? |
16741 | Do you not see me before you, Peggy? |
16741 | Do you think that the African slave- trade can be defended? |
16741 | Does you hear that, master? |
16741 | For what? |
16741 | From whom did you get them? |
16741 | Had I not better wake the doctor? |
16741 | Have they come again, too? |
16741 | Have we not always been as brother and sister? |
16741 | Have you any more orders to give, sir? 16741 Have you had a pleasant ride?" |
16741 | Have you tried it on? |
16741 | He is what? |
16741 | High,said Phillis;"where''s the sore foot you had this morning?" |
16741 | How did you get here? |
16741 | How is her pulse? |
16741 | How is yer health dis evenin, master? 16741 How is your grandmother, child?" |
16741 | How is your mother, Bacchus? |
16741 | I do n''t want any thing, Willie; but will you be sure to return to- night? 16741 I hope you will not be angry with me, master?" |
16741 | I reckon you''re sick, Aunt Peggy,said Phillis;"why did n''t you let me know you was n''t well?" |
16741 | In what respect? 16741 In what sense?" |
16741 | Is anything the matter at home, Anna? |
16741 | Is it failing? |
16741 | Is it the same? 16741 Is that your gratitude,"was the indignant reply,"for all that we''ve done for you? |
16741 | Is this you, Phillis? |
16741 | Is you got de headache now, Miss Alice? |
16741 | Its an improvement, honey,said Phillis;"but what''s the use of getting drunk at all? |
16741 | Mammy, she''s well,said the young gentleman;"how''s you, master?" |
16741 | Miss Janet,said Lydia, speaking very softly,"who made de lightning- bugs?" |
16741 | Miss Janet,said Lydia,"ai nt Miss Alice white?" |
16741 | Mother,said Esther,"will you take this medicine-- it is time?" |
16741 | Nancy,she said,"did n''t you think it was strange your grandmother slept so quiet, and laid so late this morning? |
16741 | No-- no-- foolish child; what gives you such ideas? |
16741 | Nonsense,said Arthur,"do n''t you think I can judge for myself, as regards that? |
16741 | Not when she was''live? |
16741 | Of whom are you speaking? |
16741 | Oh, Mr. William, is it you? |
16741 | Oh, mammy,she said to her attendant, for she had always thus affectionately addressed her;"did you ever see any one as handsome as Willie?" |
16741 | On the bridge,said William, laughing;"did you think I was going to jump my horse across?" |
16741 | Phillis, you do n''t mean me to wear dis here to meetin? 16741 Phillis,"said Bacchus, appealingly,"you ai nt much used to jokin, and I know you would n''t tell an ontruth; what do you mean?" |
16741 | Phillis,said he,"do you b''lieve in sperrits?" |
16741 | Robert,said Esther,"you''re a born fool; do you mean to say you want me to marry you?" |
16741 | Sarah,he said, and she looked up as before, without any doubt, in his open countenance,"are you a good worker?" |
16741 | Then if it is not your country, for what reason do you concern yourself so much about its affairs? |
16741 | Think I did n''t see her yesterday? 16741 Time old people were in bed, Aunt Peggy,"said she;"what are you settin up for, all by yourself?" |
16741 | To_ your_ heart? 16741 Was Washington a cheerful man?" |
16741 | Well, Bacchus? |
16741 | Well, but what shall I do? |
16741 | Well, of course you are a great deal happier now than when you were a slave? |
16741 | Well, what does it mean? |
16741 | Well,said Abel,"how can you defend your right to hold slaves as property in the United States?" |
16741 | Well,said Mr. Weston,"what did he say?" |
16741 | What can I do? |
16741 | What could you do? |
16741 | What do you mean by that? 16741 What do you say such a foolish thing as that for, Lydia?" |
16741 | What do you think is the meaning of the text''Cursed be Canaan, a servant of servants shall he be unto his brethren,''Hubbard? |
16741 | What does he do with it? |
16741 | What have I to forgive? 16741 What induced you to run away? |
16741 | What is here? |
16741 | What is it about, Arthur,said Abel Johnson,"it is too hot to read this morning, so pray enlighten me?" |
16741 | What is it, Alice? |
16741 | What is it, master? |
16741 | What is that large vault open to- day for? |
16741 | What is the matter, Bacchus? |
16741 | What is the woman''s name, Bacchus? |
16741 | What makes her so white? |
16741 | What makes you think so? |
16741 | What put such a dreadful thought into your head, child? |
16741 | What they going to laugh at me about? |
16741 | What was to fall? |
16741 | What would be done with the slaves in the mean time? |
16741 | What you doin here? |
16741 | What''ll I have? 16741 What''ll you have, Jake?" |
16741 | What''s come over you? |
16741 | What_ is_ the matter? |
16741 | When people are dead they do n''t hear nothin; where''s the harm? |
16741 | When? |
16741 | Where are the little girls? |
16741 | Where is Martha? |
16741 | Where shall you go first? |
16741 | Who brought this paper into my room? |
16741 | Who cares for tar and feathers? |
16741 | Who is there? |
16741 | Who says I was ever tired of her? 16741 Who will say what God intends to do? |
16741 | Who would have thought she could have made so wise a will? 16741 Who''s I got to set up wid me?" |
16741 | Whose can they be? |
16741 | Why did not Walter come in? |
16741 | Why did you do so? 16741 Why do n''t you go to bed, then?" |
16741 | Why do you not_ take_ your freedom? |
16741 | Why think of that now, my love? |
16741 | Why, Jupiter,said Phillis,"is this you? |
16741 | Why, how are you going to cross Willow''s Creek? |
16741 | Why, how,said she, as Bacchus, in a most cramped condition endeavored to raise himself,"did the lid fall on you?" |
16741 | Why, lord a massy,said he,"Phillis, what do you call dis here? |
16741 | Why, whar''s the ruffles? |
16741 | Why, what a fool you be,said one of the men;"Did n''t I tell you to bring your mistress''purse along?" |
16741 | Why, what on earth? |
16741 | Will any body listen to the boy? 16741 Will you have any thing, sir?" |
16741 | Would I, sir? 16741 Would n''t he be a good subject for tar and feathers, Arthur? |
16741 | Yes, I am; but why do you ask me? |
16741 | You ai n''t in earnest, Esther? |
16741 | You are Abolitionists, I''spose? |
16741 | You are afraid of the night air, Cousin Janet? |
16741 | You are not in love with him now, are you, Alice? |
16741 | You call it a misfortune, do you, Bacchus? |
16741 | You do n''t think, then,said Mr. Hubbard, argumentatively,"that God''s curse is on slavery, do you?" |
16741 | You never liked him, Anna,said Mr. Weston;"why was it?" |
16741 | You, with your smooth cheeks and bright eyes, may well think of passing a winter in Washington; but what should I do there? 16741 [ A] Although she is here speaking of slavery_ politically_, can you not apply it to matrimony in this miserable country of ours? |
16741 | ''And where is Abednego?'' |
16741 | ''Are they all dead?'' |
16741 | ''Father,''said he, scarcely waiting until the sentence that General Washington was uttering, was finished,''what do you think? |
16741 | ''Is it possible that they are gone, and I am no longer to be plagued with them? |
16741 | ''Well, what has become of them?'' |
16741 | ***** ARTHUR''S New Juvenile Library BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED, 1. WHO IS GREATEST? |
16741 | ***** Mr. Weston alighted from his horse, and hurried to the sitting- room,"Have you waited tea for me?" |
16741 | ***** WHAT IS CHURCH HISTORY? |
16741 | *****"Now,"said Abel,"having a couple of particularly good cigars, where did we leave off?" |
16741 | 2. WHO ARE HAPPIEST? |
16741 | After a great deal of mental exercise, the brain jumps at a conclusion,"What are these dogs kept here for?" |
16741 | Again Lydia spoke,"If I was to stay all time in de house, and never go in de sun, would I git white?" |
16741 | Alice, darling, is your head better?" |
16741 | Am I not a daughter of the Old Dominion, a member of one of the F.F.V''s? |
16741 | And Arthur, can it be right for me to be engaged to him, and to deceive him, too?" |
16741 | And have I not a right to insist, for my native State, upon all that truth will permit? |
16741 | And what did they say to the slavery that existed then and had been entailed upon them by the English government? |
16741 | And what to thee, thou faithful servant? |
16741 | And who can read the history of the world and say this curse has not existed ever since it was uttered? |
16741 | And, finally, she was desired to open her mouth, that they might see whether her teeth had been extracted to sell to the dentist?" |
16741 | Anna, did you send for the doctor?" |
16741 | Are are all my tears and prayers to fail? |
16741 | Are not all these curses recorded, and will they not all be fulfilled? |
16741 | As she looked into Mr. Weston''s grieved and honest face, the question suggested itself,--Is it right thus, to keep him in ignorance? |
16741 | As to"Whether she had been born a slave, or had been kidnapped? |
16741 | Ask mammy if I ai nt?" |
16741 | But a bitter smile passed over his countenance, and in a stern voice he said,"And you, Alice, what are you to do?" |
16741 | But does this curse authorize the slave- trade? |
16741 | But how can that man be loved who has put away his wife from him, because he is tired of her? |
16741 | But what is this, coming along the side- walk?" |
16741 | But what was she now? |
16741 | But why do n''t the Abolitionists buy our slaves, and send them to Liberia?" |
16741 | But, Phillis, have you no wishes to express, as regards your children?" |
16741 | But, what will the Abolitionist say to this scene? |
16741 | Can anybody fail to make the inference, what the practical result will be? |
16741 | Can it be that in this case the wise Creator will visit the sins of the father upon the child? |
16741 | Can we judge of society by a few isolated incidents? |
16741 | Can we not remodel our husbands, place them under our thumbs, and shut up the escape valves of their grumbling forever? |
16741 | Canst thou change his employments, and elevate his condition? |
16741 | Christian of the North, canst thou emancipate the Southern slave? |
16741 | Could a man capable of such an act deserve the blessing of a just and holy God? |
16741 | Could aught escape_ their_ vigilance? |
16741 | Did Bacchus know it?" |
16741 | Did I heed his advice? |
16741 | Did I not tell you of the time I hired his horse and chaise? |
16741 | Did ever any one hear of a soldier being amiable? |
16741 | Did he condemn the institution which he had made? |
16741 | Did he establish universal freedom? |
16741 | Did it ever occur to her, that Northerners might go South, and buy a great many of these slaves, and manumit them? |
16741 | Did not my father wear crape on his hat at his funeral? |
16741 | Did not my grandfather ride races with General Washington? |
16741 | Did she ever have any thing but sweet potato pealings? |
16741 | Did you ever think of the consequences of such an act?'' |
16741 | Do n''t you see all these graves around you?" |
16741 | Do n''t you see how people sneer at you when they see you?'' |
16741 | Do you commend that morbid affection which clings to its object not only through sorrow, but sin? |
16741 | Do you see any thing like apprehension? |
16741 | Does not this exhibit the impression of the Jews as regards the character of Ham? |
16741 | Each heart asked itself, When? |
16741 | Except in crossing a corduroy road in the West, where can one hope to be so thoroughly shaken up? |
16741 | For, is a professed gambler better than a common thief? |
16741 | Gradually the chest lid opened a little way, and a sepulchral voice, issuing from it, uttered in a low tone these words:"Phillis, gal, is that you?" |
16741 | Had Christ left it to them to carry out, in this instance, his revealed will? |
16741 | Had she ever been ducked? |
16741 | Had she ever been shut up in a dark cellar and nearly starved? |
16741 | Had the apostles authority to do it away? |
16741 | Had you an unkind master?" |
16741 | Has he in the wide world an enemy who can bring aught against him? |
16741 | Has she heard those cheering words? |
16741 | Has this curse failed or been removed? |
16741 | Have I not often told you that God is a spirit? |
16741 | Have not they been fulfilled? |
16741 | Have you any right to claim for yourself superior holiness? |
16741 | Have you never told Alice her history, cousin?" |
16741 | Have you no children, Lucy?'' |
16741 | Have you not pitied him when you reflected that he was alone, far away from such good influences? |
16741 | Have you so little pride? |
16741 | Havn''t I been crossing it these fifty years? |
16741 | He came on an errand of mercy to the world, and he was all powerful to accomplish the Divine intent; but, did he emancipate the slave? |
16741 | Here is one whom he has loved, whose voice he is accustomed to hear; shall he, through neglect or mismanagement, make a void in many hearts? |
16741 | How came you to do that?'' |
16741 | How can you stand it? |
16741 | How could such a man die? |
16741 | How could you ask me?" |
16741 | How do you all feel?" |
16741 | How does he fare? |
16741 | How is he to draw the nice line of distinction? |
16741 | How many times a week she had been whipped, and what with? |
16741 | How much did I know of death? |
16741 | I am in a hurry now, tell me what I am to pay you?'' |
16741 | I am told you are turned preacher?" |
16741 | I guess you think the rags on your back good wages enough?" |
16741 | I have been anxious for your health, but is there not more cause to fear for your happiness?" |
16741 | I meant, did you not fear His power, who could not only kill your body, but destroy your soul in hell?'' |
16741 | I rather think, that you''d think the first stray horse you could find an indication of Providence-- shouldn''t you?" |
16741 | I said to one of them, a large fat negro,''What''s your name, uncle?'' |
16741 | In reply to the question,"Are you free?" |
16741 | In the times of the apostles, what do we see? |
16741 | Is he not a curiosity? |
16741 | Is it for my country, or for my party and myself? |
16741 | Is it so?" |
16741 | Is it your wish too?" |
16741 | Is that it, Arthur?" |
16741 | Is there any place in the world like this?" |
16741 | Is there not a charm in it? |
16741 | It has been, that master and slave were friends; and if this can not continue, at whose door will the sin lie? |
16741 | It was dreadful to see her thus agitated; and Alice, throwing her arms around her mother exclaimed,"What is it, dearest mother? |
16741 | It was without any agitation that she asked what was the matter? |
16741 | Johnson?'' |
16741 | Lydia said inquiringly,"Was n''t Jesus Christ God, ma''am?" |
16741 | Men of business and mechanics in the land, they know that one who ever defended their interests is gone, and who shall take his place? |
16741 | Miss Alice, ai nt she never told you bout de time she seed an elerphant drink a river dry?" |
16741 | Mr. H. has just returned from a tour in the Southern States, and he is to lecture to- night, wo n''t you go and hear him?" |
16741 | Need I say it was joy when she called me, Mother? |
16741 | Need I say that I was happy when she nestled there? |
16741 | Need he essay to penetrate the future? |
16741 | Now, has there been any law reversing this, except in the States that have become free? |
16741 | Now, is not this infamous?" |
16741 | Now, was not that trading in human bodies and souls in earnest? |
16741 | Perkins?" |
16741 | See any little graves thar? |
16741 | Shall he, from want of skill, bring weeping and desolation to a house where health and joy have been? |
16741 | She asks the question,"_ What_ can any individual do?" |
16741 | She sighed and continued,"Am I not deceiving the kind protector and friend of my childhood? |
16741 | She was not for him; and why should he not seek, as others had done, to drown all care? |
16741 | She''s got a pleasant voice, has n''t she, sir? |
16741 | Shut down the window, Miss Ellen, do n''t you feel the wind? |
16741 | So, ma''am, if God died onct, could n''t he die agin?" |
16741 | The day when there was a tie between master and slave,--is that departing, and why? |
16741 | The young men laughed, and Arthur said"What will he do with his money? |
16741 | There is one thing concerning death in which we are apt to be sceptical, and that is,"Does he want me?" |
16741 | There, you''re sneezin; did n''t I tell you so?" |
16741 | This dread crisis past, and what would be the result? |
16741 | This is slavery indeed, and where is the man, come from God, who will show us a remedy? |
16741 | Tom evidently considers himself as too good for this world; and after making these proposals to his master, he is asked,"How are you?" |
16741 | Walter?" |
16741 | Warn''t dat what you said, sir?'' |
16741 | Was she allowed more than one meal a day? |
16741 | Was the dreaded messenger here? |
16741 | Watcher by the couch of suffering, sayest thou so? |
16741 | We may observe his dealings with man, but we may not ask, until he reveals it, Why hast thou thus done? |
16741 | Well may he bare his breast and say, for_ what_ is my voice raised where his has been heard? |
16741 | Well, Mark, I hope the little fellow is getting well?" |
16741 | Were the exertions of the Abolitionists successful, what would be the result? |
16741 | Weston?" |
16741 | What can be the matter with you? |
16741 | What can be the meaning of it?" |
16741 | What do you think about it, Arthur?" |
16741 | What has brought you here?" |
16741 | What has come over you?" |
16741 | What has it been elsewhere? |
16741 | What might it bring forth; joy or endless weeping? |
16741 | What might the short summer bring? |
16741 | What right have you New England people to the farms you are now holding?" |
16741 | What says that vision of languishing and loveliness to the old man whose eyes are fixed in grief upon it? |
16741 | What to him is the love of country, or the memory of Washington? |
16741 | What to thee, oh, mother? |
16741 | What was it a doin?" |
16741 | What was there? |
16741 | What will this gentleman think of me?" |
16741 | When did he die?" |
16741 | When is he comin, any how, sir?" |
16741 | When we are thirsty water is better than any thing else; and when we ai nt thirsty, what''s the use of drinking?" |
16741 | When were thy first thoughts of death? |
16741 | When will stay the tumultuous beatings of their hearts? |
16741 | When will they sleep in the shadow of the old church? |
16741 | When will you set out, and how will you travel? |
16741 | Where are now the hopes of half thy lifetime, where the consummation of all thy anxious plans? |
16741 | Where are such roads to be found? |
16741 | Where is Canaan?" |
16741 | Where is her beauty-- and her grace and talent? |
16741 | Where is that mother? |
16741 | Where were the whip and the cord, and other instruments of torture? |
16741 | Whether she had ever been sold? |
16741 | Which was the blacker, her eyes or her visage; or whiter, her eyeballs or her hair? |
16741 | Who could expect a woman to preserve her composure under such circumstances? |
16741 | Who is like unto the Lord our God, who dwelleth on high? |
16741 | Why are you so still and silent? |
16741 | Why ca n''t you repent? |
16741 | Why did n''t you fry''em a little more?" |
16741 | Why did you not inform me of it, that I might have sent him off?" |
16741 | Why do you judge for him? |
16741 | Why need he recall the past? |
16741 | Why, Bacchus, how come it, you forgot old Jupiter? |
16741 | Why, sir, do you mean to say, that the life of a slave is in the power of a master, and that he is not under the protection of our laws?" |
16741 | Why, you look sober; not regretting Washington already?" |
16741 | Will any one hear her coughin? |
16741 | Will it pass, or will it rest upon thee forever? |
16741 | Will she close thine eyes with her loving hand? |
16741 | Will she drop upon thy breast a daughter''s tear?" |
16741 | Will she perpetuate the name of thy race? |
16741 | Will you not join her there? |
16741 | Will you not taste the sublime joys of faith? |
16741 | Will you promise me you will try to be?" |
16741 | Will you yourself speak the word that sends me forth a wanderer upon the earth?" |
16741 | William?" |
16741 | Would you leave me for Walter, Alice?" |
16741 | Would you like again to see Mr. Caldwell, and receive the communion?" |
16741 | Would you run such a risk? |
16741 | Would you then, sir, destroy the fabric, by undermining the Constitution? |
16741 | [ B] And now, Phillis, are you satisfied? |
16741 | aged woman? |
16741 | and ai nt I up to all its freaks and ways? |
16741 | are you sure?" |
16741 | but does he offer to share in the loss? |
16741 | but what does he do that really advances his interest? |
16741 | daddy, is that you?" |
16741 | have so many years passed away, that thou hast forgotten the bitterness of thy first sorrow, or is it yet to come? |
16741 | have you ever stood by the dying bed of a slave? |
16741 | if your father had been here to have saved him-- but who could have saved him? |
16741 | master,"said Phillis,"what shall I say to you? |
16741 | said Abel,"there is that idiot, with his tongue hanging out of his mouth, across the street: was he born equal with you?" |
16741 | said Aunt Peggy,"that''s all?" |
16741 | said Mr. Weston,"Is Cousin Janet--?" |
16741 | said Mr. Weston,"and do you continue this disputing in my presence? |
16741 | said Mrs. Moore;"you would n''t have me do a thing my husband disapproves of, would you?" |
16741 | said Mrs. Weston,"and Arthur within a few miles of us? |
16741 | said Phillis;"did she sleep well?" |
16741 | said the Northern gentleman,"were niggers allowed to attend Washington''s funeral?" |
16741 | said the astonished woman:"Surely, is that you, Bacchus?" |
16741 | sir,"said Mr. Chapman, the veins in his temples swelling, and his whole frame glowing with vexation,"what is that you say? |
16741 | t''aint a shirt? |
16741 | that her voice was music to my soul, and her smile the very presence of beauty? |
16741 | what?" |
16741 | young ladies,"he continued,"did she rightly use those talents?" |
21734 | Ah thin, avic, plaze do attind to me at wance; for sure I''ve run four miles to git stuff for a dyin''family-- won''t ye now? |
21734 | Ai n''t it vexin''? |
21734 | Ai n''t you afraid some of the bad- looking scoundrels in these parts may take a fancy to your pick and shovel? |
21734 | Ai n''t you goin''with us? |
21734 | All what, sir? |
21734 | Among the mountains, is it? 21734 An'', may I ax, commodore,"said Larry O''Neil, touching his hat,"wot_ I''m_ to do?" |
21734 | An''I say, stranger,continued the Yankee, while Ned put the finishing touches to his work,"will ye do the inside o''my hut for the same money?" |
21734 | An''who are_ you_ that finds fault wi''the diggers? |
21734 | And are these murders passed over without any attempt to bring the murderers to justice? |
21734 | And did the sharper hear of it? |
21734 | And did you say you were all ready for a start to- morrow, captain? |
21734 | And how would you manage with huge manufactories? |
21734 | And now,said Ned,"may I ask permission to pass the night with you?" |
21734 | And pray, sir,he continued,"may I ask what are office- hours?" |
21734 | And suppose I did n''t care a straw for being called a coward, and would n''t attempt to clear my character? |
21734 | And suppose,answered Ned, with a smile--"suppose that I refused to fight, what then?" |
21734 | And which of the three callings do you propose adopting? |
21734 | And why not, nephew? 21734 And, pray thee, what may that be, most sapient philosopher?" |
21734 | Are grizzly- bears eaten here? |
21734 | Are the victuals gone too? |
21734 | Are we far- distant from the other miners in this creek? |
21734 | Are ye ready to go, Mister McLeod? |
21734 | Are ye sure o''the spot? |
21734 | Are ye sure? |
21734 | Are you badly hurt, my poor fellow? |
21734 | Are you in earnest? |
21734 | Are, then, all the Indian tribes at enmity with the white men? |
21734 | Arrah, now,remarked another Patlander,"do n''t ye wish ye wos up to the knees and elbows in the goolden sands already? |
21734 | At what hour? |
21734 | Av it would n''t displase yer lordship, may I take the presumption to ax how the seal come to be broken? |
21734 | Ay,_ how_ long? |
21734 | Bear- catching? |
21734 | Big''un? |
21734 | Bin long in? |
21734 | Bin there before? |
21734 | But how am I to escape from Mr Jolly? |
21734 | But how do you manage it? |
21734 | But what_ is_ the affair? |
21734 | But where have they gone to? |
21734 | But why not give it now? |
21734 | But,said Ned,"I shall have to get a steward-- is that what you call him? |
21734 | By the way,remarked Ned, as they walked along,"what of Captain Bunting''s old ship?" |
21734 | Can I see Mr Moxton? |
21734 | Can nothing be done, then? |
21734 | Can we? |
21734 | Can you speak English? |
21734 | Capital,cried Ned, laughing heartily;"and you did n''t try for a letter after all?" |
21734 | D''ye mane to tell me,he said, slowly and with emphasis,"that I''m maybe sittin''at this minute on the top o''rale goold?" |
21734 | D''you think so? 21734 DB?" |
21734 | Do I know meself? |
21734 | Do n''t ye see that ye''ve a''most made him faint? 21734 Do n''t you think, messmates,"said Captain Bunting, lighting his pipe,"that if it gets wind the whole colony will be laughin''at us?" |
21734 | Do these storms usually last long? |
21734 | Do you mean that you seven men catch fall- grown grizzly- bears alive and take them down to the settlements? |
21734 | Do you see yonder bird clinging to the stem of that tree, and pitching into it as if it were its most deadly foe? |
21734 | Do you think, then, that you would make a good digger? |
21734 | Do you? |
21734 | Does he expect more to- morrow, think ye? |
21734 | Does he like to have the Bible read to him? |
21734 | Does not this wild spot remind you of the nursery tales we used to read? |
21734 | Drop, you mean,suggested Tom, laughing at the man''s expression;"of course I have, and why not? |
21734 | Excuse me, sir,he said, hesitatingly,"may I ask what room I shall occupy, if-- if-- I come to work here?" |
21734 | Goin''to the diggin''s, I s''pose? |
21734 | Hallo, Ned, what''s keeping you? |
21734 | Halloo, Ned, what''s that I hear about prices? 21734 Have ye spoken to the other men, Elliot?" |
21734 | Have you got your colours with you? |
21734 | How did it happen? |
21734 | How in the world did you get him in there? |
21734 | How moche? |
21734 | How much did you propose? |
21734 | How often am I to tell you that I do n''t and_ wo n''t_ consider the making of money the chief good of this world? 21734 How so, boy?" |
21734 | How so? |
21734 | How was dat? |
21734 | How was that? |
21734 | How-- how much have I swallowed? |
21734 | How? |
21734 | I am not surprised to hear it,said Captain Bunting;"but pray what''s i''the wind? |
21734 | I have not kept you waiting, have I? |
21734 | I s''pose ye''ll not object to let me rest by yer fire, strangers? |
21734 | I say, Bill,he added, pointing to a little tin bowl which stood on an inverted cask outside the door of the ranche,"wot can that be for?" |
21734 | I say, stranger,inquired the Yankee,"d''ye git many bits like that in this location?" |
21734 | I suppose you intend to send this to some fair one in old Ireland? |
21734 | I''ll do that for you, all in good time; meanwhile, will you put on your hat, and run down to Moxton''s office-- you remember it? |
21734 | Indeed,replied Tom, laughing;"how, then, would you have men to live?" |
21734 | Is all right? |
21734 | Is he your husband? |
21734 | Is it a very ghostly one? |
21734 | Is it? |
21734 | Is not` nor''east and by east''our direct course for the harbour of San Francisco? |
21734 | Is that all? |
21734 | Is the trap far off? |
21734 | Is your claim better than the others in the neighbourhood? |
21734 | It''s a wild place, if all reports are true? |
21734 | It''s awkward,said the captain, with a troubled expression, as he slowly raised a square lump of pork to his mouth;"what would you advise me to do?" |
21734 | It''s only me, Ned; can I come in? 21734 Maybe ye can do Irish?" |
21734 | Mister McLeod,said he, when Ned concluded,"will ye shew me the body o''this man? |
21734 | Most true, my sagacious friend,said Tom;"but, pray, how do you prove the fact that things_ are_ wrong?" |
21734 | Mr Collins? |
21734 | My dear uncle,said he,"how can_ I_ manage such a place, without means or knowledge?" |
21734 | Near the Horn, I should think, by this time; but why so anxious? |
21734 | No, you do n''t, do you? 21734 Nor none o''your party, I expect?" |
21734 | Nother do I,said another,"It''s all a sham; come, now, ai n''t it, Bill?" |
21734 | Now, ai n''t that aggravatin''? |
21734 | Now, dear,said Larry,"we have n''t time to waste, will ye go with me to San Francisco?" |
21734 | Now, then, where''ll I steer to? |
21734 | Now, thin, who''s nixt? |
21734 | Now, who is to decide the question if I do n''t give in, Tom? 21734 Of course, you could n''t be expected to have done much in so short a time; but_ how_ much?" |
21734 | One second more and I shall commence,replied Ned;"I beg pardon, may I ask your name?" |
21734 | Or French? |
21734 | Perhaps you will inform me where_ you_ have come from, and what is your errand in these lonesome places at this hour of the night? |
21734 | Perhaps you''ll try the northern diggin''s? |
21734 | Porter there? |
21734 | Pray, sir,began Ned, modestly,"may I take the liberty of asking you what is the meaning of all this?" |
21734 | Sartinly I do,replied the bear- catcher;"an''why not, stranger?" |
21734 | Shall I read to ye, darlin''? |
21734 | Shootin'', is it? 21734 So soon?" |
21734 | Sure do n''t I know me own feelin''s best? |
21734 | Surely the farm connected with such a house must be a large one? |
21734 | Then why did n''t you? |
21734 | Then, do you mean to say that Thompson is gone? |
21734 | There you go again, Tom; you ask me the abstract question,` What do you mean by enjoying life?'' 21734 There''s more than wan,"cried another man, seizing Pat again by the arm;"wo n''t ye come, man?" |
21734 | They''re diggin''goold out o''the cabin floors, are they? |
21734 | Troth, ye''ve got a dash o''the Yankee brogue,said Larry, with a puzzled look;"did ye not come from the owld country?" |
21734 | W''en a thing comes all right, an''tight, an''ship- shape, why, wot then? 21734 Wall, now, stranger, if you choose to be resarved, and we choose to be free- an''-easy, where''s the differ? |
21734 | Wall? |
21734 | Was he well when he left? |
21734 | Well, I do n''t know about that; I suppose you''re right,replied Lizette;"but is n''t it nice? |
21734 | Well, but could n''t you_ converse_ without arguing? |
21734 | Well, now, let me ask you, Ned, how much gold have you brought back from the diggings? |
21734 | Well, what have you got, comrades? |
21734 | What do you do with them when caught? |
21734 | What have we here? |
21734 | What have you to say to me? |
21734 | What is it ye give him? |
21734 | What is it? |
21734 | What like was he? |
21734 | What say ye to that, mister? |
21734 | What shall we do now? |
21734 | What shall we do now? |
21734 | What way is that? |
21734 | What''s his name? |
21734 | What''s that? |
21734 | What''s the price? |
21734 | What, comrades,cried Black Jim, with an oath, and looking fiercely round,"will ye see a messmate treated like this? |
21734 | What, then, do you mean to do? |
21734 | What,said he,"sell the_ Roving Bess_, which stands_ A1_ at Lloyd''s, to be broken up to build gold- diggers houses? |
21734 | What_ can_ he mean? |
21734 | What_ does_ it all mean? |
21734 | What_ is_ to be done? |
21734 | When shall we start? |
21734 | Where away? |
21734 | Where did_ you_ come from, old boy? |
21734 | Where has Larry O''Neil gone? |
21734 | Where have you come from, and how comes it that your clothes are torn, and your faces covered with blood? |
21734 | Where then? |
21734 | Where''s the gold? |
21734 | Who be this Missey Nelina? |
21734 | Who can DB have been? |
21734 | Who can make a torch? |
21734 | Who comes here? |
21734 | Who do you think was the murderer? |
21734 | Who goes there? |
21734 | Who said we were` afraid,''young man? |
21734 | Who''s there? |
21734 | Who? |
21734 | Whose is the best horse? |
21734 | Why did n''t ye ax? |
21734 | Why not, stranger? |
21734 | Why not? |
21734 | Why so, stranger? |
21734 | Why, boy,said Captain Bunting, laying down his knife, and looking at Ned in amazement,"what''s put that in your head, eh?" |
21734 | Why, how did you guess that? |
21734 | Why, then, I''d be compelled to snuff you out slick off? |
21734 | Why, what have you been about? |
21734 | Why, what_ do_ you mean,said he,"who is this extraordinary proprietor?" |
21734 | Why, where are ye goin''? |
21734 | Will that suffice to stock and carry on so large a farm,inquired Ned? |
21734 | Wot wos his name? |
21734 | Yer a cliver fellow,said Larry, as he came up, panting;"sure ye did it be chance?" |
21734 | You don''say dat? |
21734 | You would n''t have me spit in my hat, would you? |
21734 | You''d make a pretty good thing of it if you did,retorted Mr Thompson;"would they not, Lizette? |
21734 | You''ll be goin''up to the bar at the American Forks now, I calc''late? |
21734 | You''re not good at a bargain, I fear,remarked Sinton;"but what of the little girl?" |
21734 | You''ve been in California, since I last saw you, I understand? |
21734 | You''ve come from San Francisco, stranger? |
21734 | ` Four''s bid,''says I, mountin''on a keg o''baccy, and howldin up the knife;` who says more? 21734 ` Now,''says I,` wot for are ye scraggin''this old man?'' |
21734 | ` Och,''says he,` who''ll sell me a place?'' 21734 ` Why not?'' |
21734 | ` Why, what do you mean, my lad?'' 21734 ` Wot''s to do?'' |
21734 | ''Cause why? |
21734 | An''whot am I to do with it? |
21734 | And if not, is it digestible? |
21734 | Any new diggin''s discovered?" |
21734 | As he did not seem inclined to be communicative, however, Ned said again,"What is the meaning of it all? |
21734 | Besides, are we agoin''to let sich a trifle stand in the way o''us an''our fortins?" |
21734 | Besides, has n''t she got an Irish heart? |
21734 | But are you_ sure_ you know her?" |
21734 | But first tell me, how is my young friend, Ned?" |
21734 | But how has it come about? |
21734 | But what''s wrong; you look pale, and, eh? |
21734 | Captain Bunting, how are ye? |
21734 | Come on, and fire together; but aim_ low_, d''ye hear?" |
21734 | Did n''t we lay him hereabouts?" |
21734 | Do n''t I know the mizzen- mast as well as I know me right leg?" |
21734 | Do you feel better to- night?" |
21734 | Do you think we shall manage to reach the diggings to- morrow, Maxton?" |
21734 | Happy, thrice happy, the few who in that hour could truly say to Jesus,"Whom have I in heaven but Thee? |
21734 | Have ye got raisins an''sago?" |
21734 | Have you any more knives like that one?" |
21734 | Have you been successful since I left?" |
21734 | Have you been used to sit at the desk?" |
21734 | Have you ever been in an office before?" |
21734 | Have you no one to look after you?" |
21734 | Have you studied law?" |
21734 | Here Ned whispered a few words to the captain, who nodded his head, and, turning to the Yankee, said--"How much will you give?" |
21734 | Here comes the mate again-- well, Mr Williams?" |
21734 | Horoo, Mister Sinton, darlint, is it yerself? |
21734 | How are ye gittin''on in the goold way, honey?" |
21734 | How are ye, kinsman? |
21734 | How comed ye to larn me name? |
21734 | How did ye break it?" |
21734 | How far is it to the next ranche, landlord?" |
21734 | How''s her head, Larry?" |
21734 | I accept your answer to the general question; but how many people, think you, can afford to put your theory in practice?" |
21734 | I dun know yet very well how I got ashore, but I did somehow--""And did the cart go for it?" |
21734 | I gave up everything for it; I spent all my time in search of it-- and I got it-- and what good can it do me_ now_? |
21734 | I guess you''ve bin raised to that sort o''thing?" |
21734 | I hope you''re not offering to speculate in half- finished holes, or anything of that sort, eh?" |
21734 | I presume that you and your friends have just arrived at the mines?" |
21734 | I say, stranger, ai n''t you a Britisher?" |
21734 | I suppose your friend has told you how the land lies?" |
21734 | I''m not a stranger; do n''t I know all your history from first to last?" |
21734 | If ye ca n''t make things better, wot then? |
21734 | If ye ca n''t, why wot then? |
21734 | If_ he_ lose the boat, do n''t_ we_ lose the tin? |
21734 | In a few minutes he resumed,--"Well, but what do you mean by enjoying life?" |
21734 | Is n''t that a lan''scape?" |
21734 | Is the shooting good?" |
21734 | It began thus:--"My Dearest Boy,--What has become of you? |
21734 | Look alive, will you? |
21734 | Look here, Larry, can you guess what it was?" |
21734 | Look here, Tom, can you decipher this? |
21734 | Maybe there is; who knows?'' |
21734 | McLeod, where are you?" |
21734 | Mr Scotchman, I misremimber yer name, wot''s that?" |
21734 | Neither is my friend Sinton, eh?" |
21734 | Now, Mr Jefferson, in what position do you intend to sit?" |
21734 | Now, who will go with me?" |
21734 | Now, why did he do it? |
21734 | On the knocker being applied, the green door was opened by a disagreeable- looking old woman, who answered to the question,"Is Mr Moxton in?" |
21734 | See here, I have had my will drawn up long ago, with the place for the name left blank I had intended-- but no matter-- what is your name?" |
21734 | Shall I tell it you?" |
21734 | Shall we remain? |
21734 | Shure I do n''t mind the blow; it''s done me no harm-- won''t ye, now?" |
21734 | Smitten with the yellow fever, Neddy? |
21734 | So says I,` Wot''ll ye give?'' |
21734 | Stay, what was the name of the man who used to visit you?" |
21734 | Suppose we meet at the Parker House, and talk over our future plans while we discuss a chop?" |
21734 | Surely some peculiarity in the atmosphere gives that tree false proportions?" |
21734 | Tell me now, how long did it take afore it growed that long?" |
21734 | The Yankee uttered an exclamation of surprise, and asked,"Why not, stranger?" |
21734 | The result was, as formerly, a disagreeable- looking old woman, who replied to the question,"Is Mr Moxton in?" |
21734 | The rider drew up suddenly, and, leaping off his horse, cried,"Can I have a draught of water, my good woman?" |
21734 | The sick man saw him instantly, and, raising himself slightly, exclaimed,"Who goes there? |
21734 | The square lump of pork disappeared, as the captain thrust it into his cheek in order to say,"What?" |
21734 | These articles having been delivered and paid for, Larry continued--"Ye''ll have brandy, av coorse?" |
21734 | Tom looked up with a flushed countenance and a glittering eye, as he exclaimed--"Who? |
21734 | Tom replied by reining up his steed, pointing to an object in front, and inquiring,"What think you of_ that_?" |
21734 | Tom, are you wounded?" |
21734 | Up goes my rifle like wink, and the red- skin would ha''gone onder in another second, but my piece snapped-- cause why? |
21734 | Very odd, is n''t it?" |
21734 | What can it be that old Thompson''s so anxious about? |
21734 | What can it mean?" |
21734 | What did ye say was your charge for it?" |
21734 | What do you mean by it? |
21734 | What do you mean?" |
21734 | What do you mean?" |
21734 | What have you heard or seen?" |
21734 | What say you to the fact, that I am as much a beggar as yourself?" |
21734 | What say you?" |
21734 | What shall I have to pay him? |
21734 | What think you? |
21734 | What you want?" |
21734 | What''s the matter with ye? |
21734 | What_ does_ it all mean?" |
21734 | What_ has_ done it, uncle? |
21734 | What_ is_ to be done?" |
21734 | Where d''ye stop?" |
21734 | Where have you been, and where are you going next?" |
21734 | Wherever did ye come from? |
21734 | Why are_ you_ here, and what has brought me here?" |
21734 | Will that suit you?" |
21734 | Will ye try a drop?" |
21734 | Wo n''t you step in and take a cocktail or a gin- sling? |
21734 | Work, work you say, an''pay we?" |
21734 | Wos ye goin''there?" |
21734 | Wot''s the differ to us?" |
21734 | You have n''t made your fortune, I fancy?" |
21734 | You tell me you have 500 pounds?" |
21734 | ` Wot''s that for?'' |
21734 | ai n''t he a bit o''thunder?" |
21734 | an''do n''t I know the way to touch it? |
21734 | and_ who''s_ this-- a wet little girl?" |
21734 | are ye not shot, capting?" |
21734 | but it''s chape postage,"said Larry, lifting the curtain, and stepping out;"could n''t ye say thirty, now?" |
21734 | can you explain what has done it?" |
21734 | captain, where are you?" |
21734 | coughed Ned gravely,"and if we should set up in the_ other_ line, will you kindly come and board with us?" |
21734 | countryman, where''s the sick Irishman and his sister gone, that lived close to ye here?" |
21734 | cried Larry,"free, gratis, for nothin''?" |
21734 | cried Larry;"an''is there no law for sich doin''s?" |
21734 | cried McLeod, who, with Larry, had seized and cocked his rifle,"is that you, Webster?" |
21734 | cried Ned Sinton, laughing in gleeful surprise;"it''s my old boat, is n''t it? |
21734 | do you call this home?" |
21734 | exclaimed Larry,"why did n''t ye tell us the price before we tuck them?" |
21734 | exclaimed Moxton,"you''re young Sinton, I suppose?" |
21734 | exclaimed Ned Sinton, rushing up to his relative,"what_ can_ be the meaning of all this? |
21734 | faix, I''m of opinion I can prove the murder; but, first of all, how is the black villain to be diskivered?" |
21734 | gasped Tom, while the questions flashed across his mind-- Is gold- dust poison? |
21734 | got cleaned out with the trip up, an''trust to diggin''for the future? |
21734 | have ye room for a large party in there?" |
21734 | he shouted, on entering,"are you there?" |
21734 | how much d''ye say?" |
21734 | leave the gold- fields just as the sun is beginning to shine on you?" |
21734 | morther, wot nixt?" |
21734 | now, ye wo n''t tell?" |
21734 | or Indians?" |
21734 | said I,` what do you mean? |
21734 | said Ned, as they entered the somewhat gloomy defile,"which used to begin,` Once upon a time--''""Hist, Ned, is that a grizzly?" |
21734 | said Ned;"but how, in such a matter, can_ we_ help you with advice?" |
21734 | said Sam Scott, in a slightly sarcastic tone,"an''suppose I do n''t stop firin''over your shoulder, what then?" |
21734 | surely you do n''t mind a wetting?" |
21734 | thin, spake, wo n''t ye, darlin''? |
21734 | very good; which is he?" |
21734 | what have we here?" |
21734 | what''s that?" |
21734 | where are you?" |
21734 | why what''s this? |
21734 | wot do you dress your pig- tail with?" |
21734 | wot do_ you_ want?" |
21734 | you do n''t mean to say you''re-- laughing?" |
21734 | you villain, have I got you?" |
21734 | yourself again?" |
31130 | Alone? |
31130 | Are n''t you bad hurt, Lewis? |
31130 | Are you not sleepy, brother? |
31130 | Bad hurt? |
31130 | Ca n''t you get him? |
31130 | Can we get to Annawan by night? |
31130 | Can you keep going? |
31130 | Captain Boone, he tell you to come steal our hosses? |
31130 | Cómo''stà ¡( How are you)? 31130 D''ye hear, Jack? |
31130 | Did she get there? |
31130 | Did you make it, Sam? |
31130 | Do you know Captain Stuart? |
31130 | Do you know my name, sir? 31130 Do you want to rest the horses, lieutenant?" |
31130 | Eh, Bat? |
31130 | Have the men had their coffee? |
31130 | Hoss tief, hey? 31130 How do? |
31130 | How far now, Cap? |
31130 | How far''ve we come, you think? |
31130 | How far, you think? |
31130 | How many are there with him? |
31130 | How many miles is it to the spot where you left him? |
31130 | How many out there, Andy? |
31130 | How many soldiers are there in Kentucky? |
31130 | How many, Cap? |
31130 | How many? |
31130 | How? |
31130 | Hurt much? |
31130 | Hurt you much, Hallowell? |
31130 | Hurt, Hallowell? |
31130 | Hurt, Logan? |
31130 | Indians, are n''t they? |
31130 | Jenny Stupe( or did he really say:Jenny, stoop!"? |
31130 | Old woman, hand me my razor, will you? |
31130 | Out with you? 31130 Really got him, have you? |
31130 | See? 31130 Shall I pull it out?" |
31130 | Shall we leave''em and ferry ourselves over on the raft? |
31130 | Sure? |
31130 | To- night, huh? |
31130 | Vat kind a disease iss der matter mit de hosses, hey? |
31130 | Want to? |
31130 | What company have you come from last? |
31130 | What do you want? |
31130 | What have you for supper? |
31130 | What in thunder are those vagabonds down yonder fooling about? |
31130 | What is it, Hallowell, old fellow? |
31130 | What is your mind, in the matter? |
31130 | What is your name? |
31130 | What makes you shrug your shoulders so, captain? |
31130 | What news now? |
31130 | What news? |
31130 | What next? |
31130 | What they doing now, Cap? |
31130 | What they doing now, Cap? |
31130 | What they doing? |
31130 | What they up to, next, I wonder? |
31130 | What will they do with me there? |
31130 | What''ll we do, then? |
31130 | What''s that? |
31130 | What''s the best thing to do, then? |
31130 | What''s the matter, Cap? |
31130 | What''s wrong? |
31130 | What''s your fee, Doc? |
31130 | What? 31130 Where from?" |
31130 | Where now? |
31130 | Where were you going when I seized you? |
31130 | Where''s Rebecca? 31130 Whereabouts?" |
31130 | Who are you? 31130 Who are you?" |
31130 | Who says I lie? |
31130 | Who will go with me to rescue Burr Harrison? |
31130 | Who will go with me to rescue Burr Harrison? |
31130 | Who''s loaded? |
31130 | Why did you risk your one shot? |
31130 | Why did you shoot your brother? |
31130 | Why so? 31130 Will you have cow beef or horse beef?" |
31130 | Will you let Captain Logan go alone? |
31130 | You are n''t? 31130 You make good cabin? |
31130 | You see that little knoll yonder? |
31130 | A fight? |
31130 | A race it was to be, with his scalp the prize? |
31130 | A trick? |
31130 | After a time the lieutenant changed his tune, to remark:"What''s the matter with the buffalo? |
31130 | Again reprieved? |
31130 | And how many men are there in Fort McIntosh?" |
31130 | And still--"What ails the rascals?" |
31130 | And what then? |
31130 | Are you men, to let a comrade be butchered?" |
31130 | Big rascal, hey? |
31130 | Boone? |
31130 | But could he make it, when all the surrounding country was being watched by the Shawnee scouts? |
31130 | But how could they help him? |
31130 | But the next morning, where were the Shawnees? |
31130 | But what to do? |
31130 | But what was that? |
31130 | But when they four had reached a view- point, and had their glasses out, the lieutenant calmly asked:"What did you see, Frank?" |
31130 | But why did n''t you go with ma?" |
31130 | But why? |
31130 | Ca n''t you tell buff''ler from reds? |
31130 | Could the Indians hold off and see the water enter the fort-- see their prey enter, unharmed? |
31130 | Could the blamed thing possibly stand fire? |
31130 | Did I marry a coward?" |
31130 | Did he do it? |
31130 | Did he not mingle with them, and eat as they ate, and sleep as they slept, and appear perfectly satisfied? |
31130 | Did n''t we come it over''em proper?" |
31130 | Did the fellow intend to talk all night? |
31130 | Did you see how little Jack uses his left hand?" |
31130 | Do you take me for a child? |
31130 | Evidently his ambush was a success, so far, else why had these women come into his very arms, for water? |
31130 | Had Captain Boggs really been captured? |
31130 | Had he come so far, merely to be taken at last? |
31130 | Had she been hit? |
31130 | Had the Indians given up? |
31130 | Had the enemy gone in earnest-- or might it be a feint, an ambush? |
31130 | Had their cannon come? |
31130 | Had they been saved? |
31130 | Had they seen? |
31130 | Have I spoken well?" |
31130 | He had faint memory of two companions-- knew their names, or thought that he did; but where were they? |
31130 | He was safe-- but was he? |
31130 | He will be, by mornin''; but what difference to him whether he''s layin''atop the ground or under the ground? |
31130 | Hey? |
31130 | Hey? |
31130 | Hey?" |
31130 | How about water? |
31130 | How are my wife and children?" |
31130 | How could it know? |
31130 | How do?" |
31130 | How had they come, and from where? |
31130 | How many lurked in the thicket? |
31130 | How many might be spared from the feeble garrison? |
31130 | How were his family? |
31130 | How you like tief? |
31130 | How''d you get away? |
31130 | How''ll we get over? |
31130 | How- do, brudder?" |
31130 | If I had thought such a thing that he says, would I have been foolish enough to say it to him? |
31130 | If I surrender, you treat me well? |
31130 | Know how?" |
31130 | Listen? |
31130 | Miamis?" |
31130 | Must he die at the stake? |
31130 | N- no? |
31130 | No hurt?" |
31130 | Now what to do? |
31130 | Now, what is the American force in Kentucky? |
31130 | One rascal white man, hey?" |
31130 | Or a trap? |
31130 | Or did n''t they care? |
31130 | Pretty soon--"How far now, Cap?" |
31130 | Say, you are n''t going to leave me?" |
31130 | See that Shawnee scalp? |
31130 | See that fellow glidin''like a snake? |
31130 | See the brush shake? |
31130 | Shall we make a running fight, Chapman?" |
31130 | She appealed to her husband:"Are you a coward, too? |
31130 | Should he be killed? |
31130 | Steal Injun''s hoss, hey? |
31130 | Surrender to you, you yaller varmints?" |
31130 | The Sioux were out of sight; there were no sounds of pursuit; was it possible that they had been let off? |
31130 | The cannon? |
31130 | The only point to be discussed was, how should he die? |
31130 | Then why did n''t they hasten on, if they were in a hurry to join Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull, and share in the plunder to be gained from the fights? |
31130 | Then why should I have told my thoughts to him, as he says? |
31130 | They entered Mexico; all were liable to arrest, but who cared? |
31130 | They had avoided two outposts; were there others, still? |
31130 | They had gone; or had n''t they? |
31130 | They knew it well; had they not worked hard here, when bound for the Columbia in the summer of 1805? |
31130 | Troops were coming? |
31130 | Was he down? |
31130 | Was he fatally hurt? |
31130 | Was he going to escape? |
31130 | Was he going to talk again-- and daylight so near? |
31130 | Was he searching? |
31130 | Was he to be eaten alive, like a deer? |
31130 | Was it to be another day of stress? |
31130 | Was n''t that reasonable? |
31130 | Was she down? |
31130 | Were they actually saved? |
31130 | Whar be ye?" |
31130 | Whar''s the rascals that stole all my plunder?" |
31130 | What could they few do? |
31130 | What did it have around it? |
31130 | What did they fear? |
31130 | What do you think?" |
31130 | What had happened? |
31130 | What is it?" |
31130 | What kind of a man is he-- how did he look?" |
31130 | What next? |
31130 | What of the cowardly Tutelu? |
31130 | What was that? |
31130 | What was that? |
31130 | What was the matter? |
31130 | What, indeed? |
31130 | What, then? |
31130 | What? |
31130 | What? |
31130 | What? |
31130 | When?" |
31130 | Where from?" |
31130 | Where live, fat boy?" |
31130 | Where live?" |
31130 | Where was Kit Carson? |
31130 | Where were the reinforcements? |
31130 | Whether they had been seen, who might tell? |
31130 | White boys? |
31130 | Who are they? |
31130 | Who do you aim to be?" |
31130 | Who goes there?" |
31130 | Who might say? |
31130 | Who might tell? |
31130 | Who more willing to act the spy than the happy- go- lucky young giant, fair- haired Simon Kenton alias Butler? |
31130 | Who now wanted him to live? |
31130 | Who''ll go and fetch it on the run?" |
31130 | Who''ll go with me?" |
31130 | Who''ll slip away and break for Lexington?" |
31130 | Who''ll take the back trail? |
31130 | Who''s afraid of the old men? |
31130 | Why had he not been killed before? |
31130 | Why send us out? |
31130 | Why?" |
31130 | Women? |
31130 | Would he make it? |
31130 | Would the Madison save him? |
31130 | Would the store hold out? |
31130 | Would they make it? |
31130 | Would they never quit? |
31130 | Would you cheat us out of him, when the people ahead are expecting great pleasure?" |
31130 | You''d send the women out, to those tomahawks?" |
31130 | You? |
31130 | he said,"Which are you most afraid of: me, or those Indians?" |
31252 | ''What grieves you, boy?'' 31252 A fact, also, that his thoughts are so wrapped up in the moccasins that he has none left for his prayers?" |
31252 | A fact, too, that he had no thanks in his heart for the beautiful moccasins, which his kindest of fathers gave him one night last week? |
31252 | A particular friend of yours sent you a pair of red moccasins one night last week-- did your father deliver them to you? |
31252 | All right? |
31252 | And did he beg you to get him a pair while you were gone to the land of Pocahontas? |
31252 | And did you ask permission of your father or mother, sir? |
31252 | And did you obtain their permission? |
31252 | And for why? |
31252 | And how long shall I have to wait for the day? |
31252 | And is your name Ben Logan? |
31252 | And that little girl there, at the foot of my bed, is her name Bertha? |
31252 | And the fat, young bear we brought you the day before yesterday? |
31252 | And the fat, young buck we brought you the day before that? |
31252 | And these two pretty people here, are they my father and mother, really, now? |
31252 | And this place, where we all are, is it really grandpap''s house, and no mistake? |
31252 | And wear your red moccasins? |
31252 | And what can Jervis Whitney do for Nick of the Woods? |
31252 | And what did you tell her? 31252 And what did your mam say to you, as you were climbing the fence?" |
31252 | And who said it was n''t? |
31252 | And who would carry your feet? |
31252 | And why do you wish to go to grandpap''s house? |
31252 | And would n''t you like for me to go and see how they are? |
31252 | And you wo n''t kick up, and rear up and cut capers, like a horse? |
31252 | And you wo n''t scratch me with your long, sharp claws? |
31252 | And you wo n''t, like the bull and the cat and the wolf, go a- jumping over there, at that steep place in the hill? |
31252 | Are we not beautiful things for the feet, Sprigg? 31252 But Sprigg, have you so soon forgotten what pap was telling us last night of his adventures between here and our old home? |
31252 | But come, now, Nick; you ca n''t stand there and tell me that Sprigg is as bad a boy as Jack Bean- Stalk? |
31252 | But may we not postpone the trial for a season, till he be stronger to endure it? |
31252 | But, Sprigg, why not the boots, which I have been promising you for a year or more? 31252 But, bethink you, how much it lacks of being wholly his own fault? |
31252 | But, while we shall be doing so much to please the whim of your son Manitou- Echo, what shall we be doing to please or benefit my son Sprigg? |
31252 | But, who are these? |
31252 | Ca n''t you give your poor pap some little sign of welcome first? |
31252 | Can you ride a bear? |
31252 | Did any one see you as you were taking your departure? |
31252 | Did he pray? |
31252 | Did he pray? |
31252 | Did he pray? |
31252 | Did he swear? |
31252 | Did he swear? |
31252 | Did he swear? |
31252 | Did you have them on when you left home? |
31252 | Ding- dong bell, when the fools are all dead, Then we will have plenty of butter and bread, wo n''t we, Pow- wow? |
31252 | Do like the bull and the cat and the wolf? 31252 Do you not see how it hurts the poor boy to be laughed at? |
31252 | Funny enough to make a dog laugh, is n''t it, Pow- wow? |
31252 | Has Friar''s lantern lighted the hypocrite''s feet to the quicksands? |
31252 | Has Jack- o''-Lantern lighted the bad boy''s feet to the frog- pond? |
31252 | Has he not teased you much of late for a pair of red moccasins? |
31252 | Have you worn them to- day? |
31252 | Have you worn them yet? |
31252 | How came I here? |
31252 | I say, what''s wrong about my moonshine? 31252 I was longing to ask if-- what''s his name?" |
31252 | Is that an English name, or Indian name? |
31252 | Is that terrible ordeal his only chance? |
31252 | Kick up, and rear up and cut capers, like a horse? 31252 My name is Sprigg, then, sure enough?" |
31252 | Now, what did I tell you? 31252 Pow- wow, is it really you, old pard, and no mistake? |
31252 | Some folks ought to be told what fools they are, ought n''t they, Pow- wow? |
31252 | Some folks think they are monstrous smart, do n''t they, Pow- wow? |
31252 | Sprigg,said Elster, in a grieved and reproachful voice,"are all your thanks for the dog? |
31252 | Then he must have swum? |
31252 | Then why do n''t you, and prove it? |
31252 | Well, and how is my son Sprigg to run this race with your son Manitou- Echo? |
31252 | Well, then, if not to church, to grandmam''s quilting? |
31252 | Were n''t you terribly frightened, Ben? |
31252 | What particular place did you have in your mind, as your journey''s end, when you set out from home? |
31252 | Where am I? |
31252 | Whither, dear Elster? |
31252 | Who calls Jervis Whitney? |
31252 | Who plies her loom, with shuttle and beam, and sings at her work with so blithe a heart? 31252 Who sits here at this late hour on Manitou hill, hiding himself from my moonshine? |
31252 | Who, I say? |
31252 | Will he be less of a thief for the pit- fall? |
31252 | Will he be the less of a rogue for the frog- pond? |
31252 | Will he be the less of a scamp for the quicksands? |
31252 | Will- o''-the- Wisp, have you lighted the robber''s feet to the pit- fall? |
31252 | You could bark tip a tree and do better than that, could n''t you, Pow- wow? |
31252 | You wo n''t bite me with your long, sharp teeth, will you? |
31252 | A gaunt- ribbed wolf, with teeth so long and sharp? |
31252 | A shaggy- coated bear, with claws so long and sharp? |
31252 | And are we all alive and here at grandpap''s house, and no dreaming about it? |
31252 | And now, Sprigg, do n''t you see that with these red moccasins on your feet you are as swift as a young wild goose, if not swifter? |
31252 | And the bright sun? |
31252 | And who was little Bertha? |
31252 | And why did he fumble so long at the moccasin latches? |
31252 | And why? |
31252 | And why? |
31252 | And why? |
31252 | And why? |
31252 | And why? |
31252 | And, Sprigg, would you like to be called a monkey? |
31252 | And, after all, why deplore it? |
31252 | But before we proceed any further, you may as well tell me how you like the looks of the bull and the cat and the wolf-- as well as do you mine?" |
31252 | But granting it to be as we say, how does the circumstance interest Nick of the Woods?" |
31252 | But his pursuers, who and where are they? |
31252 | But is n''t he fine? |
31252 | But now they were on, why was the boy not up and away? |
31252 | But where is the fence, and the trees-- where are they? |
31252 | But why so trembled his hands? |
31252 | But wo n''t he, though? |
31252 | But, Jervis Whitney-- now, where did I ever hear that name? |
31252 | CHAPTER V. Who Gave Sprigg The Red Moccasins? |
31252 | Can not? |
31252 | Can you tell us that?" |
31252 | Could it be possible that he had climbed it without conscious effort? |
31252 | Did the eye see that? |
31252 | Does he not mourn to think of the pain and distress which, by his most undutiful conduct, he is causing his dear father and his dear, dear mother?" |
31252 | Fresh and spry? |
31252 | Have you none for pap? |
31252 | He Has Them-- What Shall He Do With Them? |
31252 | His name''s Sprigg, is it? |
31252 | How could such shadows be cast? |
31252 | How is this case to be treated?" |
31252 | If a lock of hair is good for keeping one''s mind on a friend, why not as good for keeping his body there, too?" |
31252 | Is not turkey- cock just as proud of his homely feathers as peacock of his magnificent plumes? |
31252 | May not these plead for him?" |
31252 | Meg,"Not to leave out his secret designs on young Ben Logan and little Bertha Bryant? |
31252 | Not to leave out those secret designs on-- what did Manitou- Echo call them-- the boy and the girl?" |
31252 | Not yet? |
31252 | Now, after a somewhat longer pause than before, he put the startling question:"Ben, did you ever see Nick of the Woods?" |
31252 | Now, how is this to be brought about? |
31252 | Now, sir, as you are getting a little glib, will you go still further and tell us how old you are?" |
31252 | Now, sir, out with it-- straight as an arrow, plump as a bullet-- what did you tell your mother, as you were climbing the fence?" |
31252 | Now, sir, what''s your name?" |
31252 | Pow- wow, did Nick of the Woods ever give you a pair of red moccasins? |
31252 | Pow- wow, were you ever chased by the Manitous? |
31252 | Tell us-- me and Pow- wow-- how you liked the buffalo we brought home for you yesterday?" |
31252 | That is the way, I think; or why should they keep on calling me for him? |
31252 | The bear paused for a moment; then, in a voice quite soft and gentle for him, said:"But you mourn in your heart for having done this thing?" |
31252 | Then, what can catch you? |
31252 | Was that yesterday, or the moment gone but now? |
31252 | Well, suppose if a civilized white boy should happen to have a pair of red moccasins, what could he do with them?" |
31252 | What can hurt you? |
31252 | What could it have been? |
31252 | What did you tell your mother?" |
31252 | What do you see in the coals?" |
31252 | What else could we do? |
31252 | What found he there? |
31252 | What is it, my dove?" |
31252 | What is that? |
31252 | What manner of disappearance might this be? |
31252 | What manner of disappearance might this be? |
31252 | What might this mean? |
31252 | What think you Sprigg saw there, in the wild and lonesome woods? |
31252 | What was it he saw? |
31252 | What''s to hinder? |
31252 | What''s wrong about my moonshine?" |
31252 | What, though, does this signify to us Manitous? |
31252 | Where were the red moccasins? |
31252 | Where''s the use of a feller''s always waiting?" |
31252 | Who could have thought it? |
31252 | Who roams the forest, with dog and gun, and follows the chase with heart so bold? |
31252 | Who said our Sprigg was not a brave boy? |
31252 | Who said our Sprigg was not a brave boy? |
31252 | Who said our Sprigg was not a brave boy? |
31252 | Who said our Sprigg was not a brave boy? |
31252 | Who said we could n''t take Sprigg to grandpap''s house? |
31252 | Who said we could n''t take Sprigg to pretty little Bertha''s house? |
31252 | Who said we could n''t take Sprigg to young Ben Logan''s house? |
31252 | Who, with pretty, young eyes overflowing with soft, sweet tears, stood gazing at Sprigg and his mother, where they lay side by side together? |
31252 | Whose fault? |
31252 | Why did you not cast off the terrible moccasins then and there? |
31252 | Why did you not get him the boots you have been promising him? |
31252 | Why trembled he so all over? |
31252 | Why, Nick, he is as bad as Robinson Crusoe, is he not?" |
31252 | Will he be warned? |
31252 | Will they do so still? |
31252 | Will you please enlighten me, sir, with a few more gleams of your moonshine?" |
31252 | Yet what assurance had he that these things also were not dreams? |
31252 | You may not know every crook and turn of it as well as you do of the other, that is true; but we do, so what''s the difference? |
31252 | and is''Sir''all a boy has to say for himself, who dodged my moonshine? |
31252 | frightened, my brave old fellow? |
31252 | growled the bear; and then in a mocking tone added:"Oh, he is trying to dodge me, is he? |
31252 | the moccasins!--where are my red moccasins?" |
31252 | who would have thought it? |
31252 | wo n''t you get me a pair of red moccasins while you are gone, please?" |
10316 | A fixed engine? |
10316 | All right, has it anything to do with the key? |
10316 | And leather cases of writing paper? |
10316 | And still making them flapjacks, hey? |
10316 | And that''s all you''re ever going to admit, hey? |
10316 | Any news? 10316 Anyway, we got the letters mailed,"I said;"what do I care? |
10316 | Are n''t you fellows going to the boat races down at Catskill? |
10316 | Are they gone? |
10316 | Are you a hero? |
10316 | Are you a tramp? |
10316 | Are you_ sure_? |
10316 | But how did he happen to be in the cove? 10316 By who?" |
10316 | Can patrol leaders keep secrets? |
10316 | Could n''t we drop one of those saplings into it and I could shin up that? |
10316 | Did n''t you just have dinner? |
10316 | Did you ever cook bear''s meat? |
10316 | Did you mind? |
10316 | Do n''t you know enough to have your door open to the south or east or west-- what''s the difference? |
10316 | Do n''t you know who I am? |
10316 | Do you call that fair and square? |
10316 | Do you hear the sound of water rushing? |
10316 | Do you know what erosion is? |
10316 | Do you still say he did n''t do it? |
10316 | Do you think I look like a tramp? |
10316 | Do you want the paddle? |
10316 | Do_ you_ think he''s crazy and a thief? |
10316 | Ever been up in an airplane? |
10316 | Ever notice how blue the Hudson is above Poughkeepsie? |
10316 | Ever see a tiger use a crutch before? |
10316 | Ever take a good look at Skinny? |
10316 | Four cents and a key,I said;"now are you satisfied?" |
10316 | Four pennies,I said,"see? |
10316 | Get out,he said,"really?" |
10316 | Give us a lift over, will you? |
10316 | Good fishing bait around here, hey? 10316 Good idea,"he said;"any news of the little codger?" |
10316 | Guess you never talked much with the old farmers, hey? |
10316 | Hanged if_ I_ know,I said;"what about Skinny?" |
10316 | Have you got drainage? |
10316 | Have you got them? 10316 He gave it to Mr. Ellsworth, huh?" |
10316 | Here in camp, you mean? |
10316 | Heroes are n''t usually thieves, are they? |
10316 | How about camp- fire? |
10316 | How about the camping fellow? |
10316 | How about_ you_? |
10316 | How do you suppose Skinny happened to get there? |
10316 | I did n''t mean Skinny,I told him;"but he has got two good friends, anyway, and that''s us, hey?" |
10316 | I forgot all about that,I said;"did n''t Vic treat me to a soda only last week? |
10316 | I would n''t tell,I told him;"cracky, why should_ I_ tell? |
10316 | I''d sure have been drowned if I_ had n''t_ come,he laughed;"I wonder if you fellows can sell us a shovel? |
10316 | If you want me to be loyal to you, I have to be loyal if I make a promise, do n''t I? |
10316 | In what? |
10316 | Is Temple Camp all right, do you suppose? |
10316 | Is n''t Pee- wee fog horn enough? |
10316 | Is that all I shall do? |
10316 | Is that what_ you''re_ saying? |
10316 | It''s a wonder you would n''t get into shallow water; do you know how many feet you''ve got? |
10316 | Kind of a performing bear, hey? |
10316 | Kind of damp, huh? |
10316 | Kind of like the kid, do n''t you? |
10316 | Know where that is, do n''t you? |
10316 | Look down at the bottom, over at the left side,he said;"do you see something?" |
10316 | Maybe he hid muskets or powder from the redcoats there, hey? |
10316 | Maybe it changed its mind and made the lake because it knew the scouts were coming, hey? |
10316 | More than one way to kill a cat, hey? |
10316 | Nice fellows, eh? |
10316 | None whatever,Mr. Ellsworth said;"how much money was there?" |
10316 | Nothing would shake you, huh? |
10316 | Now am I a hero? |
10316 | Now are you satisfied? |
10316 | Now this is Nick''s Valley,Bert said;"it''s all full of puddles, hey? |
10316 | Now, Alf,Mr. Ellsworth said,"why did n''t you give me this key, eh?" |
10316 | Now, Blakeley,he said, kind of more serious like, while he rowed around;"what are we going to do about it? |
10316 | Oh, is that so? |
10316 | Only on account of the name, Nick''s Cove,I said;"is he dead?" |
10316 | See that old silo there? 10316 See,"Bert said,"what did I tell you?" |
10316 | So you have to be careful,I told him,"not to be saying that you have a reward for being honest, see?" |
10316 | Some cruise, hey? |
10316 | Suppose Lieutenant Donnelle writes and says he does n''t know anything about the money? |
10316 | Suppose it should n''t bring you out anywhere? |
10316 | Suppose you''re not there? |
10316 | Sure it is,I said;"what else do you suppose it is?" |
10316 | Swims like an eel,Winton said;"why did n''t they take him hiking, I wonder?" |
10316 | That is n''t the water, is it? |
10316 | That you, Blakeley? |
10316 | That''s where we came through only a little while ago,I said,"how will it be inside where the lake was-- is?" |
10316 | The which? |
10316 | The which? |
10316 | Then does n''t that prove that he''s innocent? |
10316 | There_ are_ some races, are n''t there? |
10316 | They went on a hike,he called back;"can I go with you?" |
10316 | They would n''t, huh? |
10316 | Those fellows went to Catskill did n''t they? |
10316 | Thrilling, hey? |
10316 | Through thick and thin? |
10316 | Well then, here we are,he said, with an awful funny smile,"and the question is, where is the little skinny fellow?" |
10316 | Well then, why do n''t you take more interest in it for_ their_ sake? |
10316 | Well, if he wanted to be by himself,I said,"why should I track him?" |
10316 | Well, kid,Bert said( most always he called me that),"things get worser and worser, hey?" |
10316 | Well, then, if you think it was so important to track him, why did n''t you track him? |
10316 | Well, what do you know about that? |
10316 | Well, what do you think those twins did? 10316 Well, why do you want to know?" |
10316 | Well, you can have a soda on me, ca n''t you? |
10316 | What did he do? |
10316 | What do I care for the Elks? |
10316 | What do I care? |
10316 | What do I want to look at it for? |
10316 | What do I want with the cross? |
10316 | What do you say we fish it up some day? |
10316 | What do you say we row across and cut through Nick''s Valley? |
10316 | What do you say? |
10316 | What do you want that for? |
10316 | What else can you do? 10316 What else did they say?" |
10316 | What for? |
10316 | What for? |
10316 | What is it? |
10316 | What makes you think so? |
10316 | What race? |
10316 | What time are they? |
10316 | What would be the use? |
10316 | What''ll I do with it? |
10316 | What''s the good of getting excited? |
10316 | What''s_ he_ got to do with it, anyway? |
10316 | When I win them the badge, then they''ll take me, wo n''t they? |
10316 | Where is the canoe? |
10316 | Where was it? |
10316 | Where''s your patrol? |
10316 | Where-- did-- you-- where is Skinny? |
10316 | Who are you? 10316 Who dived?" |
10316 | Who says so? |
10316 | Who''ll make us? |
10316 | Who''s going to ask you? |
10316 | Who''s there? |
10316 | Who''s there? |
10316 | Why do n''t you track an angleworm some day? |
10316 | Why should I care about circumstantial evidence? 10316 Why should n''t I talk in chunks, I''d like to know?" |
10316 | Why should you hunt for him at all, then? |
10316 | Will I be able to beat everybody swimming? |
10316 | Will the twins make them? |
10316 | Wonder what the old man thinks about it? 10316 Would you really like to know who I am?" |
10316 | Would you? |
10316 | Yes,I said,"and where is he now? |
10316 | You call this a bed? |
10316 | You do n''t hear Mr. Ellsworth around saying mean things about Skinny, do you? 10316 You do n''t know what key it is, I suppose, Alf?" |
10316 | You keep your hands off my patrol,that''s just what he said;"and you need n''t start hinting that the Elks are dishonest--""Who''s hinting that?" |
10316 | You know well enough why,he said;"who started the rule about not having two of the same merit badges in a patrol?" |
10316 | You locked the padlock and took the key, did n''t you? |
10316 | You mean an engine? |
10316 | You mean to tell me to go and sweep the wind off the deck? |
10316 | You think you''re smart talking about_ recent rains,_ do n''t you? |
10316 | You would n''t want your scout suit to get all wet, would you? |
10316 | You''re a regular Calamity Jane,Bert said;"ca n''t you think of something better than that to worry about?" |
10316 | You''re not going to tell_ them_, are you? |
10316 | ''I''ll get''em all greased up and what''ll Uncle Sam say?'' |
10316 | ''What, in these togs?'' |
10316 | ( I was n''t going to be calling him Skinny,) I said,"You go and ask Vic Norris if he''s got an awl or a small gimlet-- see? |
10316 | A killie, huh? |
10316 | Above the shore south of Nick''s Cove-- near the outlet? |
10316 | After a few seconds I called,"Are you all right?" |
10316 | Ai n''t none of yer died or gone off ter war, hey? |
10316 | All right then, what became of it? |
10316 | All right then, who did? |
10316 | All right, shall I push off?" |
10316 | All the while Mr. Ellsworth kept saying,"Shh, shh, Roy,"but what did I care? |
10316 | Am I right, Roy?" |
10316 | And I guess I had a right to run away from the boat, did n''t I?" |
10316 | And I''ve gone without sleep fifty hours at a stretch on the West Front in France-- would you believe it?" |
10316 | And anyway, I would n''t have any right to go in and spoil what our scoutmaster said, would I? |
10316 | And do you want to know what he told me? |
10316 | And duck your head and do a summersault forward-- see? |
10316 | And even suppose he did, what was the harm? |
10316 | And he said,"Yes, but will you bore a hole in it so I can wear it around my neck?" |
10316 | And where would Temple Camp be, I''d like to know? |
10316 | Any idea who it belongs to?" |
10316 | Any news?" |
10316 | Anybody got a lantern?" |
10316 | Anything particular?" |
10316 | Are they all right?" |
10316 | Are they ashamed of him? |
10316 | Are they yours?" |
10316 | Are you all right, Bert?" |
10316 | Are you straight?" |
10316 | Are you worrying about anything?" |
10316 | Because I know young mackinaw jacket and because I know Skinny-- see? |
10316 | Because look at Rob Roy,"he said;"was n''t he a bully hero and a good scout and a fellow you could trust with a secret-- wasn''t he?" |
10316 | Bert Winton( that was the new fellow) watched him, kind of laughing, and then he said,"Queer little codger, is n''t he?" |
10316 | Bert said,"A kick? |
10316 | Bet the kid wo n''t sleep to- night, hey?" |
10316 | But will the lake be there when we get back, because I''ve got some eel lines out?" |
10316 | CHAPTER III TELLS HOW I MADE A PROMISE Then he said,"Were you one of the kids who were coming along with my father when I jumped out of the boat?" |
10316 | CHAPTER VII TELLS ABOUT MY MERIT BADGE Was n''t that a crazy thing? |
10316 | CHAPTER XXXV TELLS ABOUT A NEW CAMP"That you, kiddo?" |
10316 | Ca n''t you see he''s all right?" |
10316 | Camp McCord is the name of the place and--""But how about rescuing Skinny?" |
10316 | Can you beat that? |
10316 | Can you come out alone?" |
10316 | Come ahead, and let go my arm, do you hear? |
10316 | Could you put me up for a couple of nights? |
10316 | Did I ever say you were not? |
10316 | Did I have any quarrel with you, Vic?" |
10316 | Did n''t Mr. Ellsworth tell you that?" |
10316 | Did n''t hit his tracks, did you?" |
10316 | Did n''t you know he was dead?" |
10316 | Did you ever eat those? |
10316 | Do n''t happen to know anything about it, do you?" |
10316 | Do n''t you suppose he had something better to do with himself when he was saving that gold dust twin, than to be going through his pockets?" |
10316 | Do n''t you think we''re old enough to take care of our new members? |
10316 | Do you believe that about the Elks throwing him down? |
10316 | Do you get that? |
10316 | Do you hear a sound like groaning?" |
10316 | Do you hear the voice now?" |
10316 | Do you like mysteries? |
10316 | Do you mean that some fine day we''ll wake up and find Black Lake has sneaked off?" |
10316 | Do you see the ring? |
10316 | Do you see this fellow that''s with me? |
10316 | Do you suppose I want to carry two fellows through there? |
10316 | Do you suppose I''d let anybody say you were n''t on the square? |
10316 | Do you think you know better than they do, what is best for you?" |
10316 | Do you want everybody leaving camp? |
10316 | Do you want to get us all in Dutch?" |
10316 | Doc said, all excited;"do you see it?" |
10316 | Does n''t that prove it?" |
10316 | Ellsworth?" |
10316 | Even after that the rain did n''t stop and I was just going to start out anyway, when a man who was in there said,"Why do n''t you try one more?" |
10316 | Even if you did, how could you get out? |
10316 | Ever hear of old Nick?" |
10316 | Ever hear of the scouts''oath? |
10316 | Ever look into those gray eyes of his?" |
10316 | Ever notice how the cedar shingles shrink in a dry spell?" |
10316 | Ever read_ Treasure Island?_""_ Did I!_"I said. |
10316 | Ever talk with a civil engineer?" |
10316 | Ever try to row feather- stroke, Blakeley?" |
10316 | For a minute he just kept moving the stick around and then he said,"What would be the use of telling you?" |
10316 | For about half a minute we walked along together, and then he said kind of quiet, sort of,"Do you think he''s crazy?" |
10316 | Gee williger, I do n''t see where there was any harm in that, do you? |
10316 | Gee, williger, a story that''s being towed against the tide would n''t have much action, would it? |
10316 | Hain''t you never goin''ter grow, Pee- wee? |
10316 | Hanged if I see why they do n''t join in with them and be done with it, hey? |
10316 | Has he done any good turns?" |
10316 | Has it anything to do with Skinny?" |
10316 | Have n''t I got anything to say about it? |
10316 | Have n''t you got sense enough to see that? |
10316 | He began clutching me by the arm and saying,"I got it for keeping my eyes open, did n''t I? |
10316 | He just said,"Well, what of it? |
10316 | He just said,"When?" |
10316 | He said very low as if he was all discouraged sort of,"Roy,"he said,"you said something about going home for your sister''s birthday?" |
10316 | He said, all excited like,"I can sneak up on''em, so then can I have the badge-- for sneaking-- like you said?" |
10316 | He said,"Ai n''t it good to be honest?" |
10316 | He said,"Can I learn them right now?" |
10316 | He said,"Can I sit down alongside of you?" |
10316 | He said,"Can I try for it now?" |
10316 | He said,"Me? |
10316 | He said,"The swimming badge is a good one, is n''t it?" |
10316 | He said,"What kind of things?" |
10316 | He said,"What promise?" |
10316 | He said,"What''s the matter with you lately?" |
10316 | He said,"Yes?" |
10316 | He said,"You mean Winton?" |
10316 | He was all excited and said,"Now I''ve got a regular merit badge, ai n''t I?" |
10316 | Hear that night hawk?" |
10316 | Hey? |
10316 | How are you, anyway?" |
10316 | How did I know it was his? |
10316 | How did the fellows treat him to- day? |
10316 | How do I know all this? |
10316 | How would you ever get out?" |
10316 | I asked him;"how did you get him to Catskill? |
10316 | I could see all the lights in the town, too, but what did I care? |
10316 | I got it for being honest and asking all the scout guys, did n''t I?" |
10316 | I got on one fox trail, did n''t I? |
10316 | I guess his troop will go home now, hey?" |
10316 | I guess maybe you''d better look at the map now, hey? |
10316 | I guess they did n''t know what to do with themselves, hey? |
10316 | I just said very sober like( because I''m not afraid of him),"Did Skinny take any more money?" |
10316 | I just said,"What-- is it you-- Bert? |
10316 | I said to Bert-- that''s what I called him now-- I said,"If that was true about the money, he would n''t get the gold cross, would he?" |
10316 | I said,"Are you mad at Skinny?" |
10316 | I said,"Bert, you''ve got the cross already-- haven''t you? |
10316 | I said,"Did you have a good dinner, kiddo?" |
10316 | I said,"Do you know what that''s a key to?" |
10316 | I said,"How on earth did you get to Catskill with him?" |
10316 | I said,"I do n''t know why I did n''t""If you thought he just went off to be by himself, why did n''t you trail him and make sure?" |
10316 | I said,"Suppose Mr. Ellsworth or somebody should ask me?" |
10316 | I said,"What do you mean?" |
10316 | I said,"Why?" |
10316 | I said,"You mean the gold dust twins? |
10316 | I said,"You mean you?" |
10316 | I said,"You think of everything, do n''t you?" |
10316 | I thought I''d better watch my step-- safety first, hey? |
10316 | If I do n''t make it, try to land on your feet-- a little forward-- like this-- see? |
10316 | If he is n''t good enough for you, he''s good enough-- do you see that cabin up on the hill? |
10316 | If you know anything about it, why do n''t you say so? |
10316 | Is he dead?" |
10316 | Is n''t he some scoutmaster? |
10316 | Is the swimming one better than that?" |
10316 | It''s all right to like a fellow that is n''t in your patrol, is n''t it?" |
10316 | It''s pretty deep, but the main question is,''is it wide enough?'' |
10316 | It''s to keep your mouth shut-- see? |
10316 | Know where the water went? |
10316 | Let''s see where was I? |
10316 | Listen, do you know what those fellows were doing? |
10316 | Look at that fish, will you? |
10316 | Maybe I would have said I knew only I did n''t want to tell, hey? |
10316 | Maybe he''ll think that a little fellow like Skinny is n''t important, and that''s the trouble, hey? |
10316 | Maybe it will come without calling, hey? |
10316 | Maybe somebody went with him to the house- boat, or maybe somebody followed him, hey? |
10316 | Mr. Ellsworth raised his eyebrows in that way he has and said,"Is n''t that a good deal of money for two young fellows to take camping?" |
10316 | Mr. What''s- his- name back?" |
10316 | Nobody was here, see?" |
10316 | Now can I have the badge?" |
10316 | Now, if this here old craft was an automobile, how much would I have to pay for tires with a blow- out every minute, huh?" |
10316 | Now, that''s just where we went through, see? |
10316 | One of our boys might have dropped some change and never known it But how did the key happen to be there? |
10316 | Only sometime will you tell me some of the things you did-- I mean your adventures?" |
10316 | Ought to appeal to_ you_, hey? |
10316 | Pee- wee shouted back,"Two; what do you think we are, quadrupeds?" |
10316 | Poor but honest, hey, Alf?" |
10316 | Poor, but honest, hey? |
10316 | Pretty soon Bert Winton leaned over and said to me,"Do you suppose that''s true about his father?" |
10316 | Pretty soon I heard a voice calling,"What''s your hurry, Blakeley?" |
10316 | Pretty soon he said,"You do n''t happen to know where Alfred went when he disappeared, do you, Roy?" |
10316 | Probably he was thinking about how he was going to win them the silver cup, hey? |
10316 | Savvy? |
10316 | Scouts are tramps anyway, hey? |
10316 | See? |
10316 | Shall I try it? |
10316 | So it''s better for_ me_ to skip than for_ you_, hey? |
10316 | So now will you keep your mouth shut? |
10316 | So will you please answer this letter right away? |
10316 | So will you please do that? |
10316 | Some of them will say,"Oh, there go some boy scouts, are n''t they cute?" |
10316 | Somebody said,"How about the French coin? |
10316 | That means to follow a bird or an animal and watch them without them knowing anything about it-- see?" |
10316 | That sounds like a regular author, hey? |
10316 | The Indian scouts''oath, I mean-- loyalty for better or worser? |
10316 | Then Connie said,"Why in the dickens do n''t you speak up, Skinny? |
10316 | Then I called,"You know Rebel''s Cave, do n''t you? |
10316 | Then I just happened to think to say,"Did you hear all he shouted out on the lake? |
10316 | Then I said,"Did you say anything to Connie and the Elks?" |
10316 | Then I said,"If you wore that on account of being honest, that would insult all the other fellows, would n''t it?" |
10316 | Then I said,"What did they want?" |
10316 | Then Mr. Ellsworth just laid down the key and put stamps on two or three letters and said"All right, Roy, just see that these get mailed, will you?" |
10316 | Then Westy said,"So that''s their game, is it?" |
10316 | Then all the fellows would like me, would n''t they?" |
10316 | Then he hit me a good rap on the shoulder and said,"So you see how it was, kiddo? |
10316 | Then he said, kind of as if he did n''t take much interest-- he said,"Actions speak louder than words; did you ever hear that?" |
10316 | Then he said,"Are you game to help me in a dark plot?" |
10316 | Then he said,"Ca n''t I stay here with them?" |
10316 | Then he said,"Hmph, it''s a Yale key, belonging to a padlock, eh? |
10316 | Then he said,"You do n''t think he saw me, do you?" |
10316 | Then he said:"_ Some_ scout, hey?" |
10316 | Then he sort of whispered,"Anybody up there, Skeezeks?" |
10316 | Then what?" |
10316 | Then, all of a sudden Skinny blurted out,"Am I a hero?" |
10316 | Then, all of a sudden, Wig Weigand shouted,"Look at that, will you? |
10316 | These fellows all in your patrol?" |
10316 | This is just what he said; he said,"When I heard your name was Roy, I knew you''d be all right-- see? |
10316 | Two or three times we heard him sputtering and shouting,"_ Now can I have that badge?_"Late that afternoon they let him dive off the deck. |
10316 | Uncle Jeb said,"Wall, Roay"--that''s just the way he talks, slow like;"haow''s all the boys from Bridgeboro? |
10316 | Understand? |
10316 | Was I up in the air? |
10316 | Was n''t that a peach of an address? |
10316 | We know how it happened in Alfred''s pocket, but how did it happen on the deck? |
10316 | We sold three boatfuls in the one day and whacked up about seventy dollars-- what do you think of that? |
10316 | We''ve had one flood already; is n''t that enough? |
10316 | Were you thinking about how they got mad at you?" |
10316 | Westy whispered;"have they got jackknives hanging from their belts?" |
10316 | What are all these fellows to think? |
10316 | What are you doing there?" |
10316 | What chance does_ he_ stand if Vic is after it? |
10316 | What d''ye say we go back?" |
10316 | What did I care about going tracking or stalking with my patrol? |
10316 | What did circumstantial evidence ever do for_ me_, I''d like to know?" |
10316 | What do you know about that? |
10316 | What do you say?" |
10316 | What do you say?" |
10316 | What do you say?" |
10316 | What do you suppose_ he_ cares about money-- a fellow that can do things like that? |
10316 | What do you think of that?" |
10316 | What have_ you_ got to do with our patrol anyway? |
10316 | What is it you want me to do?" |
10316 | What key is it, my boy?" |
10316 | What''d you think of that?" |
10316 | When I got to our cabin all the fellows were asleep, except Westy, and I said to him,"Do you know that scout who''s patrol leader in the Ohio troop?" |
10316 | When Mr. Ellsworth came on board he said,"Well, Roy, alone in your glory, eh?" |
10316 | Where do you suppose it goes?" |
10316 | Who wants to volunteer to go back through the mountains? |
10316 | Why all this anger?" |
10316 | Why did he ever try to paddle across in all that rain? |
10316 | Why did n''t you tell me?" |
10316 | Why do n''t they take him in and make friends with him? |
10316 | Why do n''t you let the kid alone? |
10316 | Why do n''t you take him in with you, just like you would any other fellow?" |
10316 | Will that do?" |
10316 | Will you?" |
10316 | Would you believe it? |
10316 | Would you mind looking again?" |
10316 | Would you mind telling me where he went?" |
10316 | Yer remember that?" |
10316 | You do n''t get it back in money, but you get it back in fun-- what''s the difference? |
10316 | You do n''t hear those tigers around talking, do you? |
10316 | You do n''t want to spoil it all for me now, do you?" |
10316 | You get merit badge because you''re able to do special things, see? |
10316 | You know what a hero is?" |
10316 | You live in Bridgeboro; do you know Jake Holden?" |
10316 | You notice I say we? |
10316 | You see how it was, kiddo? |
10316 | You''ve got to know what a fellow thinks before you know whether you like him or not, do n''t you?" |
10316 | he asked me;"in spite of circumstantial evidence?" |
42701 | Whence came the native races of America? |
38483 | And suppose the people attempt to suspend, by refusing to pay; what then? 38483 And thou, serenest moon, That with such holy face Dost look upon the Earth Asleep in Night''s embrace? |
38483 | Another? |
38483 | Are you possessing houses and lands,he writes,"and oxen and asses and men- servants and maid- servants, and begetting sons and daughters? |
38483 | But,he inquired, incredulously,"is it founded on fact?" |
38483 | By the way, Mr. Speaker, did you know I am a military hero? 38483 How are you, Jeff?" |
38483 | I know it; and what of that? 38483 Tell me, my secret soul, Oh, tell me, Hope and Faith, Is there no resting- place From sorrow, sin, and death? |
38483 | That will be the truth, wo n''t it? |
38483 | The thing that struck me most forcibly when I saw the Falls,he responded,"was, where in the world did all that water come from?" |
38483 | There now,says he,"did you ever see such a piece of impudence and imposition as that?" |
38483 | Tyler appointed him? |
38483 | Well, old fellow, did you do as I told you and as you promised? |
38483 | What about? |
38483 | What do you want, Peggy? |
38483 | What else did you say? |
38483 | What,I inquired,"made the deepest impression on you when you stood in the presence of the great natural wonder?" |
38483 | Will the greedy gullet of the penitentiary be satisfied with swallowing him instead of all of them, if they should venture to obey him? 38483 ''Studying what?'' 38483 ''Where is your room?'' 38483 After an astounding display of wordy pyrotechnics the dazed and bewildered stranger asked:''What is going to be the upshot of this comet business?'' 38483 And would he not discover some''danger of loss,''and be off about the time it came to taking their places? 38483 But I want to ask a close question:''Are you in_ feeling_ as well as_ judgment_ glad you are married as you are?'' 38483 But can he remember no other military coat- tail, under which a certain other party have been sheltering for near a quarter of a century? 38483 But was I, the defendant in the case, with a challenge hanging over me, to make advances, and beg a reconciliation? 38483 But what could I do? 38483 But what is it you''re mad about? |
38483 | Did you court her for her wealth? |
38483 | Did you not think, and partly form the purpose, of courting her the first time you ever saw her or heard of her? |
38483 | Do you believe you could bear that patiently? |
38483 | Do you see that spot over there?'' |
38483 | Does he not know that his own party have run the last five Presidential races under that coat- tail? |
38483 | Following are the lines:"Tell me, ye winged winds That round my pathway roar, Do ye not know some spot Where mortals weep no more? |
38483 | For instance, do you suppose that I should ever have got into notice if I had waited to be hunted up and pushed forward by older men? |
38483 | Had his love gradually died away like the morning wind? |
38483 | Has he no acquaintance with the ample military coat- tail of General Jackson? |
38483 | He looked carefully over all the papers in the case, as was his custom, and seeing my ingenious subterfuge, asked,"Is this seventh plea a good one?" |
38483 | He scratched his head thoughtfully and asked,"Had n''t we better withdraw that plea? |
38483 | How came you to court her?... |
38483 | I know he''s a fightin''man, and would rather fight than eat; but is n''t marryin''better than fightin'', though it does sometimes run in to it? |
38483 | If it was true, why was it not writ till five days after the proclamation? |
38483 | Is there anything in law requiring them to perjure themselves at the bidding of James Shields? |
38483 | Is there no happy spot Where mortals may be blessed, Where grief may find a balm And weariness a rest? |
38483 | None of that nonsense, Jeff; there ai n''t an honester women in the Lost Townships than"--"Than who?" |
38483 | One Dr. Barrett, seeing Lincoln, enquired of the latter''s friends:"Ca n''t the party raise any better material than that?" |
38483 | One day he came into the office and addressing his partner, said:''Billy, what''s the meaning of antithesis?'' |
38483 | Printer, will you be sure to let us know in your next paper whether this Shields is a Whig or a Democrat? |
38483 | Some lone and pleasant vale Some valley in the West, Where, free from toil and pain, The weary soul may rest? |
38483 | Tell me, in all thy round Hast thou not seen some spot Where miserable man Might find a happier lot? |
38483 | Was it not that you found yourself unable to reason yourself out of it? |
38483 | What cancer had he inside?" |
38483 | What do you mean by that? |
38483 | What gave him that peculiar melancholy? |
38483 | What had reason to do with it at that early stage? |
38483 | What is the prospect here?" |
38483 | What more can be said of the qualities that first made Mr. Lincoln attractive to his contemporaries? |
38483 | Why did n''t Carlin and Carpenter sign it as well as Shields? |
38483 | Will the collectors, that have taken their oaths to make the collection, dare to suspend it? |
38483 | Would you have gone out of the House,--skulked the vote? |
38483 | Would you have voted what you felt and knew to be a lie? |
38483 | and that they are now running the sixth under the same cover? |
38483 | and where shall the process cease?" |
38483 | do you think, after all, the world is going to follow the darned thing off?'' |
38483 | says I;"ai n''t its hair the right color? |
38483 | says Jeff;"and whose egg is it, pray?" |
38483 | says he;"but how will we find out?" |
38483 | says he;"what the mischief are you about?" |
38265 | But how? |
38265 | But why does he do it? 38265 Can you build a three- story hotel in sixty days on this plot?" |
38265 | Come in? |
38265 | Did n''t something come from me from Java? |
38265 | Did you expect me to bring an army with me? |
38265 | Did you see the Post this morning? |
38265 | Do n''t you want to publish books? |
38265 | Do you know Train? |
38265 | Do you know her? |
38265 | Do you know,said I,"that there is a reward offered for your head of one thousand pounds?" |
38265 | Do you mean to tell me that you refuse to be our chief? |
38265 | For the love of goodness, what have you there? |
38265 | Have you left the grocery store? |
38265 | Have you notified the commissary? |
38265 | How do you know it is right? |
38265 | How long have they been waiting, and what are they waiting for? |
38265 | How long have you been a slave? |
38265 | How much have you on hand? |
38265 | How much? |
38265 | I thought you wanted 2,000 armed men? |
38265 | Is it necessary? |
38265 | Is-- all-- that-- mine? |
38265 | It does n''t belong to the Government? |
38265 | Man- man,one girlee talkee he,"What for you go top- side look-- see?" |
38265 | They are talking about it, are they? |
38265 | Waiting for me? |
38265 | What is that? |
38265 | What is your name? |
38265 | What would be a good thing to send? |
38265 | When did he ask for poison? |
38265 | Where do I come in? |
38265 | Where is this property? |
38265 | Where will you dine? |
38265 | Which Lamartine? |
38265 | Whom do you think I am? |
38265 | Why not now? |
38265 | Why, can you not see they are''going through''him? |
38265 | Will you accept a retainer of$ 500? |
38265 | Would you ride over me roughshod? |
38265 | You do n''t mean to say you have come here without being invited? |
38265 | You here? |
38265 | After readjusting his monocle, so as to get the range better, he said:"May I-- ah-- ask a question, Mr.--ah-- Train?" |
38265 | At last, as they saw me walking about alone, one of the officials came up and said:"Why, are you alone?" |
38265 | For love of such a Corydon, Who would not be a Phyllis?" |
38265 | For what? |
38265 | Have you any objections to signing away your interest in the old place?" |
38265 | He said to me:"Do you know that rascal McGill is in the city? |
38265 | How could he know they were not pirates in disguise? |
38265 | How was I to know they were lying to me? |
38265 | I said I could, to which he replied:"Could one of your sharpshooters pick him off from here?" |
38265 | I said to him:"Why do n''t you attach the rubber to the pencil? |
38265 | I said to myself, why not have the steps attached? |
38265 | Is he paid for it?" |
38265 | Lamartine?" |
38265 | Mackay replied,"Two hundred tons bigger?" |
38265 | My answer to this was, in true Yankee fashion,"Where is Strelna?" |
38265 | One morning she burst into my office, and called out in her quaint accent,"Is Mr. George Francis Train here? |
38265 | Should I, caught in so dire an emergency, drown my principles in the cup that cheers and inebriates? |
38265 | Suppose you try one of my suits?" |
38265 | The boy turned to his mother and said:"Have you been fooling me about the God question too?" |
38265 | Then when the astute lawyer had finished, the witness looked at him quietly, and said:"Mr. Choate, will yez be after rapatin''that again?" |
38265 | Tirez?" |
38265 | Was all my Methodism and New England temperance to go down in shipwreck? |
38265 | What can not a boy learn in three weeks that is bad? |
38265 | What could I do? |
38265 | What is life worth to me? |
38265 | What was I to do? |
38265 | Where have you been?" |
38265 | While I was on the platform, a voice asked me"Who is the ring?" |
38265 | Who were they? |
38265 | Why do something that will mar it? |
38265 | Why not try him? |
38265 | Will Moseley"( the big financier there)"do it for five?" |
38265 | Will you accept this as a retainer?" |
38265 | said I,"cut it down-- this exquisite tree?" |
42872 | What do they hold-- these walls of corn, Whose banners toss in the breeze of morn? 42872 Where do they stand, these walls of corn, Whose banners toss in the breeze of morn? |
42872 | Who would have dared, with brush or pen, As this land is now, to paint it then? 42872 The Gulf easily swallows up all the Mississippi waters in a way that reminds of Rossetti''s dirge:Why does the sea moan evermore? |
17266 | A package, Paul; did he say what it contained? |
17266 | Ai n''t you heard nawthin''about it, Paul? 17266 All there, ai n''t they?" |
17266 | And counted the coins again, perhaps to find them short, eh, Jack? |
17266 | And does he always get it? |
17266 | And nothing was missing? |
17266 | And took this wad of dough out of it? |
17266 | And will he carry the bundles home safely, without stopping to play with other dogs, or to fight? |
17266 | Both door and window open in the bargain? |
17266 | But I''ve seen something about a troop? |
17266 | But he''s only a little fellow after all, Jack? |
17266 | But how do you know those moving figures are Ted and Ward, or even any of that crowd? |
17266 | But if not Karl, then who got my old coins? |
17266 | But now I''ve told you, Paul, are n''t you goin''to slip around the back way, and let them fellers take it out waitin''? 17266 But now?" |
17266 | But what d''ye think it is? |
17266 | But what''s he got on the end of that pole? |
17266 | But where there are two there may be more, Paul? |
17266 | But you could ask Arline? |
17266 | But you found out that he was innocent, did you? |
17266 | But you found the fourth all right, Jack? |
17266 | But you had something in mind, father, when you said that you met him? |
17266 | But you have another up your sleeve, you said? |
17266 | Call the roll, somebody, wo n''t you? |
17266 | Can you tell me what Smithers looks like, Paul? |
17266 | Could I? 17266 D''ye see them, son? |
17266 | Did anybody go to look for Willie? |
17266 | Did n''t I say we''d have to get up early in the morning if we hoped to keep from taking their dust? 17266 Did they? |
17266 | Did you bring your glim along? |
17266 | Did you forget to lock it after you, Jack? |
17266 | Did you happen to see inside that red car as it went by? |
17266 | Do n''t believe I ever saw it before; but then, what of that? 17266 Do n''t know, but we ought to be able to put our best foot forward just as long as that little fellow does, do n''t you think?" |
17266 | Do n''t we get more than these five matches? |
17266 | Do n''t you see what he means, Wallace? |
17266 | Do we have to stay in here until morning? |
17266 | Do we? 17266 Do you happen to know if any fellow called to see you to- day while you were out?" |
17266 | Do you know the machine, then? |
17266 | Do you mean he''d like to draw us off by shouting that way, while some of his fellows went along to the farmhouse, and got the lost boy? |
17266 | Do you want me to tell you the whole thing, sir? |
17266 | Eh? 17266 Fair? |
17266 | For goodness sake; wo n''t somebody please pound Bluff Shipley on the back, and make him bite his twisted tongue, so he can talk straight? |
17266 | Gut ye, have I? 17266 H- h- how about our b- b- barn, fellows?" |
17266 | Has anything happened to- day? |
17266 | Have you seen this party named Solus Smithers? |
17266 | Hey, what''d you do with it, son? |
17266 | Hit it the first shot,returned Bobolink;"who told you?" |
17266 | Hit up the pace, wo n''t you, please, Bobby? |
17266 | How about inviting some of the Slavin crowd to join us? |
17266 | How about it, Wallace? |
17266 | How about the engine-- is she much damaged? |
17266 | How about you, Paul? 17266 How far ahead is that place?" |
17266 | How is it, Paul? 17266 How is it, Paul?" |
17266 | How long can we keep this up, Paul? |
17266 | How long is it? |
17266 | How would to- morrow do? |
17266 | I certainly will, sir; and perhaps you''d like me to speak to the gentlemen, and tell them how anxious you are to see them? |
17266 | I guess all of you know by this time what some fellers did to Growdy''s pigs last Saturday night, painting''em to beat the band? 17266 I suppose money could n''t buy him, then?" |
17266 | Is it about Ted Slavin and his cronies? |
17266 | Is it so bad as that then? 17266 It was n''t Colonel Strange, was it?" |
17266 | Know-- what, my son? |
17266 | Let up, you; d''ye want to give the whole snap away? 17266 Listen now, what d''ye suppose they''re doing?" |
17266 | Listen to him, will you? 17266 Listen,"said William, suddenly; with a thrill in his voice;"whatever do you suppose that is?" |
17266 | Live around here, bub? |
17266 | Look here, Paul, if a fellow has to live up to the rules, however could the members of Ted''s company be taken into a troop of Boy Scouts? |
17266 | Look here, Paul, what''s this hull thing mean? |
17266 | Look here, Wash, what did I say? |
17266 | Nothing doing? |
17266 | Now what d''ye suppose the sillies are poking poles under there, for? |
17266 | Now, I reckon you''re agoin''to tell all you know about that ere bag, son? |
17266 | Now, what''s the idea that struck you this time, Paul? |
17266 | Of course you know what they were, those that are missing? |
17266 | Our lanterns? 17266 Perhaps I can guess what you did-- was it that you locked the door of your little den, Jack?" |
17266 | Perhaps it never will, and again, who knows what might come out of this? 17266 Ready to move on, fellows?" |
17266 | Remember the red car on the road, and the two men in it? |
17266 | S- s- say, d- d- don''t you k- k- know we''ve got a fi- fine b- b- barn on our p- p- place, fellows? |
17266 | Same hour as before-- eight o''clock? |
17266 | Say ye so? 17266 Say, Jack, is n''t that the name of the man who took the old Grimes farm up at the milldam?" |
17266 | Say, could n''t ye jest make an exception this time, boys? |
17266 | Say, do you think you could have nailed that runaway horse, with such an impediment twisting you up? |
17266 | Say, gimme a ride, mister? |
17266 | Say, is it as bad as that, Jack? 17266 Say, is n''t he a sport, all right, Paul? |
17266 | Say, mister, you would n''t go to hurt a poor feller what never done you no harm, now, would you? 17266 See here, Paul,"he remarked;"I''m not going to ask you to tell me who it is you suspect; but do I know him?" |
17266 | Shall I leave the den shut up as it is, then? |
17266 | Shall I strike a match, Paul? |
17266 | Six there then, eh? |
17266 | So ye think yer father''d larf, do ye? 17266 So, it''s ye, is it, Paul Morrison? |
17266 | Suppose we hold up here, and send out scouts to see how the land lies? 17266 Sure it is, William; but that mean man would n''t budge for you, hey?" |
17266 | Ted Slavin and some of his ugly ducklings? |
17266 | Tell me again I''m hearing owls, will you, fellows? 17266 That counts us in, then, for we''ll have plenty of time to get busy before the day of turkey rolls around, eh, Jack?" |
17266 | That made the little den as tight as a drum, eh? |
17266 | That ought to do for the present,said Paul, finally, as he closed the book and beamed upon his mates;"and now, what do you think, fellows?" |
17266 | That you, Paul? |
17266 | The boys are getting on fine in that water boiling test, are n''t they? 17266 The road, eh? |
17266 | Then may we hope that you will name an early day for the trial to come off? 17266 Then there were two men in it, you say?" |
17266 | Then we go on, do we? |
17266 | Then what took you in my dooryard here; for I heard a pack runnin''away when I kim out of the house? 17266 Then what''s all the doings about?" |
17266 | Then why not put for the old place at full speed right away? |
17266 | Then you give us permission to pitch in, and whale the whole bunch the next time they play one of their measly old tricks on us? 17266 Then you suggest waiting for him as he comes out, and telling him we know all about his fishing for my coins?" |
17266 | Then you_ are_ in trouble; and you mean to confess to me? 17266 Think it lies in this direction, Paul?" |
17266 | Thought you''d give us the quiet sneak, and gobble all the glory yourselves, hey? |
17266 | Wall, did yuh run acrost the bag, Brad? 17266 Well, I''d just like to learn if there is anything you Boy Scouts do n''t know how to handle?" |
17266 | Well, how did you find it? |
17266 | Well, that''s no reason we have to stay cooped up, is it? |
17266 | Well, what are we going to do about it, boys? |
17266 | Well, what do you think of that? |
17266 | Well, what''s all this about? |
17266 | Well, would you dream of such a thing as that? |
17266 | Well, you do n''t say? |
17266 | Well,said Paul, as they headed for the house of his comrade, which chanced to come before his own,"what do you think of my scheme, Jack?" |
17266 | Well? |
17266 | Were you looking for me, my boy? |
17266 | What d''ye mean, Paul? |
17266 | What did he do to you? |
17266 | What did he say? |
17266 | What do you suppose the silly goose is doing on his knees? |
17266 | What do you suppose? |
17266 | What is it? |
17266 | What of it? |
17266 | What should I wait fur, when I cort ye in the very act? 17266 What under the sun d''ye suppose he''s doing such a stunt for, Paul?" |
17266 | What was that, Jack? |
17266 | What was that? |
17266 | What was that? |
17266 | What''s all the row about, Si? |
17266 | What''s doing now? |
17266 | What''s doing to make you chase me up this way, Number Three? |
17266 | What''s that? 17266 What''s that?" |
17266 | What? |
17266 | When did you see them? |
17266 | When he lived here, you and Scissors used to be something of chums, did n''t you? |
17266 | Where are we heading for? |
17266 | Where did it happen? 17266 Where shall we meet?" |
17266 | Where''s the other twin? |
17266 | Where, when, how? |
17266 | Whew, but those fellows do n''t believe in letting the grass grow under their feet, do they? 17266 Which is one way of saying that you can guess I have a motive in asking you?" |
17266 | Who is it this time, William? 17266 Who is the woman?" |
17266 | Who knows the ways of the open like our Paul? 17266 Who locked this door, fellows?" |
17266 | Who owns the Dempsey house now, Jack? |
17266 | Who was that boy? |
17266 | Who was the last one in? |
17266 | Who''s child? |
17266 | Who''s next to report? |
17266 | Why, how do you do, Mr. Pender? 17266 Why, sure, what''s to hinder you buying your scout''s uniform with it?" |
17266 | Will Carlo hang around and wait for you a bit? |
17266 | Will you listen to me, fellows? |
17266 | With what, boss? 17266 Worth fighting hard for, eh, Paul?" |
17266 | Yes, and now? |
17266 | Yes, and then what? |
17266 | Yes, first tell me who it was you suspected that has turned out innocent? |
17266 | Yes, what''s it all mean, Paul? 17266 Yet you came up here and counted them; you are positive of that?" |
17266 | You came up here after you saw Karl off on the train? |
17266 | You carried out my suggestion then? |
17266 | You did find the bag, then? |
17266 | You do n''t say? 17266 You mean that you''ll take the street that leads to the front of your house? |
17266 | You remember Mr. Silas Westervelt, the Quaker of Manchester? |
17266 | You said there were fourteen left this morning, did n''t you, Jack? |
17266 | A bag, mister? |
17266 | All right, who cares? |
17266 | And besides, what does an hour, or even two of them, matter in the end? |
17266 | And do you think it can have gone beyond Stanhope? |
17266 | And meant to twist my chum up so he''d think one of his own crowd had been taking them?" |
17266 | And what did he say to that?" |
17266 | And what shall I say of this fine member of your patrol who so bravely risked his own life to save that of a mother''s baby? |
17266 | And when you left me in town you hurried around to the post- office to find Mr. Pender, did n''t you? |
17266 | And you wo n''t begrudge us that, Claypool?" |
17266 | Another robbery at the jewelry store; or has some one sneaked away with one of the coffins your house carries?" |
17266 | Any objection to joining in with us and having a little fun while we help a brother even up his score?" |
17266 | Any other proposition?" |
17266 | Any trouble at home? |
17266 | Anybody else going to be there to- night?" |
17266 | Anything doing? |
17266 | Are you bothered over the Boy Scout troop we''ve been organizing? |
17266 | But I''d like to see you make the test, Paul?" |
17266 | But about this wretched matter, Paul-- you wo n''t say anything to your folks, will you?" |
17266 | But about those uniforms, boys-- hadn''t the scout tailor better get to work, going over his measurements again? |
17266 | But how is it you do n''t want to go to your own folks? |
17266 | But is it true that you and Jack''s father were chums long ago?" |
17266 | But look here, ai n''t there another way to get to that old abandoned mill without going through the town? |
17266 | But see here, there''s more back of this than you''ve told me?" |
17266 | But see here, what does this mean? |
17266 | But see here, why do you just happen to mention that business? |
17266 | But tell me what''s gone wrong? |
17266 | But what about Solus Smithers-- they asked after him, you know?" |
17266 | But what else could a lad expect who was so unfortunate as to find himself afflicted with such a name as A. Cypher? |
17266 | But what makes you ask that? |
17266 | But what yuh mean apushin''in on me thetaways?" |
17266 | But what''s got you now? |
17266 | But what''s the matter with you, Jack?" |
17266 | But when do you mean to tell me what you know about this strange affair, Paul?" |
17266 | But where could he sell them, do you think?" |
17266 | But who cared? |
17266 | CHAPTER II WHAT IT MEANS TO BE A BOY SCOUT"Where are the stone throwers?" |
17266 | CHAPTER VI A STRANGE SUGGESTION"Who goes there?" |
17266 | CHAPTER XII THE RIVAL TROOPS"How far do we have to go in this new plan of forgiving the enemy, Paul?" |
17266 | CHAPTER XXI THE MEETING"How are you, Paul?" |
17266 | CHAPTER XXIII THE RED CAR"What''s the matter with you, Paul?" |
17266 | CHAPTER XXV A CAMP IN THE WOODS"Why, Paul, what''s all this hurry mean?" |
17266 | CHAPTER XXVII TED FINDS SOMETHING"Sure it was n''t an owl?" |
17266 | Chairman?" |
17266 | Come in with me, wo n''t you?" |
17266 | Could he be in league with these two men whom the Government expert was sent to watch? |
17266 | Could it be possible that the local authorities had in some manner become aware of the fact that law breakers were abroad in the land? |
17266 | Could it be possible these rascals meant to torture Ted until he told; or were they just trying to frighten him? |
17266 | D''ye hear that, you young fool? |
17266 | D''ye suppose he did anything to it when he went out?" |
17266 | D''ye think you can stand the racket?" |
17266 | D''ye understand now? |
17266 | Dared they rise up and defy these two scoundrels? |
17266 | Did he seem to know who they were?" |
17266 | Did he tell you the secret?" |
17266 | Did n''t you hear it that time?" |
17266 | Did they tackle you, son?" |
17266 | Did you ever see such agony?" |
17266 | Did you fly in through the window?" |
17266 | Did you get that manual you sent for, Paul?" |
17266 | Do n''t dozens pass along here every day, that come up from the city? |
17266 | Do n''t he sit up like a soldier? |
17266 | Do n''t let him kidnap me, will you, Paul?" |
17266 | Do n''t that satisfy you it was n''t your brother, after all, Jack?" |
17266 | Do n''t you believe me, mister? |
17266 | Do n''t you feel more like straining every nerve in the effort to win that prize, after seeing how handsome it is? |
17266 | Do you get on to the meaning of this movement, fellows?" |
17266 | Do you see anything changed here?" |
17266 | Do you want to whip me now, or take me in to the lockup, which?" |
17266 | Does the mill pond stand on the ground he''s rented?" |
17266 | Eight or ten would give us a warm time do n''t you think?" |
17266 | Even if they allowed us to pass by, do n''t you think they''d be apt to take it out of you when you returned alone? |
17266 | Everybody''s entitled to half the road; ai n''t that the law, fellers?" |
17266 | Father has n''t come back from his afternoon round of visits, has he? |
17266 | Five times I did it, to be sure; yet you saw that there were only four just now?" |
17266 | For how could Karl have anything to do with the bad business while he was up at your uncle''s?" |
17266 | Get that?" |
17266 | Gimme a ride, mister, if you''re goin''that way, wo n''t you?" |
17266 | Give me just a little more time on that, will you, old fellow?" |
17266 | Guess who remembered us in such a bully way?" |
17266 | Had not Paul said words to that effect, after telling them what it meant to be a tried and true scout? |
17266 | Has he actually been down for the mail?" |
17266 | Have you learned anything you want to tell me, Paul?" |
17266 | Hello I look here, what''s this?" |
17266 | Here Carlo, how''s your sweet tooth coming on?" |
17266 | How about that, Bluff?" |
17266 | How do they know? |
17266 | How do you boys expect to look for the child in the blackness of those woods?" |
17266 | How is the patrol coming on? |
17266 | How old is Karl?" |
17266 | How, Paul?" |
17266 | I believe you want to see for yourself if any more of my coins have disappeared?" |
17266 | I do n''t suppose Scissors ever drops in to see you nowadays?" |
17266 | I do n''t suppose you''d care to go straight to her, and ask her point blank what I''d done to make her treat me so cruelly? |
17266 | I hope you did n''t give the gentleman any idea that you had ever heard a word about him or his car?" |
17266 | I know I''m awfully dull just now, but who could blame me under the circumstances? |
17266 | I should n''t think of allowing that at all?" |
17266 | I wonder now if either of you happen to know a Mr. Solus Smithers?" |
17266 | I''d better jump in with him, do n''t you think? |
17266 | I''m going to ask you again, son, what did you do with it?" |
17266 | If some one cast Ted loose would he join forces with them, and make common cause against the ruffians? |
17266 | Is he a tall man, with a hooked nose; and does he dip snuff?" |
17266 | Is he hurt?" |
17266 | Is it about your school affairs?" |
17266 | Is n''t that Jack''s dog coming out with a package of papers in his mouth? |
17266 | Is n''t that so, Jack?" |
17266 | Is n''t that so, Paul?" |
17266 | Is n''t that so, fellows?" |
17266 | Is that plain?" |
17266 | Is that so, Paul?" |
17266 | Is the child lost?" |
17266 | It smells mighty inviting to him, I wager; but will he go in? |
17266 | Karl, how could you?" |
17266 | Let me go, wo n''t you? |
17266 | Let me loose, wo n''t you, mister? |
17266 | May I ask how they learned just where the camp of the Aldine Troop was to be pitched?" |
17266 | More of them gone, Jack?" |
17266 | No boy need longer hesitate to call out to him on the street; for Peleg, I take it, has seen a great light, eh, Jack?" |
17266 | No, I''m your superior officer, and I order you to stop right here where you belong; do you understand, Jack?" |
17266 | Now he''s adding larger stuff; and what''s this he''s doing with those stones?" |
17266 | Now shall I get busy, and meander off?" |
17266 | Now, I wonder if I could leave these two prisoners in charge of several of you, while the rest went with me in the car? |
17266 | Now, how many figures have you seen dodging along back there, just as if they did n''t care to be seen-- yet?" |
17266 | Now, however did that thing happen to be lying there in the road? |
17266 | Now, what do you think about the nerve of that, fellows?" |
17266 | Now, what''s doing, fellows; and do we get a grab at the scout?" |
17266 | Other boys may have been up there to- day?" |
17266 | Paint my critters red, white an''blue, will ye? |
17266 | Paul, that you?" |
17266 | Paul, will you ever forgive me? |
17266 | Pender?" |
17266 | Pender?" |
17266 | Perhaps some servant may have taken them?" |
17266 | Ready, all?" |
17266 | Say, are there any books on the subject, that we can get, and learn more about this thing?" |
17266 | Say, is there any other place up here but the old farm alongside the mill pond? |
17266 | See my plan?" |
17266 | Shall I let him past the door, Jack?" |
17266 | Shall you dismiss the troop here, Paul?" |
17266 | Stormways?" |
17266 | Suppose I had that list, and rooting over all the little boxes he keeps his coins in for sale, found every one of the missing ones there?" |
17266 | Suppose you take your old chum into your confidence, Paul? |
17266 | Sure you counted four, are you?" |
17266 | Take my hand, wo n''t you, Paul? |
17266 | Tell me why you are grinning so, Paul? |
17266 | That all?" |
17266 | That''s right, is n''t it, fellows?" |
17266 | The question that is bothering me is, where did he get it?" |
17266 | The water must be boiling; and who would have thought it? |
17266 | There-- well, what d''ye think of that, fellers?" |
17266 | Think I would so far forget myself as to get down on my knees, and beg her to take me back into favor? |
17266 | Think I''m stringing you, do n''t you, Paul? |
17266 | This night air has made you too cold to speak up; but we''ll fix all that, I reckon; we know how to do it, do n''t we, Wash?" |
17266 | Thomes before you went to the city, did you?" |
17266 | Thomes?" |
17266 | Thought it lots of fun, did n''t you? |
17266 | Was Mr. Jared Pender, the Government expert, about to have rivals in the field? |
17266 | Was he thinking just then of the coins; or did he have some knowledge of the practical joke that had been played on old Peleg Growdy? |
17266 | We opened his eyes some, eh?" |
17266 | Well, mebbe they have; but tell me just why they are hiding close to_ your_ place?" |
17266 | What business did he have sitting there and taking two- thirds of the road, to let William upset in the ditch trying to pass him?" |
17266 | What can you mean? |
17266 | What d''ye think of that, Jack?" |
17266 | What d''ye think yer father''ll say w''en he hears''bout this?" |
17266 | What did you do to poor old Ted and his cronies, Paul?" |
17266 | What do you want me to do, Paul, in the meantime?" |
17266 | What does a scout promise to be if allowed to wear the uniform, Wallace?" |
17266 | What has been done to find him?" |
17266 | What have they been doing?" |
17266 | What if a storm should come up?" |
17266 | What if the tall man came straight toward that spot, looking for the missing object? |
17266 | What say, fellows?" |
17266 | What shall we do, Paul?" |
17266 | What sort of a binding agreement had we ought to get up?" |
17266 | What use is it to be elected bugler if you ca n''t bugle?" |
17266 | What was that? |
17266 | What will he do right away, fellows?" |
17266 | What''s happened? |
17266 | What''s this you''re giving me, Bobolink?" |
17266 | What''s your queer game?" |
17266 | Whatever could have happened in quiet Stanhope, to cause all this gathering of people, and such earnest consultations? |
17266 | When''s the next meeting, Paul?" |
17266 | Where did you put that bag?" |
17266 | Where was it at the time? |
17266 | Where you ben all this afternoon?" |
17266 | Who air ye, anyway?" |
17266 | Who saw little Willie last? |
17266 | Who was this Solus Smithers? |
17266 | Who''s laying for me, and where?" |
17266 | Why let Ted and Ward have the inside track? |
17266 | Why should n''t we get up one here?" |
17266 | Why, I wonder? |
17266 | Why, Paul, whatever put that notion into your head?" |
17266 | Will he run, fellows?" |
17266 | With me? |
17266 | With such a leader, how could they? |
17266 | Wo n''t_ you_ take me home, Paul?" |
17266 | Wot''s a hundred dollars beside the new speerit ye''ve managed somehow to start up in me? |
17266 | Would Mr. Pender have anything to do with it?" |
17266 | You actually suspected him of taking my coins? |
17266 | You guessed something then, did n''t you, Paul?" |
17266 | You know that Si Growdy is a nephew of his? |
17266 | You mean to catch him at it some time; is that the idea, Paul?" |
17266 | You remember that baseball bat of mine that''s been lying over here so long? |
17266 | You remember that time, Jack?" |
17266 | You say none of them were ever taken in the night?" |
17266 | You understand, Paul?" |
17266 | You understand?" |
17266 | You would n''t break her heart, mister, by smokin''a poor boy?" |
17266 | You''ll let Jane get me something in a jiffy, wo n''t you, now?" |
17266 | ai n''t it j- j- just awful, f- f- fellows?" |
17266 | ai n''t that the same old shout?" |
17266 | and you say there is no need of our worrying?" |
17266 | cried Jack;"did she forget her own baby, then?" |
17266 | did they have anything to do with his coming up here? |
17266 | did you see that?" |
17266 | do you mean there''s a sequel to this story?" |
17266 | exclaimed his chum, delight showing in his voice;"so the old man has really seen a great light, has he? |
17266 | expect me to tell the hull story, with my boss asettin''there inside the store, watchin''the clock, an''dockin''me for every minute I''m late? |
17266 | he exclaimed, with a gesture of disgust;"ca n''t you take a little fun, Jack? |
17266 | how do you think you could do anything, Jack? |
17266 | is it you?" |
17266 | is that all? |
17266 | is that so?" |
17266 | look at that, will you?" |
17266 | my, whatever did he take chances like that for?" |
17266 | remarked Paul,"are you on, too? |
17266 | then you left the door unlocked again on purpose?" |
17266 | w- w- why was n''t it m- m- me?" |
17266 | watch that, will you?" |
17266 | what ails you?" |
17266 | what are you goin''to do?" |
17266 | what d''ye suppose all that row''s about?" |
17266 | what in the world is that?" |
17266 | what''s that? |
17266 | what''s this mean? |
17266 | wot d''ye know about that, now? |
17266 | wot''s doin''now, boys?" |
17266 | wot''s that, Paul? |
17266 | yes; I see; and he did n''t want trespassers on his farm, eh? |
40869 | How big is this ere brown bear, Squire? |
40869 | How do you know it is a grizzly? |
40869 | How much reward can I offer? |
40869 | Is that so? |
40869 | Where is it, Ed? |
40869 | Why do n''t you come on, I say, and help me catch him? |
40869 | Why do n''t you eat him? |
40869 | Would you undertake to get a genuine grizzly in this State? |
40869 | *****"Are there any true grizzly bears in California?" |
40869 | And do I know him? |
40869 | And what became of Sil Reese? |
40869 | And what became of the big black twin babies? |
40869 | And what became of the boy? |
40869 | And where is he now? |
40869 | But how does a bear die? |
40869 | Can you not see how it is? |
40869 | Could he? |
40869 | Do you know why a beast, a bear of all beasts, is so very much afraid of fire? |
40869 | Dog? |
40869 | He sat down on the grass, and, wearily wiping his forehead, he said to Monnehan,"Mr. Monnehan, how big was the bear that you saw?" |
40869 | How will you have him-- dead or alive?" |
40869 | Is he the representative of another genus? |
40869 | Lie down and be eaten up while you lie there and kick up your heels and enjoy yourself? |
40869 | Now, do you think you could find them?" |
40869 | Or is he the Sloth Bear,_ Prochilous_( or_ Melursus_)_ labiatus_? |
40869 | Pretty women are to be preferred; but pretty men? |
40869 | The boy? |
40869 | Were they running away from a thunder- storm? |
40869 | What did it all mean? |
40869 | What had become of this strange little army of silent brown boys? |
40869 | What made these ugly rows of scars on my left hand? |
40869 | What next? |
40869 | When he had completed his investigation and stood once more before Monarch''s cage, he was asked:"Well, what is he?" |
40869 | Where are they?" |
40869 | Where had they gone and what did all this silent mystery mean? |
40869 | Why ca n''t they live up in the chaparral, as they did before we came here to plant trees and try to make the world beautiful? |
40869 | Why do n''t you come, I say, and help me catch him?" |
40869 | Why do n''t you come? |
40869 | Why not have the little black fellows fight a duel also? |
40869 | Why not set the dog on him? |
40869 | Why, if they''re so blasted dangerous, how did your missionaries ever manage to drive them up here from Mexico, anyhow?" |
40869 | Will he? |
40869 | Would he come any farther? |
40869 | Would he? |
40869 | Would n''t that be a fix?" |
40869 | You like?" |
40869 | You want to know what the boy is doing? |
19294 | A cave around here? 19294 A cave?" |
19294 | A race? |
19294 | All right; where shall we go? |
19294 | All this is very fine, but where do we come in? |
19294 | Allen, what''s this? |
19294 | An hour? |
19294 | And biscuits, Betty? |
19294 | And if there were, do you think we would have you boys fussing around? |
19294 | And that? |
19294 | Anita is tired now, but when we hear the whole story, I know we are going to be even more grateful to you than we were before-- eh, Anita? |
19294 | Anxious to meet your Water- loo? |
19294 | Anything else? |
19294 | Are we going to take a walk or swim some more or just stay here? |
19294 | Are you doing anything particular this afternoon? |
19294 | Are you game for one last spurt? |
19294 | Are you going to sleep for-_ever_? 19294 Are you going to stay there?" |
19294 | Are you sure it was n''t limburger? |
19294 | Are you sure that''s the ferry? |
19294 | Are you sure you can find it again? |
19294 | Betty, are you telling the truth? 19294 Betty,"he pleaded,"I----""May I, Miss Nelson?" |
19294 | But are n''t you going to let us fellows come over to- night to talk things over? |
19294 | But ca n''t you see, Betty, that I am here to protect you from danger if there is any-- not let you run right into it? |
19294 | But did n''t your aunt say anything about that, Mollie? |
19294 | But did you get them? |
19294 | But do you think we can find the cave again? |
19294 | But if you did n''t find anything, what ever in the world kept you so long? |
19294 | But is n''t it early? |
19294 | But they''re not, are they, Roy? 19294 But what are we going to do?" |
19294 | But what surprise? |
19294 | But when do you suppose Anita and her brother will come to see us? |
19294 | But will somebody kindly tell me how we are going to make that boat in five minutes? |
19294 | But you are not going to leave the cave unprotected until you get the loot away? |
19294 | But, Mollie, what has that to do with us? |
19294 | But, Mother, what is it? |
19294 | Ca n''t I help, too, Betty? |
19294 | Ca n''t the old ferryboat get up any steam at all? |
19294 | Ca n''t we carry the luggage-- and the chocolates? |
19294 | Ca n''t we go right away? 19294 Ca n''t we talk about something less odoriferous?" |
19294 | Ca n''t you all stay to lunch? 19294 Ca n''t you see Mollie means that we are to occupy that vacated bungalow this summer?" |
19294 | Ca n''t you see how worked up Mollie is? 19294 Ca n''t you see what you are doing? |
19294 | Ca n''t you see? |
19294 | Ca n''t you take them off? |
19294 | Can we go back the first thing in the morning, Allen? |
19294 | Did you run over somebody? |
19294 | Did you see that gypsy girl who just passed in front of us? |
19294 | Did you see which way she went, Roy? |
19294 | Did you wish on it? |
19294 | Did your aunt say anything about a blower? |
19294 | Do I dangle my feet over it? |
19294 | Do my eyes deceive me? |
19294 | Do n''t let them come too near me, will you, Allen? |
19294 | Do n''t they though? |
19294 | Do n''t you know that it would take at least three hours for the boys to go over, find out what Mr. Mendall has to say to them and get back here? 19294 Do n''t you know you are blocking the way?" |
19294 | Do n''t you make any exceptions? |
19294 | Do n''t you remember we saw it a little after seven last night? |
19294 | Do n''t you remember, Allen, that you gave it to me just before we left, while you ran back to get something for Betty? 19294 Do n''t you think we had better get to the shore and rest a while?" |
19294 | Do n''t you think we had better lock the door? |
19294 | Do n''t you think we had better wash the dishes first? |
19294 | Do n''t you want a suit? |
19294 | Do you happen to have anything like a map of the surrounding country in your inside vest pocket? 19294 Do you imagine they could exist from six o''clock to ten without eating? |
19294 | Do you know what a blower looks like? |
19294 | Do you know whom it looks like, Betty? |
19294 | Do you know, Allen, there is nothing a girl hates more than to have a boy ask her to be reasonable, when she knows she is? 19294 Do you mean to say I do n''t know that that little whatever- you- may- call- it in your hat is quite considerable----""Class?" |
19294 | Do you mean to say that we have to walk a mile in this blazing heat? |
19294 | Do you mean to say that you girls want us to go home without seeing what is in there? |
19294 | Do you suppose I''m going to stand here, and see you get eaten up by a-- a----"A what? |
19294 | Do you suppose Mrs. Irving will really want to go? |
19294 | Do you suppose they will bring the bags out here? |
19294 | Do you think we had better? |
19294 | Do you think you can make it, Allen? |
19294 | Does anybody want to take a little tramp and find out? 19294 Fine-- but where''s Betty?" |
19294 | For goodness''sake, what is the use of making such a fuss about that old map? |
19294 | For instance? |
19294 | Frank, I''m getting smothered; wo n''t you dig me out? |
19294 | Girls, do you think they will? |
19294 | Grace, ca n''t you do anything with him? |
19294 | Had we better? |
19294 | Hand us some of those worms, Will, will you? |
19294 | Have dinner early, will you? |
19294 | Have n''t we had a good time? |
19294 | Have you folks lost anything? |
19294 | Have you got the list of the things we need, Allen? 19294 Have you heard the news-- have you?" |
19294 | Here we have everything that goes to make up a romantic sail----"What, for instance? |
19294 | Hold on a minute, Mollie, ca n''t you? |
19294 | Hold on there, will you? |
19294 | How about a little spin in the country, Frank? |
19294 | How can I find anything when I do n''t know what it looks like? |
19294 | How can he if there is n''t anything to investigate? |
19294 | How can you hear footsteps on the grass? |
19294 | How did you ever do it? |
19294 | How did you ever find that out? |
19294 | How did you know? |
19294 | How do they ever get such things? |
19294 | How is this for a fire, eh? |
19294 | How long is the race, anyway? |
19294 | How_ do_ you expect me to find out what has happened if you wo n''t come to the point? |
19294 | However? |
19294 | I do n''t know you, do I? |
19294 | I do n''t like her looks very much, do you? |
19294 | I said, have you a map of this here countryside? |
19294 | I say, what''s the use of standing here? |
19294 | I think Amy likes Conway,said Grace, then turning to Betty she asked meaningly:"Do you, by any chance, believe in love at first sight?" |
19294 | I think she knows what we are talking about,then bending over the girl she said very gently:"Do you feel better, dear?" |
19294 | I wonder if there are any more places like this hereabout? |
19294 | I wonder when the boys are going to try to ford to the islands? |
19294 | I wonder who is coming to visit us so early? |
19294 | If you are going, why do n''t you go? |
19294 | Is it my hair, or is my nose red, or is it my skirt that''s too tight? 19294 Is it very far to the camp?" |
19294 | Is my hat on right, Allen, or should it be tilted a little more over the left eye? |
19294 | Is n''t it lovely? |
19294 | Is n''t there one among you with any pep at all? 19294 Is she going to ask you to make her a visit?" |
19294 | Is she speaking to me or at me? |
19294 | Is that so? |
19294 | Is there or is there not a fowl in that basket? |
19294 | Left hand or right, Betty? 19294 Looks pretty threatening, do n''t you think?" |
19294 | Mollie, I could shake you; why do n''t you tell us and have it over with? |
19294 | Mollie, dear, that''s the island, is n''t it? 19294 More than usual?" |
19294 | Never again will I doubt the wisdom of those so learned----"What is she raving about, girls, do you know? |
19294 | Never mind, Grace, whenever your heart begins to fail you, just think of-- what, fellows? |
19294 | No, what? |
19294 | Now do we begin? 19294 Now for the fishing tackle-- where is it, fellows?" |
19294 | Now we can take down the top, ca n''t we, Frank? 19294 Now, who is that?" |
19294 | Oh, Mollie, what do you mean? |
19294 | Oh, Will, where? |
19294 | Oh, and do you know what Anita said the other day? |
19294 | Oh, are n''t they wonderful? |
19294 | Oh, are n''t you going to let us see what is in them now? |
19294 | Oh, are we the first? |
19294 | Oh, but did n''t that fish taste good last night? |
19294 | Oh, did we keep you waiting? |
19294 | Oh, do you really think so? |
19294 | Oh, do you suppose she is dead? |
19294 | Oh, do you think it will go without us? |
19294 | Oh, have a little patience, Sis, ca n''t you? |
19294 | Oh, oh,they cried together in whole- souled relief, while Mollie added eagerly:"Did you get it-- did you?" |
19294 | Oh, well, we do n''t want to beat them anyway, do we? |
19294 | Oh, what have they got on their backs? |
19294 | Oh, what is it? |
19294 | Oh, where did I put my slippers? 19294 Oh, why did n''t you make more?" |
19294 | Oh, why do n''t they come? |
19294 | Oh, why? |
19294 | Oh, you will, will you? |
19294 | Oh, you''ve got her, have you? |
19294 | Or, perhaps it should be made to cover my face entirely? |
19294 | Perhaps we might help tow it in? |
19294 | Pine Island? |
19294 | Really? |
19294 | Reformed? |
19294 | Say the first part of that speech over again, will you? |
19294 | Say, Betty, do you happen to have any more of those around? |
19294 | Say, folks, what do you say to our making ourselves comfortable? 19294 Say, what kind of sport are you, anyway?" |
19294 | Say, when are you and Frank going to practice for the big race, Betty? |
19294 | Shall I? |
19294 | Shall we give them a race? |
19294 | Since when have you taken to stump oratory, Betty? |
19294 | So soon? |
19294 | Suppose one of my slippers dropped off? |
19294 | Suppose they should come back in the meantime? |
19294 | Suppose we ca n''t find the place? |
19294 | That must be the camp, is n''t it, Roy? |
19294 | That''s the way to make them appreciate us; eh, fellows? |
19294 | The good old sun sure does change everything, does n''t it? |
19294 | The last is n''t as hard as the first, is it, Gracy? |
19294 | The only question is, how are we going to find our way? 19294 Then why do n''t you go?" |
19294 | There is n''t room in this wonderful bungalow for us, is there? |
19294 | There is no reason why you should want to be that, is there? |
19294 | This is it, is n''t it? |
19294 | Those are the caravan wagons, are n''t they? |
19294 | Thought you''d give us the slip, did you? 19294 To change the subject,"Roy broke in,"what are you girls all togged up for-- didn''t you get my message?" |
19294 | To change the subject-- has anybody noticed that the sun has gone under a cloud and that there is a stiff little breeze coming up? 19294 Twelve o''clock?" |
19294 | Was n''t he a funny old man, Roy? |
19294 | Was n''t it somewhere about here, Allen? |
19294 | Was n''t she a gypsy, Will? |
19294 | We are going for a paddle-- who wants to come along? |
19294 | We fellows have brought some fishing tackle-- suppose we go out and try to get some fish for supper? 19294 We will have to leave the automobiles somewhere in town, wo n''t we?" |
19294 | Well, are you ready? |
19294 | Well, did you ever hear such-- Frank, do n''t you think we''d better get started before he says anything worse? |
19294 | Well, now, is everybody ready? |
19294 | Well, of all the----Grace looked over her shoulder and this is what the two girls read:"When are you coming out? |
19294 | Well, what are you going to do then? |
19294 | Well, what of it? |
19294 | Well, why on earth did n''t you say so,Grace demanded,"instead of letting us wander on ahead?" |
19294 | Well, would it? |
19294 | What are you doing? |
19294 | What are you two talking about? |
19294 | What boys and why the hat? |
19294 | What can be strange about Pine Island? |
19294 | What can have happened? |
19294 | What difference does that make? |
19294 | What do you make of the weather? |
19294 | What do you mean--''reformed''? 19294 What do you mean?" |
19294 | What do you say about it? |
19294 | What do you say to full speed ahead? |
19294 | What do you say we take that side road we passed a little way back, Frank? 19294 What do you think about it, Betty?" |
19294 | What do you want? |
19294 | What does that clock say, half- past seven? 19294 What good does that do?" |
19294 | What is it, Frank? |
19294 | What is it? |
19294 | What is the matter with mother? 19294 What point do you start from?" |
19294 | What race? |
19294 | What race? |
19294 | What shall we do next? |
19294 | What shall we do? 19294 What time is it?" |
19294 | What would you suggest? |
19294 | What wouldst have us do? |
19294 | What''s first? 19294 What''s that?" |
19294 | What''s that? |
19294 | What''s that? |
19294 | What''s the big idea? |
19294 | What''s the matter with our going together? |
19294 | What? |
19294 | What? |
19294 | What? |
19294 | When is lunch? |
19294 | Where did you go to school? |
19294 | Where is it? |
19294 | Where is the table cloth, Mollie? |
19294 | Where shall we go? |
19294 | Where to, so early? |
19294 | Where to? |
19294 | Where? |
19294 | Where_ have_ you kept yourselves all morning? |
19294 | Whereabouts did you see the tackle, Mollie? |
19294 | Which one of you have I to thank for-- for saving me? |
19294 | Which? |
19294 | Who is it? |
19294 | Who wants to go in first? |
19294 | Who''s going to do the work first? |
19294 | Who''s talking about me now? |
19294 | Whom did you wave to then, Betty? |
19294 | Why did n''t you buy three boxes while you were about it, Roy? |
19294 | Why did n''t you stop for me? |
19294 | Why do n''t they bring the things here? |
19294 | Why do n''t you do something to earn your living? 19294 Why do n''t you see, Grace?" |
19294 | Why do n''t you tell us something we do n''t know? |
19294 | Why do something when we can get lots more fun out of doing nothing? |
19294 | Why do you girls stand around staring at me anyway? |
19294 | Why is it boys always have to tease? |
19294 | Why not slip a skirt and middy over our bathing suits? |
19294 | Why not take a walk about the country? |
19294 | Why not? |
19294 | Why not? |
19294 | Why not? |
19294 | Why, do n''t you know, Grace, that there is n''t one of us that does n''t need a lot of reforming? |
19294 | Why, how can you think of such a thing, Will, when you know how interested we all are? 19294 Will it make you feel any better if we get the others?" |
19294 | Will this do? |
19294 | Will you have another race? |
19294 | Will you tell me about it if I let you go? 19294 Will?" |
19294 | Wo n''t you have your fortunes told? 19294 Wo n''t you please wake up? |
19294 | Would you be sorry if I did n''t? |
19294 | Yes, I know, but what I spoke of is such a wee little cousin to----"Is that the dipper up there, Frank? |
19294 | Yes, look around, girls, will you? |
19294 | Yes, what did you do to her, Betty? |
19294 | Yes, you are terribly ill- treated, are n''t you? |
19294 | You all know young Mrs. Irving whose husband travels? |
19294 | You have never gone and forgotten it? |
19294 | You mean to say you were waiting for us? |
19294 | You say there is another opening at the farther side? |
19294 | You should never ask what a person thinks about on a beautiful summer, day when she is wandering through the woodland with-- with----"Whom? |
19294 | You think it was somewhere about here, do n''t you? |
19294 | You''re not going to keep this up, are you? |
19294 | ( will we?" |
19294 | After a walk that seemed endless, Will called out to the boys in the front:"Is n''t it time for relief work, Allen? |
19294 | Agreed?" |
19294 | Ah, what have we here?" |
19294 | Amy, did you put the eggs in?" |
19294 | And as for Paul''s having the mumps----""Then what is it? |
19294 | And leave the cave?" |
19294 | And now that spring had dipped into summer, and they were again in Deepdale, was this ride of theirs, begun so joyously, about to end in tragedy? |
19294 | And what of Grace? |
19294 | Any news since I left?" |
19294 | Are we on time?" |
19294 | Are you sure everything is there-- not a thing missing? |
19294 | Are you sure he was stolen, Grace?" |
19294 | Are you sure? |
19294 | Awfully shaken up?" |
19294 | Been waiting long?" |
19294 | Before Mollie could answer a head was poked in at the door and an accompanying voice asked cheerily:"May we come in? |
19294 | Besides, do n''t you suppose_ we_ like plum pudding?" |
19294 | Betty, do n''t you know me well enough----""Where have you people been anyway?" |
19294 | But Betty started to speak dreamily, saying:"What will those poor old gypsies do when they come back and find the place cleared out?" |
19294 | But do you really think there are gypsies on the island?" |
19294 | But may I ask,"he added, with exaggerated politeness,"how we are to go about accomplishing this service to society?" |
19294 | But that brings me back to my first query-- why are you girls all dressed up?" |
19294 | But who is the other girl? |
19294 | But would there have been room for all of us in Frank''s car, anyway?" |
19294 | But, Betty, are n''t you a bit interested? |
19294 | But, seriously, what is the idea, Betty? |
19294 | CHAPTER VI A WONDERFUL OUTING"Hello, Betty, that you? |
19294 | CHAPTER XV A SPLENDID CATCH"Ca n''t anybody think of anything to do?" |
19294 | CHAPTER XX DANGEROUS VISITORS"Gypsies?" |
19294 | Ca n''t we do something to stop it, boys?" |
19294 | Ca n''t we toast marshmallows? |
19294 | Ca n''t you, Allen? |
19294 | Can you be ready to start by six?" |
19294 | Could they make it? |
19294 | Did you ever see a girl like her?" |
19294 | Did you ever see such a mob?" |
19294 | Did you say it was the silver that had been stolen?" |
19294 | Do n''t you suppose we could make it if we started by nine?" |
19294 | Do n''t you think you had better go back and tell them, Frank?" |
19294 | Do n''t you think-- oh, what is it, Frank?" |
19294 | Do you want me to go home and spend a dismal evening all by myself-- is that it?" |
19294 | Does your father suspect the gypsies?" |
19294 | For had they not between them done a marvelous thing? |
19294 | Goodness, did I throw away an opportunity?" |
19294 | Grace fairly stuttered, but just then Mollie called out an impatient:"Who''s there?" |
19294 | Had ever such a thing happened before in the annals of history? |
19294 | Have a chocolate?" |
19294 | Have we been robbed?" |
19294 | How about it, Betty-- shall we give them another race? |
19294 | How about it, Frank?" |
19294 | How about it, Grace?" |
19294 | How about you, Betty? |
19294 | How are you feeling-- better?" |
19294 | How do we get over to the island from the mainland, Betty, do you remember?" |
19294 | How is that for a slam?" |
19294 | How on earth could they have lost out so soon? |
19294 | How''s that for a good fat one, eh?" |
19294 | If"this Jallow girl"had her, Betty''s, escort, where did she come in? |
19294 | Indeed, why should she-- the accusation was so plainly absurd? |
19294 | Irving?" |
19294 | Is n''t it a dandy?" |
19294 | Is n''t it terrible? |
19294 | Is she sick? |
19294 | It_ will_ be nice and shady and cool, wo n''t it, Mollie?" |
19294 | Just think, nothing to do but swim for-- how many years is it, Mollie?" |
19294 | Mrs. Irving followed more slowly with Amy and Grace, and they were just in time to hear Mollie''s last sentence:"Where have the boys disappeared to?" |
19294 | Mrs. Irving, is she?" |
19294 | No, I wo n''t tell you one thing more about it, except that everything is O. K. Will you come over to- night? |
19294 | Oh, I wonder where they went to?" |
19294 | Oh, Mrs. Irving, what is there?" |
19294 | Oh, ca n''t we-- can''t we?" |
19294 | Oh, have you got to go upstairs? |
19294 | Oh, is n''t it a wonderful night?" |
19294 | Oh, that you, Allen? |
19294 | Oh, well, if that''s all why do n''t you bring him along? |
19294 | Oh, what are we going to do?" |
19294 | Oh, what can be the matter?" |
19294 | Oh, where has the old thing gone to?" |
19294 | Oh, why did Allen look so happy? |
19294 | Once Amy uttered a weak protest, saying:"Do n''t you think we had better go back?" |
19294 | Remember I told you the other day that she intended to go to Europe? |
19294 | Say, girls, do you think we have a chance in the world of even keeping up with the boys?" |
19294 | Shall we go in the house?" |
19294 | Sling over that bag, Sis, will you?" |
19294 | Tell me some one-- am I right?" |
19294 | That does n''t sound just right, either, does it?" |
19294 | That is where you come from, is n''t it?" |
19294 | The creamer and teapot? |
19294 | The girls followed hesitatingly, as Mollie rushed forward and threw her arms about her mother''s neck, crying:"Mother, dear, what is it? |
19294 | Then I may count on you, to- night, honey? |
19294 | Then she added, as Mollie came to help her,"Did you ever see anybody eat like those boys last night?" |
19294 | Then, turning to the girl beside him, he added,"How are you feeling, Betty? |
19294 | To save one life-- to have brought back from eternity one little soul-- was there not joy enough in that to last them all their days? |
19294 | We have quite some ride before us; eh, Mollie?" |
19294 | Well, ladies, what day shall we set for the adventure?" |
19294 | Were n''t they, Mollie?" |
19294 | What are you going to do?" |
19294 | What did they do, Betty?" |
19294 | What do you say, Allen?" |
19294 | What do you say, Amy, more speed?" |
19294 | What is she doing in our crowd anyway?" |
19294 | What time do you suppose it is now?" |
19294 | What was the use of having a big fire- place if they never used it? |
19294 | What will Aunt Elvira say?" |
19294 | What''s that-- you ca n''t? |
19294 | What''s that? |
19294 | What''s that? |
19294 | What''s the use of talking about it, anyway?" |
19294 | What?" |
19294 | When can we go?" |
19294 | When shall we go, Con?" |
19294 | Where are they, Mollie?" |
19294 | Where can we find excitement?" |
19294 | Where is the bungalow?" |
19294 | Where''s that runaway sister of mine? |
19294 | Who cares to go along?" |
19294 | Who''s got the lunch basket?" |
19294 | Why did you say you dreamed it?" |
19294 | Why do n''t you all join in? |
19294 | Why do n''t you slow down a little? |
19294 | Why not?" |
19294 | Why should Allen be paired off with"this Jallow girl"? |
19294 | Why worry about a thing you ca n''t find?" |
19294 | Why, the first time I made biscuits, do you know what dad said?" |
19294 | Will you call the start?" |
19294 | Will you help me to remember?" |
19294 | Wo n''t you please interfere for the sake of the community? |
19294 | You do n''t suppose we''d take you to see a lot of old crones like this peppery woman, do you?" |
19294 | You remember what they did, do n''t you?" |
19294 | You will do it, wo n''t you, boys?" |
19294 | You''re a judge of rods, Will-- how do these look?" |
19294 | You''ve got the table cloth? |
19294 | cried Betty, springing up and pointing toward the mainland,"or is that the good old Pine Island dreadnaught steaming majestically from the harbor? |
19294 | how could we have forgotten it?" |
19294 | is n''t that wonderful?" |
19294 | protested Betty,"you never brought chocolates along?" |
19294 | she grasped his arm beseechingly,"did you find the necklace?" |
19294 | when are you fellows-- I mean girls-- going to get up?" |
19294 | where are you?" |
19294 | where is everybody?" |
19294 | who''s your venerable friend, Grace?" |
19294 | will we?" |
19294 | you have n''t?" |
43884 | Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
39853 | And dost thou know aught of the import of this letter? |
39853 | And how came living man to trust a boy like you to come alone, through the streets of Mecca, with such an errand? |
39853 | And what is he to you? |
39853 | And whither goest thou, my master? |
39853 | Are you afraid? |
39853 | Bedouin, where are your eyes and ears? |
39853 | Boy, dost thou not fear to die? |
39853 | Did I not say I would not trust a horse to thee? |
39853 | Did he not conquer Babylonia without it? |
39853 | Do you think me like your Greek boys, made of wax? 39853 Does he not fight in the name of Allah and the Prophet? |
39853 | Does he not realize that the hosts of Heraclius are bearing down upon us, that he leaves us sitting idly in our tents? |
39853 | Has he not taught us that action is the soul and secret of success? |
39853 | Have I missed the way? 39853 How did you come by it?" |
39853 | How long have you been a man, well taught in killing other men, not to see what any cowardly shepherd boy could read? 39853 If I speak the words and throw the lance and kill an Arab, that moment will he set my father free?" |
39853 | Is Kahled the Invincible afraid? |
39853 | Is it the loss of his girdle? |
39853 | Is not the motto of Kahled''Waiting does not win''? |
39853 | Is the word of the prince unchanged? |
39853 | Is this thy father? |
39853 | Kanana,he exclaimed,"why am I silent? |
39853 | Master, do they see us? |
39853 | Thou knowest not what they all know? |
39853 | Thou son of my old age, why didst thou come into the world to curse me? 39853 What camels and servants shall be provided?" |
39853 | Who art thou? |
39853 | Who is he? |
39853 | Wouldst thou dare to go without an escort? |
39853 | Wouldst thou teach me the value of camels and merchandise to comfort me? 39853 And hast thou fixed the price of ransom which Airikat will demand, or slay thy brother? 39853 Are you dead, or only sleeping? |
39853 | As for the beggars, where were your senses? |
39853 | As it was, he said, a little doubtfully,"What wouldst thou with my girdle?" |
39853 | Could a bright- colored girdle give him strength?" |
39853 | Didst thou think that I would not willingly and freely lead the white camel anywhere, to serve the great caliph?" |
39853 | Dost thou believe I would be treacherous to a servant of Omar and the Prophet?" |
39853 | Dost thou believe that Kanana spoke in fear or cowardice? |
39853 | Dost thou not fear that some rat may bite thee? |
39853 | Hast thou anything to say before the work begins?" |
39853 | He fell from his horse and--""You killed him?" |
39853 | His eyes were fixed on Manuel, and when all was still, he asked:"Will the prince allow his captive to sit alone till sunrise and consider his offer?" |
39853 | His lips parted and he muttered, angrily:"Is this my reward for having given a cup of water to the thirsty?" |
39853 | How could he know that that hand had never drawn a sword? |
39853 | I kept you waiting, did n''t I?" |
39853 | If he should come within range of the lance of Kanana, I suppose that Manuel would be well pleased to wait?" |
39853 | Kanana did not turn his head, but calmly answered:"Do you see yonder a man upon a gray horse, moving slowly among the soldiers? |
39853 | Kanana returned the salutation, and immediately asked,"Did the dust from Kahled''s host blow over you when your foot was on the sand of Bashra?" |
39853 | May it please the prince to double every torture he has prepared for me, and in exchange to set that old man free?" |
39853 | The great caliph quickly broke the seal and read; then, turning to the bearer, asked sharply,"And who art thou?" |
39853 | Three times his father came to him with the question:"Are you ready to be a man?" |
39853 | To Mount Hor? |
39853 | Was he not an Arab, and an Ishmaelite? |
39853 | Was he sleeping? |
39853 | Was it the robbers coming down upon him? |
39853 | Were not their lances made of the same peculiar wood; and their camel saddles, were they not the same, stained with the deep dye of Bashra? |
39853 | What dost thou require to aid thee in performing this duty?" |
39853 | What shall a father do with a son who will neither lift his hand among men nor bear a part with women? |
39853 | What was it? |
39853 | What was that shock that roused him? |
39853 | When wilt thou start?" |
39853 | Whither darest thou to go, thus, all alone, and after dark, upon the sand?" |
39853 | Who should be going toward Mecca at this season, without a burdened camel in his caravan, if he went not to meet his chief for war? |
39853 | Who should come out of the rising sun, with his camel licking the desert sand, if he came not from Bashra? |
39853 | Why did Airikat crowd his caravan, day and night, if he expected no one?" |
39853 | Why should we kill one another, even if we are Arabs and Ishmaelites?" |
39853 | Why was he waiting? |
39853 | Would he never stop? |
39853 | Would you see that happen?" |
39853 | XII KANANA''S MESSENGERS Far and wide the impatient soldiers asked,"Why is the army inactive?" |
39853 | [ Illustration:"DOST THOU BELIEVE THAT KANANA SPOKE IN FEAR?"] |
39853 | _ La Illaha il Allah!_""And what is my mission to be?" |
39853 | cried the old man, angrily( Page 21)_ Frontispiece_ Kanana stood upon the very edge of the white porch 42"Dost thou believe Kanana spoke in fear?" |
39853 | son of the Terror of the Desert, speaking of danger?" |
35239 | And John Stanley? |
35239 | And do n''t you think it would be a good idea to have Merica make a pig and a kitten out of gingerbread? 35239 And how was your pearl set?" |
35239 | And the amount of the note? 35239 And what is that? |
35239 | And who is it? |
35239 | And why_ not_? |
35239 | And you do n''t think, do you, that it is at all necessary for us to do anything very elaborate or-- expensive? |
35239 | And-- and what else was it? 35239 But is it really a note of my father''s? |
35239 | But why do you ask? |
35239 | But, Miss Bramwell, pray tell me, does not the pennyroyal belong to the whole state? 35239 But, my dear madam, you do n''t know how to play cards, do you?" |
35239 | But-- dear Miss Judy, have you considered? 35239 Dear Miss Judy, is there anything-- anything in the whole world-- that I can do?" |
35239 | Did Sam cover his pen as everybody else did? |
35239 | Did she know whether he used to be a dancing- master in his own country, as we have understood? 35239 Do any of you ladies think my children would get their supper any sooner if I came here whining about how hungry they were? |
35239 | Do n''t you think, sister Sophia, that many of poor Becky''s mistakes came from not knowing just what was right? 35239 Do you know any girls who work? |
35239 | Do you mean to say, Sidney, that Mr. Gordon is at your house-- with Doris now-- to- night? |
35239 | Have I said anything about the right or wrong of it? 35239 Have you ever known any-- any girl-- like me-- who worked?" |
35239 | Have you ever stopped to think where all this philandering must lead? 35239 Have you lost something?" |
35239 | How are you to- day, Tom? |
35239 | How can you sit here, eating, laughing, and spinning yarns, when you know your children are hungry at home-- and never think of them till now? |
35239 | How could it be wrong? |
35239 | How in the world do you always remember-- never once forgetting-- from year to year? 35239 How many times must I tell you that I do n''t like the bony parts?" |
35239 | Is the Spaniard such a terrible person? 35239 Is this beautiful Doris a child still?" |
35239 | Is this the kind of braids that the mermaids wear hanging down their backs? |
35239 | Let Eunice go and I''ll defend her; I''ll take her as my first case,--shall I? |
35239 | Miss Judy,said the doctor, before she had time to ask what had happened,"what do you think of playing poker?" |
35239 | No such thing as a Whiskey Baptist? |
35239 | Now, what''s the use of your telling me any such nonsense as that, Jim Slocum? 35239 Now_ is n''t_ that like a man?" |
35239 | Oh, you told her, did you? |
35239 | Sister Sophia, do you happen to know whether Mr. Pettus has been getting any boxes of tea lately? |
35239 | So that''s how the matter stands, is it? 35239 Somebody had to be killed-- and why?" |
35239 | The corset- boards? |
35239 | Then what do you call it? |
35239 | Then who is it? |
35239 | Were you-- do you wish_ me_ to play with him? |
35239 | What bad luck? |
35239 | What difference would it make to me if it were the United States? 35239 What do you mean, Sidney? |
35239 | What do you mean-- I say, sir-- by sitting there without saying a word? 35239 What does such conduct mean, Merica?" |
35239 | What on earth is the matter? |
35239 | What''s all that tirade got to do with what I said about Anne''s-- and everybody''s-- being what they pretend to be? |
35239 | What''s the use of worrying Miss Judy? 35239 What''s the use of your going on like that to me, Sidney? |
35239 | Who comes at this late day claiming that my father did not pay what he owed,--when he could have paid? |
35239 | Who is Alvarado? |
35239 | Who said she did n''t? |
35239 | Who? |
35239 | Why, did n''t you know about his corn? 35239 Why?" |
35239 | Why? |
35239 | Would n''t anybody but a man know that Anne would only stand the firmer for that very reason? 35239 Would you like me to come with you now-- at once? |
35239 | You are sure that Mr. Beauchamp used to be a dancing- master? |
35239 | You do n''t mind, do you, sister Sophia? |
35239 | You mean the old gentleman whom I saw yesterday? 35239 _ Do_ you know any working girls?" |
35239 | _ What_ Betty? |
35239 | _ Why_ not-- I ask you, Jane_ Alexander_? 35239 And his young mother, whom he had never known? 35239 And how could a body guard against such an unheard- of thing as that was? |
35239 | And is it true that the debt never has been paid? |
35239 | And then, carelessly, after an instant''s pause,"What did you say?" |
35239 | And was it not rather a pretty ambition and even a laudable one? |
35239 | And was there not also that remarkable song, celebrating the part taken by"The Hunters of Kentucky"in the battle of New Orleans? |
35239 | And what would be the use-- since neither Anne nor the doctor nor the power of the whole world of sympathy or science could do anything more? |
35239 | And what''s the odds, anyway?" |
35239 | And why has the note not been known about before? |
35239 | And yet what did it matter, after all? |
35239 | Are you sure that the colonel has actually brought the suit?" |
35239 | Are you sure, John, that there is no mistake? |
35239 | Beauchamp?" |
35239 | But what could anybody think or say of Anne''s sincerity now? |
35239 | Ca n''t you see him now, John? |
35239 | Ca n''t you speak, dear Miss Judy? |
35239 | Did he ever owe the money? |
35239 | Did n''t they always get drunk on every county court day of their lives, and keep sober all the rest of the year? |
35239 | Did n''t they always pay their debts on the stroke of the town clock, and to a hundred cents on the dollar? |
35239 | Did n''t they always vote the straight Democratic ticket for fifty years, without ever a scratch from end to end? |
35239 | Did you ever see anybody like Kitty, sister Sophia?" |
35239 | Do n''t you remember, sister Sophia, how much he liked the other two-- the ones he took in exchange for the sugar?" |
35239 | Do n''t_ I_ know as well as you do that she ca n''t eat it-- nor anything else-- ever again in this world? |
35239 | Do you mean some one who lives over there in the house behind those silver poplars?" |
35239 | Gad-- sir-- what more would you have? |
35239 | Had Doris recognized in his guarded attitude toward her an intended warning to guard her own heart-- as his grandmother had said? |
35239 | Had Doris seen him-- as his grandmother had seen him? |
35239 | Had he the right-- toward her? |
35239 | Had this cynical old woman disapproved of her, had she been unkind to her? |
35239 | Have not most of us noted pettier ambitions and far less laudable ones in a much larger world? |
35239 | How can I help you? |
35239 | How could she offer Doris the disrespect of making an explanation? |
35239 | How in the world could you think such a thing? |
35239 | How long has it been since your father died?" |
35239 | How much is it?" |
35239 | If it should be more than the amount of the whole pension,--more than she had or ever hoped to have in the wide world,--what should she do then? |
35239 | Is it not amazing that a small, soft woman can leave such a large, hard void in the world? |
35239 | Is n''t that your idea, sister Sophia?" |
35239 | Is the judge afraid?" |
35239 | Send Enoch Cotton-- where is Enoch, anyway?" |
35239 | Suppose we consult sister Sophia?" |
35239 | That stately, beautiful old man with the silver hair curling on his shoulders, and wearing the long black cloak?" |
35239 | Then she said, delicately but uneasily,"Are you quite sure that Uncle Watty and the children will-- will know how to do the honors?" |
35239 | Was another fair portion of the good green earth ever so deep- dyed in the blood of both the innocent and the guilty? |
35239 | Was it then possible for Anne to listen for a moment to this incredible, monstrous, destroying thing which the doctor had urged? |
35239 | Was it, after all, ever right to do wrong to one person in order to benefit another, even though the injured might never know of the injury? |
35239 | Was she not younger than Eunice and better- looking and several shades lighter in color? |
35239 | What are you doing, Eunice? |
35239 | What are you thinking of to speak of card- playing in Anne Watson''s house?" |
35239 | What are_ you_ here for, Jim, at this time of day?" |
35239 | What did she say?" |
35239 | What did somebody tell me about him-- only this morning? |
35239 | What else could you call them, I ask you,''Mandy Pettus? |
35239 | What else did I come for? |
35239 | What have you been up to, anyway?" |
35239 | What if the child would_ not_ sit on the home- made rug? |
35239 | What is it?" |
35239 | What more could any man be?" |
35239 | What sort of woman is his wife? |
35239 | What then? |
35239 | What was it I wanted to say about that young John Stanley, who''s eternally hanging round my house? |
35239 | What was there for her to be afraid of? |
35239 | What will he think now? |
35239 | What woman would n''t? |
35239 | What would this stranger think of Doris, or of any well brought up girl, whom he thus found neglected? |
35239 | What would_ we_ have been, without our dear mother?" |
35239 | What''s the matter with you, ca n''t you speak, boy?" |
35239 | What''s the odds-- since it never interferes with his work? |
35239 | What''s this I hear about all the Millses a- swarming down from Green River, and about you''re inviting them to dinner? |
35239 | When, therefore, on the following Sunday-- through some singular mischance-- he chose as a text:"Children, have ye any meat?" |
35239 | Where, pray, do the rest of us come in? |
35239 | Who would have remembered the garden in the midst of such awful trouble as hers? |
35239 | Who''s raking anything up?" |
35239 | Why did she marry him?" |
35239 | Why have I never been told-- all these years? |
35239 | Will you be so very kind, young sir, as to give my compliments to the elder of the major''s daughters, and also to the major himself? |
35239 | Wo n''t you ask?" |
35239 | Wo n''t you help me?" |
35239 | Would n''t you, and you, and all of you"--turning from one to another--"begin right away to regard me as a tiresome beggar and my children as paupers? |
35239 | Would you ever invite me to come again if I did that-- even once? |
35239 | Would you invite me to_ your_ parties, Miss Pettus? |
35239 | Would you, Mrs. Gordon? |
35239 | You do n''t know anything about chess, do you, Tom?" |
35239 | You to enter the arena to struggle with brutal gladiators for the spoils which belong to the strongest and the fiercest? |
35239 | You will not forget?" |
35239 | You wo n''t forget?" |
35239 | _ Do_ you mean to tell me that you have left Doris-- that poor, poor child-- to receive a perfect stranger entirely alone? |
35239 | are you going to let the bear hug the life out of you before you''ll give him that spoonful of milk?''" |
44228 | He was very wet and his boat was full of water, but to the inquiry of"Rough out in the bay?" |
41266 | Damn you, why do n''t you disperse? |
41266 | I have half of Old England set against me already, and do you think I will have all New England likewise? |
41266 | Well,said Stark,"would you have us turn out now, while it is pitch dark and raining buckets?" |
41266 | What do you suppose my fate would be,Arnold is said to have inquired,"if my misguided countrymen were to take me prisoner?" |
41266 | What do you think of the damnable doings of that diabolical dog? |
41266 | Who knows,said John Rowe,"how tea will mingle with salt water?" |
41266 | Why,therefore,"all this haste? |
41266 | But were it ever so easy, does any friend to his country really wish to see America thus humbled? |
41266 | But why, we may ask, did the intriguer come back? |
41266 | Colonel Reed replied,"You are aware, sir, of the rank of General Washington in our army?" |
41266 | Could it have been with the intention of playing into the hands of the enemy? |
41266 | For a moment all firing ceased on both ships, and Captain Pearson called out,"Have you struck your colours?" |
41266 | General Lee, what are you about?" |
41266 | Is this the palace that papa was to have when he came to America?" |
41266 | No one spoke for a few moments, until General Stevens exclaimed,"Well, gentlemen, is it not too late_ now_ to do anything but fight?" |
41266 | Then why not be magnanimous in the hour of triumph? |
41266 | To whom but Chatham should appeal be made to repair the drooping fortunes of the empire? |
41266 | Was it to join such a league as this that she had cast off allegiance to Great Britain? |
41266 | What must the traitor''s feelings have been when he read the affectionate letters which Schuyler wrote him at this very time? |
41266 | What would Washington, what would Congress have thought, had the truth in its blackness been so much as dreamed of? |
41266 | What would the keeper of his majesty''s lions do? |
41266 | When Cornwallis, on the 7th of April, arrived at Wilmington, what was he to do next? |
41266 | Where is the brigadier who will go?" |
41266 | Whom can we trust now?" |
41266 | Why did he think it worth his while to pose once more in the attitude of an American? |
41266 | Why not make a hill? |
41266 | Why this driving?" |
41266 | Why this urging? |
41266 | Would he not fling open the dens of the wild beasts, and then address them thus? |
41266 | [ 35] To a gentleman, like Clinton, such a proposal was a gross insult, to which the only fitting answer would have been,"What do you take me for?" |
41266 | and could Sir Henry Clinton have been aware of this purpose? |
40254 | About how fast can that streak of greased lightning travel, any way? |
40254 | Am I hungry? |
40254 | And now,he concluded,"do you wonder that I dread that sleek and crawling monster that I call the sea?" |
40254 | And so you''re one of the chaps in the transcontinental race, are you? 40254 Are you fit?" |
40254 | Are you two rascals going along? |
40254 | Beat a train? |
40254 | Billy the Kid and his gang? 40254 But have n''t you got a machine in the place you could take a cylinder from, and put it on my machine?" |
40254 | But how long will it take to get the new one here? |
40254 | But is n''t your name Wilson-- Bert Wilson, the college pitcher? |
40254 | But what started the feud in the first place? |
40254 | Can you tell me,he asked,"who sent that telegram early this morning?" |
40254 | Did you think for a minute that Tom and I would miss the fun of seeing you scoot across the continent and win that ten thousand dollars? 40254 Do n''t smoke, eh?" |
40254 | Do you remember? |
40254 | Do you see this hair of mine? |
40254 | Do you smoke, son? |
40254 | Have you ever seen an abalone? 40254 Have you really decided to go into it?" |
40254 | How about any crooked work? |
40254 | How about that contest anyway? |
40254 | How about the route? |
40254 | How are you feeling, Bert? |
40254 | I should say you did,agreed his late rival,"but what are you doing way out here a thousand miles from nowhere, more or less?" |
40254 | I suppose you''ll begin practicing at the track pretty soon now, wo n''t you, Bert? |
40254 | Is a wolf hungry? 40254 Is there a switch between here and Corridon?" |
40254 | Is there any chance of that? |
40254 | Is there any road near the track that he might have used? |
40254 | Near Newark, did you say? |
40254 | No need to worry about your not delivering the goods, is there, old boy? |
40254 | Nobody''s going to play a trick like that on us and get away with it, are they? |
40254 | Oh, just about an hour ago,replied the clerk,"no bad news I hope?" |
40254 | Since when did you fellows set up to be mind readers? |
40254 | Wall, stranger, what kind of a contraption do you- all reckon to have thar? |
40254 | We''ll make it ahead of everybody else or die in the attempt, wo n''t we, old fellow? |
40254 | Weeping for more worlds to conquer? |
40254 | What are you going to christen it, Bert? |
40254 | What do you mean by that? |
40254 | What kept you so long? |
40254 | What was it-- a freight? |
40254 | What''s the matter, Alexander? |
40254 | What''s the record for a motorcycle? |
40254 | What''s up? |
40254 | When did it come? |
40254 | Why would n''t it be a good idea,Tom proposed,"to hire an automobile early to- morrow morning and meet him outside the town on his way in? |
40254 | Are you hungry?" |
40254 | But how about you, now? |
40254 | But whareabouts in that gasoline buggy o''yourn am I goin''to sit? |
40254 | But what was the race compared to dear old Tom, Tom, who at this very moment might be calling for him? |
40254 | But would his machine be equal to the task? |
40254 | CHAPTER II THE"BLUE STREAK""Is n''t it a beauty?" |
40254 | Could he ever forget? |
40254 | Did Bert remember? |
40254 | Did he remember? |
40254 | Do you realize that?" |
40254 | Do you remember the time she ran away from the Gray Ghost? |
40254 | Everything O.K., I hope?" |
40254 | Hold up the front fork, will you?" |
40254 | How long will it take me to get there?" |
40254 | How on earth did you escape? |
40254 | Is a hawk hungry? |
40254 | No? |
40254 | Pretty nifty building, do n''t you think?" |
40254 | Queer kind of fishing, is n''t it?" |
40254 | Then in a whisper,"Ye have n''t forgot the shamrock?" |
40254 | What could be done? |
40254 | What do you say we light out and take a squint at that machine of yourn? |
40254 | Where is the Mogul?" |
40254 | Why had he awakened so suddenly? |
40254 | Why should he not trust it now? |
40254 | You can do that all right, ca n''t you?" |
40254 | he exclaimed gaily,"how is the old''bus''to- night? |
40254 | they demanded, both in the same breath,"who sent that telegram, do you know?" |
35742 | But when? |
35742 | Dead, sir? |
35742 | If the Governor refuses to give the pass, shall the revenue officer be allowed to seize the tea and land it to- morrow morning? |
35742 | Is it not finished? |
35742 | What makes thee think so, Isaac? |
35742 | What picture do you get in that paragraph? |
35742 | Where is Cervera going? |
35742 | Why dost thou remove thy hat, friend Charles? |
35742 | Will he try to break the blockade which an American fleet under Admiral Sampson is keeping up on the northern coast of Cuba? 35742 Would$ 10 be of any service?" |
35742 | About his ability as a speech- maker? |
35742 | Are you constantly trying to form mental pictures as you read? |
35742 | Are you forming the habit of looking up on your map all the places mentioned in the text? |
35742 | But when shall we be stronger? |
35742 | But while, in deep suspense, the meeting waited and deliberated, John Rowe said,"Who knows how tea will mingle with salt water?" |
35742 | Can you form a mental picture of Patrick Henry as he made his great speech in St. John''s Church? |
35742 | Can you form a mental picture of their first dwellings? |
35742 | Do you not think it would be profitable for you to memorize this speech? |
35742 | For how could they escape? |
35742 | Had he and his men endured such peril and hardship to perish unknown in the sea? |
35742 | Have you definite pictures of the personal appearance of these men? |
35742 | How could he send Ezekiel, too? |
35742 | How did Greene look? |
35742 | How did Jefferson look when he was in college? |
35742 | How did William Pitt feel about American taxation? |
35742 | How did Wolfe look, and what were his most striking personal traits? |
35742 | How did he dress? |
35742 | How did he make many Puritan enemies? |
35742 | How did he show his interest in the people? |
35742 | How did his colony suffer? |
35742 | How did his slaves regard him? |
35742 | How did it result? |
35742 | How did the people of Providence feel about religious freedom? |
35742 | How do you explain the success in life of this poor boy? |
35742 | How many are already in the forts lying between Lake Erie and the Ohio River?" |
35742 | How was he treated by the French people and their King? |
35742 | How was the idea of the telegraph suggested to Morse? |
35742 | In Pocahontas? |
35742 | In what way did the King try to entrap the Americans? |
35742 | In what way was he defeated? |
35742 | In what ways did he give evidence of his stubbornness? |
35742 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
35742 | Its most striking result? |
35742 | On a certain occasion, Morse said to one of them, who owed him a quarter''s tuition:"Well, Strothers, my boy, how are we off for money?" |
35742 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
35742 | Should the people of Virginia tamely submit to it and say nothing? |
35742 | Should they urge Parliament to repeal it? |
35742 | Tell about Washington''s troubles and his retreat across New Jersey? |
35742 | The special question of inquiry was this:"Does the length of wire make any difference in the velocity of the electric current passing through it?" |
35742 | Washington eagerly asked,"Did the Americans stand the fire of the regular troops?" |
35742 | What and where was The Hermitage? |
35742 | What can be the plans of the French? |
35742 | What can you say of his record in the Mexican War? |
35742 | What can you tell about Grant''s personality? |
35742 | What caused the war with Spain? |
35742 | What caused this war? |
35742 | What did Champlain accomplish? |
35742 | What did De Soto accomplish? |
35742 | What did Franklin have to do with the following: the Stamp Act; the Declaration of Independence; securing aid from France? |
35742 | What did Jackson do for the Union? |
35742 | What did Lieutenant Hobson and his men do? |
35742 | What did Raleigh try to do? |
35742 | What did he succeed in doing? |
35742 | What did his mother mean when she said to him,"George, be King"? |
35742 | What do the following dates mean: 1492, 1541, 1607, 1629, 1676, 1682? |
35742 | What do the following dates signify: 1492, 1607, 1620, 1775- 1783, 1861- 1865, 1898? |
35742 | What do you admire in Bacon? |
35742 | What do you admire in Boone''s character? |
35742 | What do you admire in Jefferson''s character? |
35742 | What do you admire in La Salle''s character? |
35742 | What do you admire in Penn''s character? |
35742 | What do you admire in Roger Williams? |
35742 | What do you admire in Smith? |
35742 | What do you admire in his character? |
35742 | What do you admire in his character? |
35742 | What do you admire in his character? |
35742 | What do you admire in his character? |
35742 | What do you admire in the character of Abraham Lincoln? |
35742 | What do you admire in the character of Admiral Dewey? |
35742 | What do you admire in the character of Miles Standish, and what did he do for the Pilgrims at Plymouth? |
35742 | What do you admire in the character of Robert Fulton? |
35742 | What do you think of General Braddock? |
35742 | What do you think of Powhatan? |
35742 | What great discovery did he make at this time? |
35742 | What great thing did he do? |
35742 | What honors were showered upon him? |
35742 | What important thing was done by Sir Thomas Dale? |
35742 | What is a hero? |
35742 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
35742 | What is meant by his"republican simplicity"? |
35742 | What is there in Webster''s character that you admire? |
35742 | What picture have you of Webster''s personal appearance? |
35742 | What serious accident happened to his boat? |
35742 | What shall we do?" |
35742 | What should be done about the Stamp Act? |
35742 | What simple ways of living did Franklin adopt when he was trying hard to pay his debts? |
35742 | What sort of a man was he in his home life? |
35742 | What traits in Grant''s character do you admire? |
35742 | What was Boone''s great work? |
35742 | What was Columbus trying to do? |
35742 | What was Daniel Webster''s idea of the Union? |
35742 | What was Washington''s favorite motto? |
35742 | What was his personal appearance when he went to Williamsburg to attend the session of the House of Burgesses? |
35742 | What was the Stamp Act and what was its purpose? |
35742 | What was the condition of his army when he took command of it in the South? |
35742 | What was the condition of this army? |
35742 | What was the great work of Samuel Adams? |
35742 | What was the new problem? |
35742 | What was the purpose of this journey? |
35742 | What was the"race for life"? |
35742 | What was their three- fold purpose? |
35742 | What was this? |
35742 | What were Gage''s secret plans, and how did Paul Revere and his band of patriots try to thwart them? |
35742 | What were King George''s new taxes? |
35742 | What were La Salle''s twofold plans? |
35742 | What were Marion''s methods of annoying the British? |
35742 | What were his most prominent traits of character? |
35742 | What were his reading habits? |
35742 | What were his trials and difficulties at Quebec? |
35742 | What were his working habits? |
35742 | What were its most striking results? |
35742 | What were the British plans for 1777, and in what way did General Howe blunder in carrying out his part? |
35742 | What were the Navigation Laws, and how did they affect the planters? |
35742 | What were the leading causes of the Revolution? |
35742 | What would they have? |
35742 | What, in the American sailors in the war with Spain? |
35742 | When and why did Jefferson purchase Louisiana? |
35742 | When did the Quakers settle Pennsylvania? |
35742 | When did this battle take place? |
35742 | When was Jamestown settled? |
35742 | When? |
35742 | When? |
35742 | When? |
35742 | Which point of view was correct? |
35742 | Whom do you most admire of all the heroes you have read about in this book? |
35742 | Why did Commodore Dewey go with his fleet to the Philippines? |
35742 | Why did Raleigh when a boy hate Spain? |
35742 | Why did he wish to settle Pennsylvania? |
35742 | Why did the British wish to get control of the South? |
35742 | Why did the Iroquois become bitter enemies of the French and warm friends of the Dutch? |
35742 | Why did the colonists object to it? |
35742 | Why stand we here idle? |
35742 | Why was Penn thrown into prison? |
35742 | Why was the capture of Quebec by the English so important? |
35742 | Why were all the taxes repealed except the one on tea? |
35742 | Why? |
35742 | Will he try to intercept and destroy the battle- ship Oregon? |
35742 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
35742 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
35742 | Would the world never know of their great achievement? |
35742 | [ 12] Or, will he bring havoc and destruction upon us by sailing straight for some great Atlantic seaport?" |
35742 | he asked,"Who runs?" |
35742 | or should they cry out against it in open defiance? |
38819 | But,interjected one of the listeners,"does President Harding understand that?" |
38819 | Kow Loon, where is the place anyway? |
38819 | Your President,he said,"is a charming man, but why does he put such funny things in his speeches?" |
38819 | After he has blustered through some utterance, he will buttonhole you and ask,"Did I make a damn fool of myself? |
38819 | All this sounds as if I were getting far from my happy ending, and you begin to see me asking the old question,"Is democracy a failure?" |
38819 | And not only are we divided as to the limits of government, but where shall Mr. Harding look for authority to guide him with respect to clocks? |
38819 | And what virtue is there in the theory that the Executive alone represents the national point of view, that he alone speaks"for the country?" |
38819 | And who would be worse scandalized than the ancient committee chairman, some with one foot in the grave? |
38819 | Besides, we have had infinite space, in our minds; but have we ever had democracy there? |
38819 | But does Progress always respond instantly to our needs with new methods and devices, like a nurse responding to a hungry child? |
38819 | But granting that the real Mr. Mellon is shown in the enormous fortune and not in the timid asking of a subordinate,"Did I make a good impression?" |
38819 | But how many of us really believe that in the unqualified way we once did? |
38819 | But in peace shall he go on thus boldly? |
38819 | But on what do the octogenarian feet of Mr. Lodge and Mr. Cummins, and Mr. Colt and Mr. Nelson, and the others, rest except upon party authority? |
38819 | But when will progress vouchsafe it? |
38819 | But why should Mr. Harding understand or represent the national point of view? |
38819 | Can anyone tell whether Mr. Justice Taft is coming or going, as this Fourth of July speaker asked? |
38819 | Did I get it clear? |
38819 | Does he represent Capital? |
38819 | Does he represent the farmers? |
38819 | Existence had been unclouded until this last cloud came; why was it to end suddenly and without reason? |
38819 | For the limited tasks of self- government, why should special talents be required? |
38819 | Forces? |
38819 | Had not Mr. Carnegie confessed the weakness in his soul''s fortress by writing a book? |
38819 | Had not Mr. Morgan by buying art suggested the one aim of pioneering on a grand scale might not be life''s sole end? |
38819 | Have we a government by parties there? |
38819 | How could the dull sideshow in Washington compete with the big spectacle in New York? |
38819 | How doubt in the face of all this evidence? |
38819 | How much wisdom has emerged from the biweekly meetings? |
38819 | If the two existing parties can not be positive and constructive,"Why not scrap them both?" |
38819 | Just a journalist? |
38819 | Minority opinion is definite, but is it safe? |
38819 | Mr. Hearst''s newspapers? |
38819 | Or did I seem like a damn fool?" |
38819 | Or shall he revert to the good old days, the days of McKinley, when the clock was sacred? |
38819 | Or something that Mr. Harding may create himself if he will? |
38819 | Or the manufacturer or railroad builder who put the town on the map, giving employment to labor or an outlet for its products? |
38819 | Or the product of the propaganda conducted from Washington? |
38819 | Or the rest of the press? |
38819 | Principles? |
38819 | Public opinion, what is it? |
38819 | Remember the sneers in our cocksure press of those days at the"culture"of Boston? |
38819 | Shall Wilson"get away with it,"with his League of Nations and his sublimated world set free from all the baser passions of the past? |
38819 | Shall official Washington turn to public opinion as its guide? |
38819 | The connection between President Harding and the Ku Klux Klan? |
38819 | To business? |
38819 | To go back to the small town again, who was it increased the opportunities of the storekeeper, the neighboring farmer, or real estate holder? |
38819 | To his party? |
38819 | To public opinion then? |
38819 | Useful; but why should the whole nation worry about who advises with the President over the inveterate bad habits of the people as letter writers? |
38819 | Was his reputation solidly based or was it newspaper made? |
38819 | Was it the mayor and the common council by passing ordinances about street signs and sidewalk encumbrances? |
38819 | Was n''t America being produced in accordance with economic law and was n''t America one of the marvels of the earth? |
38819 | Were ever great abilities so tongue- tied as this? |
38819 | Were they not instruments rather than mere men, instruments of the greater purpose of which America was the perfect work? |
38819 | What could Alexander Hamilton do as the head of Mr. Harding''s Cabinet? |
38819 | What could Alexander Hamilton do? |
38819 | What could a subordinate reply except,"Yes, Mr. Mellon, you did very well."? |
38819 | What difference does it make which is in power?" |
38819 | What do these adverse circumstances mean regarding Mr. Vanderlip''s fitness to be, let us say, Secretary of the Treasury? |
38819 | What else? |
38819 | What is a good Secretary of the Treasury? |
38819 | What is he going to do in office with those who"stood close"to him as he"stood close"to President Taft? |
38819 | What is it that makes a leader and followers unless it is a common purpose? |
38819 | What more threatening spectacle for second childhood is there than first childhood? |
38819 | What would the loss of the senatorship mean to such a man? |
38819 | When he was retiring, it is said, a reporter asked,"What can be done with the Senate?" |
38819 | When we ceased to be a nation of farmers did we abandon the basis of our government in divine right? |
38819 | Where did Mr. Harding''s plan of settling international affairs by conferences originate? |
38819 | Where is authority? |
38819 | Who else? |
38819 | Who knows that there wo n''t be another"and Frelinghuysen"ticket, this time a successful one? |
38819 | Why not, indeed? |
38819 | Why should Mr. Harding have a vast understanding of national problems and a clear sense of the country''s will? |
38819 | Why should President Harding declaim against them so persistently? |
38819 | Why should minorities be regarded with such aversion? |
38819 | Why should we let this new political organism keep us awake nights? |
38819 | Would you make the nation happy and rich, give the soldiers a five- billion- dollar bonus and start them buying? |
38819 | Yet Mr. Harding''s administration has been in office more than a year, and how many important policies has it adopted? |
38819 | You and I know those Allied war debts are worthless, but how can we make the people realize that they are worthless?" |
38819 | You have trouble laughing? |
38819 | does such shrinking, such ill adaptation, on the stage of public life make a contribution to the unending drama of self- government? |
41036 | Ai n''t you old enough to know better? |
41036 | Are you trying to commit suicide? |
41036 | Ca n''t we win through with this start? |
41036 | Come on, you fellows,he yelled over his shoulder;"do you want me to drive them back twice?" |
41036 | Did you catch that pig yesterday? |
41036 | Do n''t you hear a drum? |
41036 | Do n''t you see the fellow is a Reb? 41036 Do you surrender?" |
41036 | Have you ever hit anything with that old gun of yours? |
41036 | How about dropping some of the fire- bars on the tracks? |
41036 | How about putting this in the middle of the track on the chance that it may entangle the wheels? |
41036 | How long since you''ve been wagon- master? |
41036 | I command here,said the Confederate colonel, rising from the middle pit,"and who are you, sir?" |
41036 | If you''re from the North,said one,"why do n''t you show us a Yankee trick before you go?" |
41036 | John, what in the world are you doing there? |
41036 | Little man, can you really drum? |
41036 | Major Keenan,shouted General Pleasonton,"how many men have you got?" |
41036 | Say, grandpa,called out one,"did you fight in the Revolution?" |
41036 | Well, general,answered Andrews slowly,"do n''t you think it''s worth trying? |
41036 | What are you doing down here? |
41036 | What are you doing, old man, wounded on a battle- field in citizens''clothes? |
41036 | What else? |
41036 | What is the meaning of all this? |
41036 | What the devil are you fellows stopping for? |
41036 | What will you do for me? |
41036 | What''s the matter with you fellows anyway,said Allen, as he reached the safety of the rear rank;"do you think I''m going to do all the fighting?" |
41036 | What''s your business,said one,"and what are you doing in that uniform?" |
41036 | Where are ye gaun, ye mason lads, Wi''a''your ladders lang and hie? |
41036 | Where be ye gaun, ye broken men? |
41036 | Where be ye gaun, ye hunters keen? |
41036 | Where be ye gaun, ye marshal men? |
41036 | Where is the_ Mississippi_? 41036 Whose horse is this?" |
41036 | Why do n''t you get back to the rear where you belong? |
41036 | Why do n''t you play something else? |
41036 | Why trespass ye on the English side? 41036 You do n''t think I am going to die, do you, Bill?" |
41036 | ''Well,''I said,''General, I have only got twelve more bullets; ca n''t I shoot those?'' |
41036 | And as we cross''d the Bateable Land, When to the English side we held, The first o''men that we met wi'', Whae sould it be but fause Sakelde? |
41036 | And when we cam to the lower prison, Where Willie o''Kinmont he did lie--"O sleep ye, wake ye, Kinmont Willie, Upon the morn that thou''s to die?" |
41036 | But who shall break the guards that wait Before the awful face of Fate? |
41036 | General Grant called General Granger up to him and said angrily:"Did you order those men up, Granger?" |
41036 | How they hae ta''en bauld Kinmont Willie, On Haribee to hang him up? |
41036 | I turns around and right behind me was General George Washington, so I saluted and I says,''What is it, General?'' |
41036 | If I get him to you, do you think you can ease his pain?" |
41036 | O have ye na heard o''the keen Lord Scroope? |
41036 | The last verse sang the praise both of the rider and the horse:"What was done? |
41036 | Then loud the warden''s trumpet blew--"O wha dare meddle wi''me?" |
41036 | What can I do for you?" |
41036 | What you hangin''back for?" |
41036 | Where are you going?" |
41036 | Where''ll I go?" |
41036 | what to do? |
42549 | 484.--"Where is my hat?"] |
42549 | 486.--"Will you play with me?"] |
42549 | Ask each boy and girl to repeat in turn these lines:"She says she sells sea- shells; Shall she sell sea- shells?" |
42549 | Can you hesitate between the two arrangements? |
42549 | Could a manufacturer furnish you with such enchanting material from which to make your toys? |
42549 | Do you like real country buttermilk, and have you ever helped churn? |
42549 | Does not all that sound delightful? |
42549 | Feed the Birds Have you ever seen little young birds in their nest? |
42549 | How is it managed? |
42549 | How many bars has yo''got now? |
42549 | Is the old spinning- wheel in the attic, neglected and covered with dust, or in the parlor, decked in all its bravery of blue ribbons and snowy flax? |
42549 | Is there any flower more beautiful? |
42549 | It looks very much like a cape now, does n''t it? |
42549 | Six? |
42549 | There they are sitting in rows; do n''t you see them? |
42549 | WOULD it not be fun to see a yoke of real live oxen come slowly walking into the kitchen dragging a load of logs? |
42549 | Why what can compare with it? |
42549 | Wo n''t you, mammy?" |
13898 | Adventure? 13898 All here?" |
13898 | And did you see Tim Lally get that one? |
13898 | And wo n''t he have a good time? |
13898 | And you swallowed that? |
13898 | Angry, Don? |
13898 | Any trouble with Tim? |
13898 | Anything wrong, Bobbie? |
13898 | Are we the only fellows here? |
13898 | Are you going to Danger Mountain? |
13898 | Are you sick? |
13898 | Arm tired? |
13898 | But can we do it? 13898 But suppose a patrol finds the treasure, what then?" |
13898 | But when a fellow tells about other things--"Could you stop this scout from doing something dangerous if you told? |
13898 | Ca n''t a fellow have a little fun? 13898 Ca n''t the patrol leader keep order?" |
13898 | Care to start now? |
13898 | Could we try the walls again? |
13898 | Cut what out? |
13898 | Did I do anything to you? |
13898 | Did n''t I tell you? |
13898 | Did n''t he say anything? |
13898 | Did n''t you hear me say twelve sharp? |
13898 | Did you hear the latest? 13898 Did you see Ted Carter make that catch?" |
13898 | Did you see Tim roughing Bobbie all afternoon? |
13898 | Did you tell him? 13898 Did you tell him?" |
13898 | Do n''t you think I''m good enough? |
13898 | Do n''t you want me to play tomorrow? |
13898 | Do you think I would n''t know an e? |
13898 | Do you think he votes for his opponent? |
13898 | Do you think_ they''ll_ sit around in the dark? 13898 Does he know it''s dangerous?" |
13898 | Does n''t he know any better than to pay attention to a kid like Bobbie? |
13898 | Does n''t he? |
13898 | Does n''t look like Lonesome Woods now, does it? |
13898 | Does that look as though I''m stringing you? 13898 Don,"Barbara said,"do n''t you think he''s all right at heart if he does acts like that?" |
13898 | Don,said Mr. Strong,"do you remember when you learned to pitch an outcurve?" |
13898 | Down in the mouth? |
13898 | Each two scouts by themselves? |
13898 | Everything all right? 13898 Feels better, does n''t it?" |
13898 | Fire? |
13898 | For patrol leader? |
13898 | For the love of Mike, Tim, why did you do that? |
13898 | Get back for what? |
13898 | Getting ready for the signal contest, Tim? |
13898 | Going my way? |
13898 | Got enough? |
13898 | Got your scout whistle? |
13898 | Have you a wrench? 13898 Have you and Tim been scrapping?" |
13898 | Hiking tomorrow? |
13898 | How about Monday? |
13898 | How about Tim? |
13898 | How about a man who runs for president of the United States? |
13898 | How about another session Friday? |
13898 | How about eats, Tim? |
13898 | How about making camp? 13898 How about one whistle if everything''s all right?" |
13898 | How about some practice in the woods this afternoon, Tim? |
13898 | How about starting? |
13898 | How about you and Andy and Bobbie practicing a couple of times before Friday? |
13898 | How about you, Bobbie? |
13898 | How about you? |
13898 | How do you know Phil Morris is moving? |
13898 | How do you know what Mr. Wall expected? 13898 How do you know?" |
13898 | How do you know? |
13898 | How do you know? |
13898 | How do you like it? |
13898 | How does a fellow get to be a better scout? |
13898 | How does it look? |
13898 | How does it look? |
13898 | How far apart will they put us in the woods? |
13898 | How is he on the ball field; all right? |
13898 | How is that for a good turn? |
13898 | How is that going to hit our signaling chances? |
13898 | How long? |
13898 | How many of you scouts told Mr. Wall you were going on this trip? |
13898 | How much wire must each patrol have out? |
13898 | How will they know which way we went? |
13898 | How will we find it again? |
13898 | How''s everything, Tim? |
13898 | How''s mine? |
13898 | How''s the water? |
13898 | Hungry? |
13898 | Hurting him? |
13898 | I did right to go to him, did n''t I, dad? |
13898 | I guess we''ll tame that roughneck, what? |
13898 | I said I was going to show the fellows, did n''t I? 13898 If I get it,"he said in a low voice,"will you stand by me if I get stuck? |
13898 | If a scout knows that some other scout is going to do something-- something dangerous, maybe-- is it blabbing if he tells? |
13898 | If he liked practicing here at first-- He did like it, did n''t he? |
13898 | If he practiced a couple of times this week--"How are you going to get him to practice? |
13898 | If we practice once or twice every week--"Once or twice? |
13898 | If you thought Mr. Wall would have no objection to a Danger Mountain hike, why did you wait until you got him out of the village? |
13898 | If you worked with him and let him do things his own way would n''t he get over his grouch? |
13898 | If you''re sore about what Ritter said--"Me sore? 13898 Is Mr. Wall away today, Don? |
13898 | Is he home? 13898 Is it carrying tales?" |
13898 | Is it worrying you? |
13898 | Is n''t that Tim down the road-- that fellow leaning against the fence? |
13898 | Is n''t that splendid? |
13898 | Is that fair, Tim? |
13898 | Is that your idea of being a scout? |
13898 | Is there anything I could try, dad, to stop him? 13898 It_ is_ lonesome in here, is n''t it?" |
13898 | Just like telling me,''See, why did n''t you camp when I said so?'' |
13898 | Just quit, eh? |
13898 | Look here, Tim,he said;"what''s the use of stewing around this way? |
13898 | Look here,he said sharply;"why did you pick me?" |
13898 | Monday or Tuesday? |
13898 | More trouble with Tim? |
13898 | Must I work with Tim? |
13898 | Must we watch out for Eagles and Wolves even before we get to the treasure? |
13898 | Needles and thread and shoe- brushes? |
13898 | No, but-- What''s the use of tormenting Bobbie? |
13898 | No? |
13898 | Not scouts? |
13898 | Remember last winter when Mr. Blair was sick? |
13898 | Say, Ted, any chance for me to get back? |
13898 | Say, how is Tim going? 13898 Say,"Rood called,"what''s that?" |
13898 | Scared? |
13898 | Scout meeting tonight? |
13898 | Scouting is n''t all fun, is it? |
13898 | Seen Tim yet? |
13898 | Shall I tell him about Wednesday? |
13898 | Signaling contest next month,Don told him,"Were you there when Mr. Wall made the announcement?" |
13898 | So that''s the game, is it? |
13898 | Suppose they find it out there, Tim, and do n''t see the canteen? |
13898 | Suppose they start to search right around here? |
13898 | Suppose they yell, too? |
13898 | Sure; but he is n''t sensitive about his patrol, is he? |
13898 | That means a new patrol leader, does n''t it? |
13898 | That would get him, would n''t it? |
13898 | That''s a crack at me, is n''t it? |
13898 | The Wolf patrol will surely win points in the signaling, wo n''t it? |
13898 | The mountain? |
13898 | Then there''s nothing left to worry about, is there? |
13898 | They seemed to hit everything today, Tim, did n''t they? |
13898 | Think Don''ll catch him? |
13898 | Think that could be it? |
13898 | Think we can stick in the lead? |
13898 | Think you can get anybody to play any better for you than I play? |
13898 | Think you''re going to like it? |
13898 | Tim would n''t make a good patrol leader, would he, Don? |
13898 | Try to get fresh with the kid pitcher, eh? |
13898 | Want more? |
13898 | Want to go to the woods tomorrow? |
13898 | Was Tim chased? |
13898 | Was Tim elected? |
13898 | Was it wrong for Don to vote for himself? |
13898 | Was n''t it the turn of your patrol to clean house? |
13898 | Was n''t it, Tim? |
13898 | Was that right, Don? |
13898 | We''re close now, are n''t we? |
13898 | Well, how about the signaling? |
13898 | Well, if you know it, what''s the use of paying any attention to him? 13898 Well, what does it look like?" |
13898 | Well, what more do you want? |
13898 | Well, what of it? |
13898 | Well, why did n''t you answer? |
13898 | Well, wo n''t he? |
13898 | Well,he demanded of Ritter angrily,"what are you looking at me for? |
13898 | Well,said Ted,"they are n''t giant- killers, are they?" |
13898 | Well,she asked,"what''s the scout trouble now?" |
13898 | Well,the Scoutmaster smiled,"how''s the new patrol leader?" |
13898 | Were you fellows hiding behind that brush? |
13898 | What are you doing around here on a Monday? |
13898 | What are you doing,Tim demanded,"asking me to let up on him or telling me?" |
13898 | What became of the Eagles? |
13898 | What big stuff? |
13898 | What did I tell you about this game? |
13898 | What did he say? |
13898 | What did you go cat- acting for? |
13898 | What do you mean by that? |
13898 | What good does it do to be sorry now? |
13898 | What is it this time? |
13898 | What kind of a game is this? |
13898 | What kind of good turns? |
13898 | What kind of meat have you? |
13898 | What other patrol has anything on us? |
13898 | What team do you pitch against tomorrow? |
13898 | What would Mr. Wall think of you? 13898 What''s Don rushing off for?" |
13898 | What''s that? |
13898 | What''s the first order I get; practice tomorrow? |
13898 | What''s the matter back there? |
13898 | What''s the matter with Tim, anyway? 13898 What''s the matter with me?" |
13898 | What''s the matter with you? |
13898 | What''s the matter, Don? |
13898 | What''s the matter; did Tim want to be patrol leader? |
13898 | What''s the matter? |
13898 | What''s the meaning of this? |
13898 | What''s the use of me slicking up,Tim scowled,"if other fellows are going to do as they please?" |
13898 | What''s what? |
13898 | What''s wrong, Tim? |
13898 | What''s wrong? |
13898 | What, sir? |
13898 | What, toward them? |
13898 | When do you think I was born-- yesterday? 13898 When do you want to practice?" |
13898 | When shall we go into the woods for that signaling? |
13898 | When was that? |
13898 | Where do you leave Don Strong? |
13898 | Where have you been keeping yourself, Tim? |
13898 | Where''s Tim now? |
13898 | Where''s the other haversack? 13898 Where-- where are you going to get another catcher?" |
13898 | Which do you want to do, send or receive? |
13898 | Who did? |
13898 | Who found the cup? |
13898 | Who made a boob of you? |
13898 | Who says so? |
13898 | Who told you about the cup? |
13898 | Who was the star cook? |
13898 | Who''ll carry the ax? |
13898 | Who''ll work with me on Morse? |
13898 | Who''s doing something dangerous? |
13898 | Who''s there? |
13898 | Why ca n''t we do the mountain? |
13898 | Why did you wait until he went away for the day and then sneak off on this hike? |
13898 | Why do n''t you shift-- you and Tim do the Morse instead of Tim and Alex? |
13898 | Why does n''t he wait until somebody blames him? |
13898 | Why is n''t it? |
13898 | Why not? |
13898 | Why should n''t he think it? |
13898 | Why so many sober faces? 13898 Why will Tim be so headstrong?" |
13898 | Why wo n''t they think we dropped the haversacks while heading the other way? |
13898 | Why, Tim, I-- I-- I--"Well, how about it? |
13898 | Will I? |
13898 | Will he think that? |
13898 | Will that be all right for you, Tim? |
13898 | Will trails cross? |
13898 | Would n''t it be fine for a scout to leave his patrol leader in the lurch? 13898 You are?" |
13898 | You know that Tim is a harum- scarum, do n''t you? |
13898 | You will, will you? |
13898 | You''re not fooling me, Ted? |
13898 | _ I_ had three mistakes? |
13898 | A voice cried,"How about Lonesome Woods?" |
13898 | After a moment she asked:"How about good turns, Don? |
13898 | After all, what had he gained? |
13898 | Alex looked at him sharply, and the look said as plainly as words,"Going to make him toe the mark?" |
13898 | All at once a voice whispered to him,"How could Don practice? |
13898 | And having gone back, why had he not told Tim, bluntly and plainly, that he would have to let Bobbie alone? |
13898 | And yet was it fair for him to keep silent? |
13898 | And yet, if Tim insisted, what was he to do? |
13898 | And yet--"Going to get needles and thread and things?" |
13898 | Andy''s voice sounded in his ear:"Did you vote for me?" |
13898 | Are you the keeper of the whole patrol?" |
13898 | As a patrol leader, what should he do? |
13898 | Ask_ him_ to do extra work? |
13898 | At the first rest, while the red- haired boy poured water over the ankle bandages, Don said:"You''ve heard about the new patrol, have n''t you?" |
13898 | Besides, would n''t it be fine experience to pitch against stronger batters? |
13898 | Bobbie nodded,"Any from our patrol?" |
13898 | Bobbie rattled on;"are n''t you glad Don is going to show you how to do things?" |
13898 | But as for his companions--"What fellows are with him?" |
13898 | But what could Tim expect if he was going to antagonize everybody? |
13898 | But what could he do if a scout made up his mind to stay away from meetings and be nasty? |
13898 | But you could ask the fellows, could n''t you?" |
13898 | Ca n''t I even say what I''d like?" |
13898 | Ca n''t you imagine what he''ll tell you?" |
13898 | Coming my way?" |
13898 | Could I see him right away?" |
13898 | Could this be rough- and- tumble Tim? |
13898 | Did Mr. Wall know? |
13898 | Did Mr. Wall suspect something and intend to question him? |
13898 | Did he tell you?" |
13898 | Did n''t I show up for practice today?" |
13898 | Did the old- time scouts like Daniel Boone go running for help every time they found themselves in trouble?" |
13898 | Did you hear about Phil Morris?" |
13898 | Do you pull?" |
13898 | Do you think I''d send an e for a v?" |
13898 | Do you think he''d do a stunt like that now?" |
13898 | Do you understand?" |
13898 | Does Tim do any?" |
13898 | Don caught his bold, sidelong glance-- a glance that seemed to say,"Well, what are you going to do about it?" |
13898 | Everybody understand?" |
13898 | Funny, is n''t it?" |
13898 | Got your staves? |
13898 | Had Andy been signaling to him? |
13898 | Had something been going on over there? |
13898 | Had they been afraid in the woods? |
13898 | Had they seen the Foxes? |
13898 | Has Don got him working?" |
13898 | He wanted to do what was best-- for Tim, for himself, for the patrol-- but what was best? |
13898 | He was disappointed, but what was the use of jumping on a scout who was trying to do right? |
13898 | Hear me?" |
13898 | Honest?" |
13898 | How about Don being to blame for not answering the signal? |
13898 | How about it, Don?" |
13898 | How about you and Alex Davidson taking Morse?" |
13898 | How could he hide it?" |
13898 | How did Tim act a couple of months ago whenever anything displeased him?" |
13898 | How did he know whether I made any mistakes?" |
13898 | How did you find the going?" |
13898 | How did you get the votes if you did n''t ask for them? |
13898 | How does that look?" |
13898 | How far did you go?" |
13898 | How much wire would be needed? |
13898 | How should the wire be measured? |
13898 | How would it be now on the day of the real thing? |
13898 | I''d be a fine scout to run away, would n''t I?" |
13898 | If there was some hidden reason for switching him from Alex, it should show itself now, should n''t it? |
13898 | If we can get them off on a false scent-- Where are they?" |
13898 | Is he going on the hike?" |
13898 | Is he going to grouch just because he was n''t elected patrol leader? |
13898 | Is n''t he a scout?" |
13898 | Is n''t that right, Tim?" |
13898 | Is n''t that rubbing it in?" |
13898 | Is n''t that swell?" |
13898 | Is that clear?" |
13898 | Is there anything I can do for you?" |
13898 | Just one more trial?" |
13898 | Just to be watched? |
13898 | Next week? |
13898 | Now, how about you fellows?" |
13898 | Of course, this was going to be all kinds of fun, but-- but-- Well, Lonesome Woods was Lonesome Woods, was n''t it? |
13898 | Or suppose he walked out sullen and grumbling, and stayed away from the meeting or came late or came untidy-- and the Wolves lost points? |
13898 | Or suppose he went, glad to be relieved of his share of the job? |
13898 | Ready? |
13898 | Remember?" |
13898 | See that opening? |
13898 | So long as Tim was losing his scrappiness, what was the use of fussing over him? |
13898 | Something whispered to him,"Why did n''t you work hard before? |
13898 | Suppose Tim got hot- headed and would n''t go? |
13898 | Suppose anybody was near? |
13898 | Take a scout message for me?" |
13898 | The time he had ruined Andy''s fire Mr. Wall had said,"What do you think a scout should do-- the square thing?" |
13898 | Then, after a moment:"Is n''t Tim your catcher on the town team?" |
13898 | There were no questions of,"Did you go to your patrol leader, Tim?" |
13898 | Three votes for him? |
13898 | Understand?" |
13898 | Use their heads? |
13898 | Wait until I tack on this screening, will you?" |
13898 | Wall?" |
13898 | Wall?" |
13898 | Want Mr. Wall to put us out?" |
13898 | Want to ride in with me, Don?" |
13898 | Was Tim going to act like that all summer? |
13898 | Was he always going to be the fellow who made his patrol lose? |
13898 | Was he getting stage fright? |
13898 | Was it best to let Tim run on in the hope that he''d be shamed into a better spirit by the other scouts? |
13898 | Was it fair to those scouts who had labored with a will? |
13898 | Was n''t he Tim Lally, the fellow who always spoiled things? |
13898 | Was n''t it hard to catch up? |
13898 | Was that a noise? |
13898 | Was that the way to handle this hot- tempered scout-- humor him a bit, praise him a little, give him the important assignments? |
13898 | Was there any scrap?" |
13898 | Was there much more?" |
13898 | Was this a joke? |
13898 | We''ve lost the points, have n''t we?" |
13898 | Were the buttons all right? |
13898 | Were they never going to get out? |
13898 | What are you going to do?" |
13898 | What chance would they have for the Scoutmaster''s Cup? |
13898 | What did Don mean by jumping on him? |
13898 | What did five points amount to, if their loss would make Tim a better scout? |
13898 | What did he say?" |
13898 | What did that mean? |
13898 | What did you bring, Charlie?" |
13898 | What did you want to leave the pail there for?" |
13898 | What do you think you should do-- the square thing?" |
13898 | What does that look like?" |
13898 | What had become of the haversacks and blankets? |
13898 | What new trick was this, anyway? |
13898 | What should he do-- the square thing? |
13898 | What should he do? |
13898 | What should he do? |
13898 | What should he take along to cook at noon? |
13898 | What sort of patrol leader would he be to let two of his scouts break faith with the Scoutmaster and not fight to the very last to bring them back? |
13898 | What strange adventures would befall them? |
13898 | What was the matter? |
13898 | What was the use of his spoiling his own fun? |
13898 | What was the use of letting the other patrols prepare for the unexpected and doing nothing yourself? |
13898 | What was there that had to be hidden? |
13898 | What was wrong? |
13898 | What would Don say to him now? |
13898 | What would happen then? |
13898 | What would they find? |
13898 | What''s the matter with the Foxes?" |
13898 | What''s the matter with you, Tim?" |
13898 | What''s the matter, you look worried?" |
13898 | What''s the matter?" |
13898 | When he brought them away Don spoke quickly:"How about telegraphy, sir?" |
13898 | When that happens--""Yes, sir?" |
13898 | When would they go? |
13898 | Where had they found the cup? |
13898 | Which can you do best, Tim?" |
13898 | Which way? |
13898 | Who ever heard of a night camp and no fire?" |
13898 | Why ca n''t we all pull together?" |
13898 | Why could n''t Tim stick to his patrol and play fair, and not spoil all the fun? |
13898 | Why could n''t he be told the truth? |
13898 | Why did Andy tap like that-- two taps, pause, another tap-- over and over again? |
13898 | Why did Phil Morris have to move away? |
13898 | Why did he shift me here? |
13898 | Why did n''t he let me stay with Alex? |
13898 | Why did n''t he try at the other meetings and cut out his fooling?" |
13898 | Why did n''t we bring a trowel?" |
13898 | Why did n''t you tell me the paint was wet? |
13898 | Why had he gone back that time? |
13898 | Why had n''t he made sure of those buttons instead of taking a chance? |
13898 | Why should I get sore? |
13898 | Why should he worry when he had done the best he could? |
13898 | Why should it take six days to discover that b and p sounded almost the same? |
13898 | Why would n''t the batters hurry? |
13898 | Why, he wondered, did Tim seem to take such a delight in going against everybody else? |
13898 | Why?" |
13898 | Why_ had_ he been shifted? |
13898 | Would Tim come spick and span? |
13898 | Would he go too fast or too slow? |
13898 | Would he never come out from behind the tree? |
13898 | Would he?" |
13898 | Would n''t it be fine if all scouts were as keen and as alert as that? |
13898 | Would the ball break true? |
13898 | Would they obey? |
13898 | Would this broad- shouldered young man who stood so confidently at the plate hammer it a mile? |
13898 | Would you call that failure?" |
13898 | Would you prefer to talk this over?" |
13898 | You were worried, were n''t you?" |
13898 | but was n''t this fun? |
13898 | called a voice,"how are you Wolves going to manage about Alex Davidson? |
13898 | could n''t some fellows ever learn to hold their tongues? |
13898 | cried the assistant patrol leader;"was n''t that a corking game? |
13898 | do you want the Eagles and Foxes coming down and gobbling us?" |
13898 | he said,"what''s the use? |
13898 | was n''t that a hot one? |
13898 | was this-- was this real? |
13898 | what are you laughing at?" |
13898 | what did you bring to cook? |
13898 | when would the bugle blow? |
41493 | I must go and see Benton,he says:"Have n''t I shouted for him in Missouri, and has n''t he made speeches in favor of Oregon? |
41493 | A few days later Captain Angne''s[ Augur?] |
41493 | Angne[ Augur? |
41493 | Are they not intended to animate our enemies? |
41493 | Are they not intended to destroy our zeal? |
41493 | Captain Smith lost twenty- nine men killed and wounded in this battle, and had it not been for the timely arrival of Angne''s[ Augur?] |
41493 | Cushing, Philip Foster, Ransom Clark, H. H. Hide( Hyde? |
41493 | Eight days would be about the traveling time from New York City to the terminus of the road, and if[ steamship?] |
41493 | Has government help promoted individual competence, and has it promoted the general welfare? |
41493 | How could it be otherwise? |
41493 | Is it worthy of the notice that Congress has given it?" |
41493 | Just as everything was ready, according to"John''s"plans for an attack upon the regulars, Captain Angne''s[ Augur?] |
41493 | Let not those who now[ have it?] |
41493 | McCarver?] |
41493 | Mr. St. Vrais[ Vrain?] |
41493 | Nevertheless, there should be investigation of governmental experiments, and the great and ever recurring question is, What do these show? |
41493 | S. F. LONG,(?) |
41493 | Sir, are they not words of brilliant polished treason even in the very capitol of the Republic?" |
41493 | The Calapooia range will present an easy problem for solution; but the Scott''s[ Siskiyou?] |
41493 | The Xenia_ Free Press_ says: A farmer in this county informed us a few days since that he could raise a company of fifty families who, if[ supported?] |
41493 | What are they coming here for? |
41493 | What is a few thousand dollars compared with the object to be acquired? |
41493 | Where was Oregon with about one seventh of Delaware''s population and Minnesota with less than one half of Oregon''s? |
41493 | Who could deny them? |
41493 | Why is it that our Government is so indifferent to the claims of the nation upon this territory, its wealth and possessions? |
41493 | Why not begin to make wholesome, beautiful, and edifying the Oregon village and city, so that, as a whole, each may be a positive joy forever? |
41493 | Why not commission a delegate to Dresden? |
41493 | William Penland, an Englishman, put the question:"Sir, which flag would you support in the event of war over Oregon?" |
41493 | Your first question now will be,"how are you satisfied with the country? |
42248 | Why,I asked Mr. Stone,"did you take the hazard and endure the acute hardship of this expedition?" |
42248 | Are these shallow spots above the tops of other volcanic cones or lava- masses? |
42248 | But as the sequoia is found nowhere else, the question arises, did it survive somewhere near the localities in which it is now growing? |
42248 | Did the sequoia endure the long ice age in these few places where the groves are now growing? |
42248 | Discomforts? |
42248 | Does it wonder whence and whither? |
42248 | Is a block of stone beneficially used when put into the walls of a dam, and not beneficially used when carved into a piece of statuary? |
42248 | Is a piece of canvas valuable only for a tent- fly, but worthless as a painting? |
42248 | Is the test dollars, or has beauty of scenery, rest, recreation, health and enjoyment something to do with it? |
42248 | Is the volcanic curtain once more to fall upon the forests of this magic scene? |
42248 | Is there no beneficial use except that which is purely commercial? |
42248 | The people of the United States are united in name, but are they doing good team- work? |
42248 | Was I exploring the topography of the moon? |
42248 | Were there more springs in the days of these people than now? |
42248 | What graphic, dramatic, world- building story is locked in these bold scenes? |
42248 | What is the greatest feature in this wonderland whose history began at a camp- fire? |
42248 | Who were the cliff dwellers? |
42248 | Why should not such vast expenditures be made in our own country instead of in foreign lands? |
42248 | Why should private concerns reap profits by exploiting the visitors to National Parks? |
42248 | Will mountains of white and silent snow again pile upon a lifeless world?" |
42248 | XXI NATIONAL PARKS THE SCHOOL OF NATURE Why not each year send thousands of school- children through the National Parks? |
42248 | have I got to cross this too?" |
20375 | A show? 20375 About how much do you reckon it will cost you all to go to the ball in a first class livery turn out?" |
20375 | And wife, when I asked him how, what do you think he said? 20375 Are you ashamed of your calling?" |
20375 | But John,and the Captain looked serious,"who sent Alfred and Charley out on a foraging expedition last night with your old mare and wagon?" |
20375 | Chickens killed? |
20375 | Could she play the music as usual if they went on with the exhibition? |
20375 | Did he get it on the hill? |
20375 | Did he pull you out? |
20375 | Did n''t you tell me yesterday my fingers were all thumbs? 20375 Do n''t we go to Winchester?" |
20375 | Do they run out at nite much, Node an''Alfurd? |
20375 | Do you know him? |
20375 | Do you remember a boy that was raised in Brownsville, worked in Snowden''s Machine Shop? 20375 Doctor, I think that liniment had something to do with my trouble, do n''t you? |
20375 | Does that hurt? 20375 Does that hurt?" |
20375 | Does that hurt? |
20375 | Dried apples? 20375 Eh, huh, eh, huh,"nodded the tanner,"what did you do with the carcass?" |
20375 | Eight o''clock what? 20375 Father, has Palmer tried to get nine hundred dollars out of you? |
20375 | Good luck, huh? 20375 Good mornin''Mrs. Beckley, how''s all?" |
20375 | Good,answered the man,"would you like to try her?" |
20375 | Has he a show? |
20375 | Have you had any fights before? |
20375 | Hello, Lin? 20375 Hello, Lin?" |
20375 | How are you? 20375 How did it come that Eli paid for services in advance? |
20375 | How do you manage the members of your company? |
20375 | How great a matter a little fire kindleth,quoted Palmer as he pleadingly asked:"Say, kid, how much are you going to hang me up for?" |
20375 | How many do you wish? |
20375 | How much uv dis panorama I own? |
20375 | How much you got? |
20375 | How was it? |
20375 | Know him? 20375 Liniment? |
20375 | Liniment? |
20375 | Muz, Muz, what''s the matter with me-- how long have I been sick-- d- do you th- i- n- k I''m goin''to die? |
20375 | No,answered the wife in open- mouthed wonder,"have you heard they were goun''off tu fight Injuns?" |
20375 | Not fifty dollars in the house, huh? 20375 Now, Uncle Madison, what''s your cure for the political and social upheavals?" |
20375 | Oh, I''m all right,Alfred assured him,"we''ll do it all right tomorrow, wo n''t we Bindley?" |
20375 | Oh, Jake, what''s the matter with you? 20375 Oh, as a politician?" |
20375 | Phwat are they pinched fur? |
20375 | Phwat wud yez like to eat? |
20375 | Ready? |
20375 | So you''ve been borrowing money to get into the show business? |
20375 | Then what ye palaverin''''bout, ye''ve done all right? |
20375 | Then why did you go with him? |
20375 | Then you did not borrow the money from Thornton? |
20375 | Then you will not sign the paper? |
20375 | Then, Alfred, you are against temperance? |
20375 | They have plagued me until I could n''t have a minute''s peace of mind, and then they hit me with a rotten tomattus as big as a gourd, why--? |
20375 | They''re from out of town, are they? |
20375 | To whom will you dedicate your book? |
20375 | Uncle Madison, do you believe in the majority rule? |
20375 | Vell, I toldt heem I vus ashamed mit myself, end he sedt:''Oh, hell yu kann standt und look myzerbul, kan''t yu?'' |
20375 | Vhy don''dt yu try it ef yu tink it ees so tam easy? |
20375 | Vot I tid? 20375 Vot I tid?" |
20375 | Vot I tid? |
20375 | Vot you tid? |
20375 | Walk on the sidewalk,shouted the old soldier,"Walk on the sidewalk? |
20375 | Was that you in the haymow? |
20375 | Well, Alfred, what do you think of Sam Jones, and Billy Sunday? |
20375 | Well, for Heaven''s sake, you have n''t bought a farm like that, have you? 20375 Well, let me see, ten dollars a week will be about right, wo n''t it Charley?" |
20375 | Well, then, father, you have changed your mind as to shows? |
20375 | Well, what do you purpose doing with this money Mr. Eli left here for you? |
20375 | Well, what is the trouble? |
20375 | Well, what is your remedy for the evil, Alfred? |
20375 | Well, where do you think of going? |
20375 | Well, who on earth ever did play fair with the public? 20375 Well, you take it back to Hurd an''ax him what he takes me fur, a damned jeweler?" |
20375 | Were you there this afternoon? |
20375 | What amount of money do you require? |
20375 | What charges will you prefer against them; you stated you had never had trouble with them before? |
20375 | What did he say? |
20375 | What did you say his name was? |
20375 | What do you say about keeping him? |
20375 | What do you think I am? |
20375 | What in the world he s thet consarned boy got intu his punkin''agin? 20375 What kind of liniment did you apply to Alfred''s bruises?" |
20375 | What the devil do you mean by strapping me in this thing and running all over town to find a pole to push me up in the air? 20375 What the hell do I care whether he sticks or not? |
20375 | What the hell have I got to do with selling tickets? 20375 What''s happened now?" |
20375 | What''s the matter, what''s up? 20375 What''s the matter? |
20375 | What''s the trouble now? |
20375 | When will you have time to attend to matters of that kind? 20375 When will you pay him?" |
20375 | Where are Mrs. Palmer and Gideon? |
20375 | Where are they? |
20375 | Where did you get the liniment; did you bring it with you? |
20375 | Where is your brother and his wife? |
20375 | Where''s Bindley? |
20375 | Where''s Jake and the team going? |
20375 | Where''s your clothes? |
20375 | Where''s your gun? |
20375 | Where''s your regular clothes? |
20375 | Which Mr. Thornton? 20375 Who is this man Palmer whom you are so greatly taken up with?" |
20375 | Who said I had? 20375 Who told you so?" |
20375 | Who took them off you? |
20375 | Who''s me? |
20375 | Who''s there? |
20375 | Why did n''t you answer when I called to you? |
20375 | Why do n''t ye gin Redstone Skule- house another try? 20375 Why, Colonel, what has disturbed you so?" |
20375 | Why, Uncle Tom, are n''t you satisfied with your calling? |
20375 | Why, do n''t you count your board, as anything? |
20375 | Why, what in thunder is to hinder them? 20375 Why, what the h-- ll tarnation do you mean?" |
20375 | Why, what''s that to you? 20375 Why, when does it get daylight in Pittsburg?" |
20375 | Will that see you through and put the show out? |
20375 | Will you give it to me for him? |
20375 | Yez belongs to some kind of a sacret society, do n''t yez? |
20375 | You wo n''t come down, wo n''t you? 20375 You''re going to tell her what?" |
20375 | Your satchel with all that money in it? 20375 ''What is my right place in the labor of this world? 20375 A mercantile business? |
20375 | After a moment he nodded his head a half dozen times, very slowly as he framed the question:"What became of--?" |
20375 | After a pause he continued:"Well, about this boy; what shall I say to him? |
20375 | After one of their arguments, Palmer, as usual, lost his patience:"What sort of humans are you? |
20375 | Air yu fixin''to fly the coop? |
20375 | Alfred asked:"Did n''t you think he took a shot at Uncle Ned?" |
20375 | Alfred began to get interested:"What''s the matter, Doc; have you found any bones broken?" |
20375 | Alfred tried to look unconcerned as he asked the question:"Did I leave my satchel in your drug store last night? |
20375 | Alfred was passing on when the gentleman said:"Al, do n''t you remember me? |
20375 | Alfred''s first thought was, what will the folks at home say should he be thrown into jail? |
20375 | Alfred''s laugh was cut short by a voice calling from below:"Who''s that? |
20375 | Alfred, arriving at his private car-- the wife was a visitor-- the first question propounded was:"Where have you been to this hour of the night? |
20375 | Are many of your people drunkards?" |
20375 | Are you going to the store?" |
20375 | Are you making any money?" |
20375 | As he entered, the boss said:"Well, you want your money, do you, eh?" |
20375 | As one prediction of Bill''s after another came to pass, she would say to Alfred:"There, see there? |
20375 | As the man turned the book over in his hand he inquired:"Did you open it?" |
20375 | At the first touch of the hide he looked into the farmer''s face, and in a careless tone, asked:"Been killing a beef?" |
20375 | Beckley?" |
20375 | Breaks? |
20375 | Breaks? |
20375 | Brown?" |
20375 | But, are you satisfied with your life? |
20375 | CHAPTER TEN If every man''s eternal care Were written on his brow, How many would our pity share Who raise our envy now? |
20375 | Ca n''t I do other work right here at home if I quit this, I do n''t have to rove, do I?" |
20375 | Ca n''t we talk it over?" |
20375 | Ca n''t you walk on the sidewalk?" |
20375 | Charles Duprez, of Duprez and Benedict, answered one of Alfred''s letters thusly: DEAR SIR: In answer to your letter-- do you double in brass? |
20375 | Christian, owing to the burden he carries on his back, flounders about and is fast sinking when Help appears and asks:"What doest thou there?" |
20375 | Colonel,"and she trembled as she spoke,"do you-- do-- you think-- Sam had money to pay for the hire of the carriage?" |
20375 | Come on boy, tell me about you eh?" |
20375 | Dick Durrant, the banjoist, taught Alfred the comedy of the familiar duet,"What''s the matter Pompey?" |
20375 | Did I ever think I''d come to this? |
20375 | Did either of these men ever offer you violence?" |
20375 | Did ever a party of amateurs decide to assault the public that they did not use a minstrel performance as their weapon? |
20375 | Did he ever say anything to you about his arm where I bit him?" |
20375 | Did he get my letter? |
20375 | Did he want you to buy a half interest in the show?" |
20375 | Did n''t I tell you so, eh?" |
20375 | Did n''t he push ye in the creek?" |
20375 | Did n''t you regard him as your friend?" |
20375 | Did n''t your crow- baits ever see a gas wagon before?" |
20375 | Did they coax ye? |
20375 | Did they offer to gin ye a job?" |
20375 | Did this man Palmer borrow money from you?" |
20375 | Did ye see them things with feathers on them they wus draggin''aroun''? |
20375 | Did you borrow Uncle Tom''s? |
20375 | Did you ever feel the loneliness, the forsakedness of this condition? |
20375 | Did you ever hear of Workman''s Hotel in Brownsville? |
20375 | Did you sleep; have you no pain?" |
20375 | Do you ever remember one of them telling the dear common people that good government was essential to prosperity? |
20375 | Do you hear?" |
20375 | Do you not know where it is located? |
20375 | Do you reckon he''s on to the capital prize fake?" |
20375 | Do you remember he worked his way up? |
20375 | Do you remember the North End before the depot was located there? |
20375 | Do you remember the last speech he made at his old home? |
20375 | Do you remember the trade of his father?" |
20375 | Do you remember why? |
20375 | Do you s''pose I want you to pole me like a raft? |
20375 | Do you want to break it? |
20375 | Does Uncle Ned feel hard towards me? |
20375 | Does he?" |
20375 | Does it hamper you in your affairs?" |
20375 | Does that pain you?" |
20375 | Does your mother favor it? |
20375 | Ef I was to be ketched yar by a white man, what explanation could I make that would protect the honor of my family?" |
20375 | Every man should ask himself:''What is my place? |
20375 | Fifty dollars a month? |
20375 | Finally Lin, turning to the mother, inquired:"What did ye think uf the blessin''?" |
20375 | Finally he began:"Muz, do you think Pap would be mad if I was to go away while he is in Pittsburgh?" |
20375 | For no man''s ever conquered Till he says:"I''ve got enough?" |
20375 | Fur heavin''s sake, what kin I preach about?'' |
20375 | Gaskill inquired:"Well, how are you going to git home?" |
20375 | Gideon seemed in doubt and fearful:"But how will you manage to get rid of him?" |
20375 | Got a letter from Sis, did you? |
20375 | Groping his way in the darkness Alfred kept calling in a muffled voice:"John, John, John, where are you? |
20375 | Has n''t the old man talked to you about it? |
20375 | Has that man who tried to boss me this morning been telling you anything about me?" |
20375 | Has yer husband talked about Injuns tu yer lately?" |
20375 | Have you any soreness in your joints or muscles?" |
20375 | Have you any turpentine in the house he could have gotten at?" |
20375 | Have you ever asked yourself:"I wonder if the sap in the sugar trees is stirring yet? |
20375 | Have you ever lived in the country? |
20375 | Have you ever visited in the country in springtime? |
20375 | Have you ever worked in a sugar camp, such as there were in old Fayette County in those days? |
20375 | Have you got your tickets?" |
20375 | Have you handled them before?" |
20375 | He cried mockingly:"Who, who art thou? |
20375 | He exclaimed:"Where the h-- ll did you find it? |
20375 | He forgot his surroundings; he felt no embarrassment that all stared at him, their looks seeming to say:"Well, how did you like it? |
20375 | He heard several remarks not intended for his ears:"Who is dat ole white man''trudin''yar? |
20375 | He seated himself at a desk as Alfred rose from his knees, from exploring a dark corner, and inquired in an unconcerned tone,"Find it?" |
20375 | He was completely confused:"What do you mean? |
20375 | Heh, Alfredt?" |
20375 | Hell? |
20375 | Here Alfred interrupted the parent:"Have you said anything to mother about this? |
20375 | Here the Uniontown man, with a contemptuous snort, said:"I s''pose he just kept on slidin''till he froze to death?" |
20375 | Hey? |
20375 | His manner was as flambuoyant as ever:"Where is this mainstay of the only panorama on earth? |
20375 | His wife scanned him, noting his skinned nose:"Eh, huh, Mr. Injun, I hope ye ai n''t skulped?" |
20375 | Hit you pretty hard, did it not?" |
20375 | Ho, ho, ho; chickens comes home to roost, do n''t they?" |
20375 | How about yours?" |
20375 | How dare you use such language in this house?" |
20375 | How did Mr. Thornton know that I held your note?" |
20375 | How did she know about Sammy Steele and his loan? |
20375 | How did the"Plumed Knight''s"detractors in the"Rum- Romanism- and- Rebellion"campaign overlook the fact that the Blaines once bought and sold slaves? |
20375 | How did you come to go to him?" |
20375 | How did you get out of the trouble in Bealsville? |
20375 | How do you expect me to put the show on?" |
20375 | How do you feel? |
20375 | How have you been? |
20375 | How is Palmer doing? |
20375 | How many boys have had their aspirations checked, their longings silenced, by loving but misguided parents and friends? |
20375 | How many links do you drop?" |
20375 | How many monkeys has they?" |
20375 | How many of Hurd''s pills constitute a dose for a cow?" |
20375 | How much did it cost you?" |
20375 | How much did they get from you over there?" |
20375 | How much do you want?" |
20375 | How shall I decide it? |
20375 | How shall I fill it that my life shall not be a failure?'' |
20375 | How shall I find it? |
20375 | How shall I succeed in it?'' |
20375 | How then can I go back from this and not be hanged as a traitor?" |
20375 | How was Alfred to know the Benedict who was to head the new show was not Lew Benedict? |
20375 | How''s all? |
20375 | How- dye?" |
20375 | However, when he located him four hundred years back, the old professor said"Huh, four hundred years ago? |
20375 | Huh, what in hell do you take me for, the tight- rope walker?" |
20375 | I could scarcely go on with my speech:"If this be thy condition, why standest thou still?" |
20375 | I cut in before he could get further:"Do you see yon shining light? |
20375 | I did n''t give Jake any time, I just shouted at him:"Do you see yon wicket gate?" |
20375 | I want to ask you: Did you ever know an honest saloonkeeper, an honest man who made or sold whisky?" |
20375 | I wonder what you will think of next to squander your money on?" |
20375 | If all the saloons could be closed-- Uncle Tom, have you given the subject, or this sin, or whatever you may term it, serious study? |
20375 | If ever a Charlotte knew that I engaged in this business what would I say to him? |
20375 | If he brings it you''ll keep it, wo n''t you Muz? |
20375 | In answer to the doctor''s first question:"How do you feel this morning?" |
20375 | Is he making money? |
20375 | Is that paper he holds on me binding? |
20375 | Is the sugar water dripping?" |
20375 | Is there anything happened?" |
20375 | Is there not a recollection of something you have worked and hoped for? |
20375 | Is there not something that you dreamed of in youth, forgotten for years, that has come to you later on? |
20375 | It''s me, Pap, do n''t you know me?" |
20375 | Jake is supposed to be reading a book and asks:"What shall I do to be saved?" |
20375 | Jake, in a tone of voice that would have convinced anyone more reasonable than Palmer, of his sorrow, inquired:"Vot I tid?" |
20375 | Jake, in open- eyed surprise, repeated:"Breaks? |
20375 | Leaning over the table, he sneered:"So you come in every night to hear the jokes that came over in Noah''s ark, do you? |
20375 | Lin looked at Cousin Charley in a sort of pitying way as she asked:"How is hit thet all are agin Alfurd? |
20375 | Lin looked surprised as she repeated,"Nite an''day? |
20375 | Lin opened the door, she jerked her head toward the opening, as she said:"Now, say, does yer muther know yere''out? |
20375 | Looking angrily at Alfred, she began:"Why did ye run? |
20375 | Looking him full in the face he asked:"Did you have a hand in that affair last night?" |
20375 | Looking him over she asked:"Who made''em?" |
20375 | Morning or night?" |
20375 | Now tell me, Alfred, who prompted you to take the linen out of the chest?" |
20375 | Now what are you going to do to make the public what you consider it should be?" |
20375 | Now you want to quit, eh? |
20375 | Now, reader, will you not be a bit abashed to ask:"Where is Brownsville?" |
20375 | Oh, what you tryin''to git through you? |
20375 | One day Vance noticed the colored porter carrying a tub to the lady''s room:"Yer, yer, where yer goin''with thet tub?" |
20375 | Others never ask the question of themselves:''What is my place? |
20375 | P. S. Was the gun gone? |
20375 | Palmer gave a little forced laugh:"Jake was your friend, was he not? |
20375 | Resting his hands on the cell bars, he gazed admiringly at Clayton fully a half minute, ere he asked:"Are yez Pope of it?" |
20375 | Say Pap, now do n''t get mad; how much did he set you back? |
20375 | Say, Gideon, how much did you get? |
20375 | Say, what are you going to do with all this money?" |
20375 | Say, who do you take after? |
20375 | Should he enter? |
20375 | So much for each sinner saved or did you lump the job?" |
20375 | That it was a higher honor to be governed in a republic like ours, than to live in any other country? |
20375 | That they, the common people, had it in their power to relieve themselves of their few wrongs? |
20375 | Thayer?" |
20375 | The argument was used,"Why not elevate Nimrod Potts, the cobbler, to the highest office within the gift of the electorate of Brownsville?" |
20375 | The boss entered and, with a pleasant"good evening,"seated himself opposite Alfred, and familiarly inquired:"What they got for supper? |
20375 | The doctor held his hands over Alfred''s face:"Where''s your turpentine? |
20375 | The man asked:"What Charley are you looking for?" |
20375 | The man looked the boy over carefully saying:"Where are you going to pad?" |
20375 | The parent carelessly inquired:"How long you been in bed?" |
20375 | The proprietor, John O''Brien, was very kindly spoken and, looking curiously at Alfred, he inquired:"How did you come to ask for this job? |
20375 | The voice, part of the way up the ladder leading to the hay mow, called again, this time commandingly:"Who''s up in the hay mow? |
20375 | The wife gazed appealingly at them as they entered, and, in a trembling voice, asked:"No news?" |
20375 | The window sash above was raised and the father''s voice, gruffer than Alfred had heard it in a long time, demanded,"Who''s there?" |
20375 | Then I come as Help; I say:"Why did you not look for the steps?" |
20375 | Then Worldly Wise advises Christian:"Wilt thou hearken to me if I give thee counsel?" |
20375 | There''s young Bill Piper that used to keep recitin'', Do you know what he''s done? |
20375 | Turning his back on Alfred and pretending to look over his books, he continued:"Where do you expect to meet your friend?" |
20375 | Turning toward him the doctor, with his nose still at the neck of the bottle, inquired:"John, where did you get this stuff, this liniment?" |
20375 | Uncle Jake said:"John never asked what''Al- f- u- r- d''had done when he returned home, but simply asked,''Where is he?'' |
20375 | Vot I breaks?" |
20375 | Waiting for the boss, hey?" |
20375 | Was he awake?" |
20375 | Was there ever a boy who did not feel that he was imposed upon, who did not imagine he was abused above all others? |
20375 | Well, we walked straight to the place, and what do you suppose?" |
20375 | Were you ever in a strange city, broke and without a friend, without the price of a bed, without the price of a full meal? |
20375 | Whar did dat ole white man kum frum? |
20375 | Whar you livin''and what you a- doin''for yourself? |
20375 | What about my good name? |
20375 | What are you talking about-- burning dried apples?" |
20375 | What did n''t you do? |
20375 | What do they amount to? |
20375 | What do you think you should have gone into? |
20375 | What does your father mean by holding you down in this way? |
20375 | What in hell do you mean by making a contract like this for my paper? |
20375 | What kind of law have you got in Titusville? |
20375 | What kind of meat does this, our Caesar feed upon that he should thus command us?" |
20375 | What shall I do that I may be content to labor and succeed in the world?'' |
20375 | What would church people say? |
20375 | What would n''t he give to be free like other boys? |
20375 | What would people say? |
20375 | What''ll those men think of me? |
20375 | What''s happened them chickens? |
20375 | What''s his name? |
20375 | What''s on yer mind? |
20375 | What''s the trouble anyway?" |
20375 | When Alfred handed the blacksmith the broken bits of the spring he took them in the hollow of his big palm and said:"What''s these?" |
20375 | When Alfred''s turn came he was asked:"How much does your contract call for?" |
20375 | When Lin hailed them by shouting:"How- dye, how''s the minstrels?" |
20375 | When Martha shouted,"What devilment are you up to now?" |
20375 | When do the retreat begin?" |
20375 | When will she be back? |
20375 | Where am I at? |
20375 | Where are you bound for? |
20375 | Where can we get a little something to clear the cobwebs out of our tonsils?" |
20375 | Where did you get it? |
20375 | Where did you meet him?" |
20375 | Where''s Eli? |
20375 | Where''s Gideon? |
20375 | Where''s the other boys?" |
20375 | Where''s your satchel?" |
20375 | While the dicker was pending, a young clerk from a store door, yelled to a passer- by on the opposite side of the street:"Were you at the circus?" |
20375 | Who fetched him up yar?" |
20375 | Who has not felt his impurities the more that he was in the presence of a sinless child? |
20375 | Who said it was? |
20375 | Who so advised you? |
20375 | Who told you I had? |
20375 | Who''s that?" |
20375 | Why did n''t ye put on yer clothes?" |
20375 | Why do n''t you cut his act down one- half at least? |
20375 | Why do n''t you let this farm business go? |
20375 | Why do n''t you rest? |
20375 | Why should I be ashamed of it? |
20375 | Why? |
20375 | Will you? |
20375 | Worldly Wise Man here appears before Christian and speaks to him:"How now good fellow; whither away after this burdened manner?" |
20375 | Would he( Jake) furnish the money to pay the expenses after ruining the business of the panorama? |
20375 | Would that be right?" |
20375 | Would you live the same life over again?" |
20375 | You boys trying to tear down the house? |
20375 | You ca n''t farm in winter, can you?" |
20375 | You do n''t imagine for a moment we will kill any of_ our_ chickens, do you?" |
20375 | You do n''t mean to tell me you left that satchel somewhere and are not certain where?" |
20375 | You going to hold us here all day? |
20375 | You have no debts following you, have you?" |
20375 | You look too well groomed for such work?" |
20375 | You remember Bill Jones in Brownsville? |
20375 | You say there''s no excuse for any man being broke or out of a job these times? |
20375 | You were gambling? |
20375 | You''ll wear your welcome out, wo n''t you?" |
20375 | [ Illustration: Joe Thornton and Alfred]"Why? |
20375 | [ Illustration: Lin and"Al- f- u- r- d"] As he wended his way up the garden walk, the mother shouted:"Lin, where on earth has he been?" |
20375 | [ Illustration: Uncle Tom]"What are you going to do with Polly?" |
20375 | [ Illustration:"And Thar''s the Very Bottle"]"Was there turpentine in the liniment you used?" |
20375 | [ Illustration:"He''ll Not Put Faith''s Clothes On Me"] Is Pap coming over before we start? |
20375 | [ Illustration:"What Does Hurd Take Me Fur, a Damned Jeweler?"] |
20375 | [ Illustration]"Well, you do n''t call that thing a cradle, do you?" |
20375 | do n''t you carry your stage and scenery?" |
25811 | All right,declared Ralph, meekly accepting his fate,"but will you kindly tell me what a Thread and Needle Race is?" |
25811 | And are these our things you have in the wagon? 25811 And how do you explain the Indian squaw''s feeling against the name of Latham?" |
25811 | And what do you think? 25811 And why did you knock on our door at this time of the evening, without informing us who you were?" |
25811 | And wo n''t you go down to the village, and stay with Naki and Ceally until Eunice comes back? |
25811 | And you remember Bab said she was going to discover, on that drive, what connection Eunice had with the Latham family? |
25811 | Are not you and your grandchild the last of your race? 25811 Are you Naki and Ceally?" |
25811 | Are you afraid of me? |
25811 | Are you going, Miss Sallie? |
25811 | Are you nervous about our riding this afternoon? |
25811 | Are you preparing to be a lawyer''s clerk that you spend your spare hours poring over musty business papers? |
25811 | Aunt Sallie,Ruth asked, as soon as the doctor left,"may I have Eunice up at the hotel with us, as soon as she is well enough to leave the hospital?" |
25811 | Bab,Grace asked, joining the two sisters,"why did you spend so much time out in that shed looking at airship models? |
25811 | Bab,said Mollie, after a moment''s pause,"has n''t it been dreadfully dull since Ruth and her father went away? |
25811 | Barbara, what is the matter with you? |
25811 | Build a fire? |
25811 | But I am coming back next summer to see you and my grandmother? |
25811 | But how did you find us, Hugh? |
25811 | But how shall we get a doctor up there? |
25811 | But what shall we do now? |
25811 | But what will Aunt Sallie say? |
25811 | But where are Ruth and Grace? |
25811 | But where is the guard house please, Miss Sallie? |
25811 | But why, my child? |
25811 | But wo n''t you come again, Eunice? |
25811 | But wo n''t you let me thank you for leading my sister to me? 25811 But you are not afraid of your uncle, are you?" |
25811 | But you will come back again, in a week or two wo n''t you? |
25811 | But you will come with us, if your grandmother says you may? |
25811 | But, Eunice,Mollie inquired, more and more puzzled by the girl''s appearance and conversation,"are you a pure- blooded Indian? |
25811 | Can I help either of you? |
25811 | Can it be possible? |
25811 | Can you manage to walk? 25811 Children, what on earth is the matter?" |
25811 | Did Uncle Ralph write you about this? |
25811 | Did some one speak to me? |
25811 | Did you ever see anything in the world so funny? 25811 Did you hear some one calling?" |
25811 | Did you like Reginald Latham to- day, Bab? |
25811 | Do I look as though I meant to harm you? 25811 Do I look like the bogie man, who lives in the woods and comes to steal away naughty children?" |
25811 | Do n''t ask Bab? 25811 Do n''t you know what a kiss is, Eunice? |
25811 | Do n''t you think we had better go up to the wigwam? |
25811 | Do you know what I suddenly thought, when Bab and I saw that great white object come sailing over our heads this afternoon? 25811 Do you know, Bab, I am much interested in our little Indian girl? |
25811 | Do you mean you have found out about Eunice? |
25811 | Do you remember, Bab? 25811 Do you remember,"she asked,"a paragraph in the first geography you studied at school? |
25811 | Do you think I had better go ahead, Naki? |
25811 | Do you think you and Ralph can stay for our coon hunt, Hugh? |
25811 | Do you think you can manage, Miss Sallie? |
25811 | Does Miss Sallie know? |
25811 | Eunice,Ruth asked,"do you know what a present is?" |
25811 | Eunice,Ruth asked,"do you remember your father and mother?" |
25811 | Eunice,asked Mollie,"are you going for a ride in the big balloon I showed you yesterday as we rode away from the hospital?" |
25811 | Eunice,she asked,"do you still wear the gold chain around your neck? |
25811 | Give me your handkerchief, please? |
25811 | Gone where? |
25811 | Grace, have you finished making your speech? |
25811 | Grace,she asked,"will you be a perfect dear? |
25811 | Has n''t she been shooting with you? 25811 Have we arrived?" |
25811 | Have you any memorandum among your husband''s papers which would prove that the money was returned to him before his death? |
25811 | Have you any money, girls? |
25811 | Have you grown suddenly deaf? 25811 Have you talked with Mollie?" |
25811 | How could I possibly light a fire? |
25811 | How could it, Barbara, dear? |
25811 | How could you be so horrid, Mollie? |
25811 | How dare you take all the bacon, when you have just declared it was so delicious? 25811 How did I know?" |
25811 | How did you happen to bring the horse over? |
25811 | How did you know? |
25811 | How do you do? |
25811 | How long must we wait? |
25811 | I am sorry, Mr. Latham,she exclaimed politely,"but we have planned to do some target practice in the morning? |
25811 | I hate good- byes, do n''t you, Aunt Sallie? |
25811 | I presume,Mr. Stuart said quietly to Bab,"that your uncle settled this debt years ago; but if he did, why was the note never canceled?" |
25811 | I wonder if that is true? |
25811 | I wonder,said Mollie to Grace, as she finally followed her into bed,"what wonderful adventures we shall have in this forest? |
25811 | I wonder,she thought at last,"if I can persuade Ruth to go to college with me?" |
25811 | I wonder,thought Mollie,"if, somehow, I have struck the famous''Lost Man''s Trail?'' |
25811 | If I tell you,she implored,"will you promise me by the stars never to betray me? |
25811 | If you are n''t sharing your money with us by giving us all these good times, what are you doing? 25811 Is Mollie growing worldly wise, Hugh?" |
25811 | Is a man riding on that great, great big bird? |
25811 | Is anything the matter? |
25811 | Is coon hunting a cruel sport, Ralph? |
25811 | Is it the great white spirit, my grandmother has told me about? |
25811 | Is it true, father? |
25811 | Is n''t the scenery just too perfect for words? |
25811 | Is n''t this a dangerous business? |
25811 | Is that what is preying on my hospitable aunt''s mind all this time? |
25811 | Is the old woman also named Eunice? |
25811 | Is there some one down there in the woods? |
25811 | Is this game for women only? |
25811 | Is this why you are not pleased to see us? 25811 Is your guide an Indian?" |
25811 | It is rather dirty work, is n''t it? |
25811 | Kindly explain to me, Ruth,asked Hugh, as the party finally started,"why you are carrying those two large bolts of ribbon? |
25811 | May Eunice go away with us now? |
25811 | May I inquire what you are doing, Barbara? |
25811 | May I take your teacup from you? |
25811 | May we count on you for the Gymkana races, Ruth? |
25811 | May we, Miss Sallie? 25811 May we, Miss Sallie?" |
25811 | Miss Sallie,inquired Barbara, an hour later,"will Mollie and I do for the call at the Ambassador''s? |
25811 | Miss Stuart,he asked,"will you or your friends drive a turkey, a duck, a hen, or a gander in our Gymkana race? |
25811 | Mollie, I do n''t want to be a croaker,began Bab, after a little hesitation,"but have you noticed that mother seems worried about something? |
25811 | Mr. Latham, are you ill? |
25811 | Mrs. Thurston,inquired Ruth,"do n''t you dearly love''The Automobile Girls''?" |
25811 | My dear child, what is the matter now? |
25811 | Naki,Miss Sallie asked,"at daylight, to- morrow, will you go to the old squaw''s wigwam? |
25811 | Now, Mother Eunice,Mollie ended,"wo n''t you let little Eunice go away with us this afternoon, instead? |
25811 | Now, does everybody understand about to- morrow? |
25811 | Of course, Miss Sallie knows we are going to practise shooting? |
25811 | Oh, I say, Miss Stuart,he quizzed in the affected fashion that so angered Mollie,"ca n''t you trust me to look after Miss Thurston? |
25811 | Oh, Ruth,cried Barbara,"could it be a signal from Mollie?" |
25811 | Oh, must you go so soon, boys? |
25811 | Please, Miss Sallie,she cried hastily,"may Naki and I go out to look for Mollie? |
25811 | Ralph Ewing and Hugh Post, where did you come from? |
25811 | Ralph, or Hugh? |
25811 | Ruth and Mollie are late in getting back, are n''t they? |
25811 | Ruth,continued Miss Sallie severely,"what are you and Barbara doing in those clothes? |
25811 | Shall I ask her? |
25811 | Shall I ask the other girls to come in? |
25811 | Shall we have tea out on our veranda, Barbara? |
25811 | Suppose, I do have to stay in the woods all night? |
25811 | Tell me,Barbara continued,"no one has properly explained it to me how you happened to be at the right place just at the right moment? |
25811 | Then who has given Beauty to us? |
25811 | Wait a second, Eunice? |
25811 | Was this money paid you by your brother when he settled your estate? |
25811 | Well girls,Mollie continued,"do you recall that Bab went driving, a few days ago, with Reginald Latham, Mr. Winthrop Latham and Aunt Sallie?" |
25811 | Well then, Aunt Sallie, we have no choice in the matter, have we? |
25811 | Well,continued Ruth,"you remember about the little Indian girl whom Bab accidentally shot yesterday? |
25811 | What about Grace? |
25811 | What are we to do? 25811 What are you going to do now, Ruth Stuart?" |
25811 | What do you mean,demanded Ruth and Mollie,"by going off on such a mysterious errand? |
25811 | What do you mean? |
25811 | What do you say,continued Miss Stuart,"to our going back to civilization? |
25811 | What do you think has happened? |
25811 | What does Uncle Ralph propose that we do? 25811 What else can we do?" |
25811 | What experiment do you intend to try? |
25811 | What has happened to you? |
25811 | What have you done to your silly little self? 25811 What in the world can you mean?" |
25811 | What is it Hugh? |
25811 | What is it, Ceally? |
25811 | What is it, Miss Sallie? |
25811 | What is it? |
25811 | What is our guide''s outlandish name? |
25811 | What is the child talking about? |
25811 | What is the matter with Miss Mollie Thurston this morning? 25811 What is the matter with you, Mollie? |
25811 | What is the matter with you, Reginald? |
25811 | What money should have been paid by my brother years ago? 25811 What on earth has happened this time?" |
25811 | What on earth is it? |
25811 | What on earth shall we do? 25811 What on earth''s the matter, Bab?" |
25811 | What shall we do to help with the preparations, Miss Sallie? |
25811 | What should we expect to sleep on except the floor or the ground? 25811 What then, Aunt Sallie?" |
25811 | What woman and her son came to your house to see this squaw? |
25811 | What would Aunt Sallie say if she could see us opening our mail on the street? |
25811 | What''s the joke? |
25811 | What''s the matter? |
25811 | What''s the programme for to- day? |
25811 | What''s up? |
25811 | When do we start, Ruth? |
25811 | When shall we go to see Eunice? |
25811 | Where did you come from? |
25811 | Where did you come from? |
25811 | Where did you find my daughters? 25811 Where have you been, Mollie?" |
25811 | Where is''Automobile Girl''number four? |
25811 | Where''s Mollie? |
25811 | Who are you? |
25811 | Who could wish to steal a poor little Indian girl? 25811 Who is out there?" |
25811 | Who is this Indian girl? 25811 Who knows indeed, Barbara?" |
25811 | Who knows what a day may bring forth? |
25811 | Who knows what luck they may bring to us? 25811 Who knows? |
25811 | Who on earth can they be? |
25811 | Who''s there? |
25811 | Who? |
25811 | Why are you alone? |
25811 | Why ca n''t I come up and help with the teaching? 25811 Why did you come here?" |
25811 | Why do n''t you get up? 25811 Why do you ask me, doctor?" |
25811 | Why do you do such a strange thing to me? |
25811 | Why is everybody looking so serious? |
25811 | Why not come and see all of us? 25811 Why not, Mollie?" |
25811 | Why not? |
25811 | Why not? |
25811 | Why should it not be well with me? |
25811 | Why should n''t Dorothy Morton sell Beauty to a girl who cares more for the horse than Dorothy does? |
25811 | Why should she be afraid of the law? |
25811 | Why should there be any running away with the child? |
25811 | Why, Bab,asked Mollie sleepily,"when did you and Ruth find me? |
25811 | Why, Eunice,Mollie asked quietly,"are you not glad to see your friends?" |
25811 | Why, Eunice? |
25811 | Why, Mollie, do n''t you think that is a good enough explanation of Reginald Latham''s attitude toward Eunice? |
25811 | Why, what do you mean? |
25811 | Why, who would wish to steal her from you? |
25811 | Will some one take the child away? |
25811 | Will you come to our little private balcony? 25811 Will you go with me to see her at ten o''clock to- morrow morning, Miss Stuart?" |
25811 | Will you sew the button on for me, Mollie? |
25811 | Wo n''t you come in and have a game of archery with us to- morrow afternoon? 25811 You are alone, are n''t you?" |
25811 | You are not angry with me for going off with Reginald Latham last night are you? 25811 You are not angry with me?" |
25811 | You are the girls, are n''t you, who have been camping on one of our Berkshire hills? |
25811 | You do n''t mean to say that Barbara and Ruth have put Ralph''s name and mine down for three of your performances? 25811 You tell me this child''s name is Eunice? |
25811 | You will not tell my grandmother? |
25811 | You? |
25811 | ****** The Range and Grange Hustlers By FRANK GEE PATCHIN Have you any idea of the excitements, the glories of life on great ranches in the West? |
25811 | Am I not safe in my own house? |
25811 | And how did Mollie find you to tell you I was concealed in the woods with a sprained ankle? |
25811 | And how was Reginald to be provided for? |
25811 | And what is the name of that hill over there? |
25811 | And, could it be possible? |
25811 | Are n''t you just a little glad to see us?" |
25811 | Are n''t you, Bab?" |
25811 | Are not the four of us going? |
25811 | Are you going into the millinery business to- day?" |
25811 | Are you perfectly sure you do not feel afraid?" |
25811 | But I wonder if you are really interested in the girl, or whether you are being kind to her, now, only because of her accident?" |
25811 | But did they hear a low moan like the sound of a wounded dove? |
25811 | But girls do n''t care for such weepy books nowadays, do they? |
25811 | But how could I dream of what I knew nothing?" |
25811 | But is it well with you?" |
25811 | But this Indian child, where did she come from? |
25811 | But was it quite fair of you to come each morning to our windows, and then fly away again before anyone could see you?" |
25811 | But what about Eunice and her protectors? |
25811 | But what''s the matter with you, Bab?" |
25811 | But why introduce the Indians?" |
25811 | But would you mind glancing at them, please?" |
25811 | CHAPTER VII MOLLIE FOLLOWS THE TRAIL"Mollie have you seen my red sweater?" |
25811 | CHAPTER XIII THE WIGWAM"How much farther must we walk, Naki?" |
25811 | CHAPTER XV SOCIETY IN LENOX"Miss Sallie, is Lenox the oldest summer resort in the United States?" |
25811 | CHAPTER XVI AT THE AMBASSADOR''S"Shall we walk down to the postoffice, Ruth?" |
25811 | CHAPTER XXI EUNICE AND MR. WINTHROP LATHAM"Ruth, may I go with you to get Eunice?" |
25811 | CHAPTER XXIV WHAT TO DO WITH EUNICE"Bab, will you come out on the hotel driveway a minute?" |
25811 | Can I help you?" |
25811 | Can we be of any assistance to you?" |
25811 | Can you not hear when you are spoken to?" |
25811 | Can you tell us the name?" |
25811 | Come, Mrs. Thurston,"questioned Mr. Stuart,"do n''t you think this is a good scheme for everyone?" |
25811 | Coming, child?" |
25811 | Could it be laughter? |
25811 | Could it be the famous ghost of Lost Man''s Trail? |
25811 | Could it be the ghost? |
25811 | Could you, would you, just give us each a hunk of bread to stay our appetites?" |
25811 | Did Ruth remember to tell you that the British Ambassador''s daughters, Dorothy and Gwendolin Morton, are coming in to tea? |
25811 | Did his better nature move him? |
25811 | Did they call her Eunice? |
25811 | Did you ever hear of a dummy race or a thread- and- needle race?" |
25811 | Did you ever see anything so lovely as these hills are now? |
25811 | Did you have a nice, quiet time by yourself?" |
25811 | Did you think I was going away?" |
25811 | Do Ambassadors shake hands, Aunt Sallie? |
25811 | Do any of you ride horseback well enough to go in for the hurdle jumping? |
25811 | Do n''t you smell something horrible?" |
25811 | Do n''t you wish to come with us?" |
25811 | Do you feel equal to another aerial flight?" |
25811 | Do you know what an uncle is?" |
25811 | Do you ride, Miss Thurston?" |
25811 | Do you suppose she would like the change?" |
25811 | Do you think Miss Sallie will ever forgive me?" |
25811 | Do you think they will ever come back? |
25811 | Do you think, Miss Sallie, we girls have a right to betray the old Indian woman''s secrets?" |
25811 | Dorothy inquired, turning first to Ruth, then to Bab, Mollie and Grace,"May I put down your names for this race?" |
25811 | Girls, if I tell you something will you promise me not to laugh? |
25811 | Had her visitor been a real girl, or was Mollie bewitched by a brown elf? |
25811 | Had she been asleep and dreamed of Ruth? |
25811 | Have n''t I told you? |
25811 | Have you ever been to school?" |
25811 | Have you seen this girl?" |
25811 | He merely inquired coldly:"How are you, Mollie?" |
25811 | How could Dorothy Morton ever have been willing to sell her?" |
25811 | How could she ask for it when you alone knew of the debt and kept the matter a secret? |
25811 | How could we have dreamed the child was hiding in the underbrush? |
25811 | How could we know she was hiding near us? |
25811 | How did you happen to light a fire before you awakened me?" |
25811 | How did you spend the afternoon, dear? |
25811 | How is Grace''s headache? |
25811 | How shall we manage then? |
25811 | How was she to protect the interests of Eunice without accusing Mr. Latham''s relatives of evil designs against the child? |
25811 | I would like to know, Bab, how you and I are to get the thing to the ground?" |
25811 | If he never has paid it, can he be forced to do so now?" |
25811 | If we are to enjoy Lenox, and all the delights it offers, do n''t you think it is about time we were moving there? |
25811 | In a voice that only Mollie, who stood near, could hear she asked:"My little wood pigeon is wounded? |
25811 | In two years more she would be ready to enter, but where was the money to come from? |
25811 | Is anyone near?" |
25811 | Is my heart good?" |
25811 | Is n''t it too wonderful?" |
25811 | Is n''t that great?" |
25811 | Is she much hurt, Naki?" |
25811 | Latham?" |
25811 | May I, Miss Stuart?" |
25811 | Miss Stuart looked up from her eggs and toast:"What are you children quarreling about?" |
25811 | Monument Mountain, did you say? |
25811 | Oh, Bab, what shall we do?" |
25811 | Oh, it simply ca n''t be true----""What ca n''t be true, mother?" |
25811 | Oh, what, what can we do?" |
25811 | Please explain?" |
25811 | Remember the first time we saw her, Hugh? |
25811 | Shall I send her a dress of mine?" |
25811 | Shall we open the door?" |
25811 | Shall your name forever sound in my ears? |
25811 | So that is the name Lenox has given to its latest form of social entertainment?" |
25811 | That is an English game, is n''t it? |
25811 | That reminds me, are we ever going to break bread again? |
25811 | Then she had gone-- where? |
25811 | Think you can climb the hill back of us?" |
25811 | This time the voice came through the megaphone:"Can you get me help? |
25811 | Want to, Bab?" |
25811 | Was it Mollie''s voice calling her? |
25811 | Was it a boy or girl? |
25811 | Was it human or a sprite? |
25811 | Was n''t it too absurd? |
25811 | Was the child dreaming? |
25811 | We must make her understand that Mrs. Latham and Reginald are her enemies, we are her friends----""Is that all, Bab?" |
25811 | What are you talking about, Ruth? |
25811 | What chance had the child and her ignorant, uncivilized grandmother against him? |
25811 | What connection could she have with these two men of wealth and position? |
25811 | What did it all mean? |
25811 | What did we see? |
25811 | What do you think of my serious- minded father? |
25811 | What had become of Naki? |
25811 | What had happened at the log cabin, meantime? |
25811 | What has come over her? |
25811 | What have you planned?" |
25811 | What on earth do you suppose he and his mother could have against a poor old squaw and her little girl? |
25811 | What shall we do? |
25811 | What was a handsome, middle- aged woman doing on top of a mountain? |
25811 | What would then become of Eunice? |
25811 | When can I see the Indian grandmother?" |
25811 | When the girls filed into the living room for their lunch Bab asked carelessly:"Where''s Mollie?" |
25811 | Where are the other girls and Aunt Sallie?" |
25811 | Where did it come from?" |
25811 | Where did you find her?" |
25811 | Where is the carriage in which we are to drive?" |
25811 | Where was the clue to the mystery? |
25811 | Which was the right one? |
25811 | Which way should she go? |
25811 | Who could ever trace a child carried away in an airship? |
25811 | Who do you think her visitors were?" |
25811 | Who do you think she was? |
25811 | Who in all this world has a claim on her but her poor old grandmother? |
25811 | Who is? |
25811 | Who knows but you will turn out the best sportsman in the lot? |
25811 | Who knows what may be stored away in that little head of yours? |
25811 | Why had she taken such a dislike to Reginald Latham? |
25811 | Why had the name of Latham fired this old squaw to such a burst of fury? |
25811 | Why were her only companions two charming young girls and a rough looking man and his wife? |
25811 | Why, Mr. Stuart,"asked Ruth,"are Mollie and I not also invited to dinner?" |
25811 | Will she be able to see our friends this afternoon?" |
25811 | Will you promise?" |
25811 | Wo n''t it be a jolly lark?" |
25811 | Wo n''t you come to our hut? |
25811 | Would you have helped pulled Reginald down out of his airship, if you had known how you would dislike him, Mollie?" |
25811 | Would you like to try?" |
25811 | You are my friends?" |
25811 | You remember that we have spoken of her before?" |
25811 | You would not sell me, would you? |
25811 | cried Barbara,"what do you mean?" |
25811 | she thought, finally,"what possible harm can it do Mr. Winthrop Latham to look at poor, pretty little Eunice? |
45075 | How many Indians were there, and did you see them? |
45075 | How about next morning? |
45075 | How long would we be gone? |
45075 | In his excitement he held the primers in his left hand, asking all the while,"Where in thunder are those primers? |
45075 | Late in the evening James Hanrahan came to me and said:"Billy, where are you going?" |
45075 | What have we to transport from our nations? |
45075 | What use have we for railroads in our country? |
45075 | What would be our adventures? |
45075 | Where were we going? |
40276 | ''What Career?'' 40276 And can you spin, Blanche?" |
40276 | And what is it? |
40276 | And who invented railroads? |
40276 | And wouldst thou not call us then? |
40276 | Are you going to read us that part in the book, Clem? |
40276 | But does not all this indicate that we might spend a few days in looking up inventions? |
40276 | But who is the inventor? |
40276 | Could you tell us,said Fergus,"what is the cause of the depression in the cotton- manufacture?" |
40276 | Did he write memoirs? |
40276 | Did n''t Dr. Franklin invent the telegraph? |
40276 | Did you ever read''Frank''? |
40276 | Did you know him? |
40276 | Do n''t you think now, Uncle Fritz, we had better go into the kitchen? |
40276 | Do you not think that all the great things have been invented, Uncle Fritz? |
40276 | He said this in substance:''What will future times say of us, the men of the end of the nineteenth century? 40276 He''ll be in fine spirits now with his engine?" |
40276 | How do you know he was a German? |
40276 | How long has this been true? |
40276 | Is it certain that Blanche is to go? |
40276 | Is it the Beccaria who did about capital punishment? |
40276 | Is not that like the dear German man that wrote this? 40276 Oh, dear, Uncle Fritz, do you know?" |
40276 | Should not I have come? |
40276 | Were they Dr. Franklin''s musical glasses? |
40276 | What did he invent? |
40276 | What did he invent? |
40276 | What is the association between Franklin and Robinson Crusoe? |
40276 | What kind of a telegraph was it? |
40276 | Who is he? |
40276 | Whom shall we read about first? |
40276 | Whom should you have told us about, had it rained? |
40276 | Why should it be well, Mabel? |
40276 | Yes,said Fanchon;"but Harry says,''The rapid car is to come, and I dare say that will be accomplished soon, papa; do not you think it will?''" |
40276 | You shall not talk such stuff.--Uncle Fritz, what books shall I bring you? |
40276 | ''But what has Eli been doing?'' |
40276 | And if magic had not got a bad name, should we not call the men of science magicians now?" |
40276 | And then Archimedes pokes his head out through one of the holes, and says in Greek,''How do you like that, my friends?'' |
40276 | And upon a time went the burgesses''daughters to play in the palace and beheld the metal man; and one of them asked in sport, why he shot not? |
40276 | And with this he sang him a song to his own music as to times and seasons, and went on,"Do you tell us, Copper- nose, when Time is? |
40276 | But what substance? |
40276 | Can we wonder that his neighbors thought him mad? |
40276 | Did he not invent hot baths?" |
40276 | Did his eyes deceive him? |
40276 | Do you not know that it is not nice to interrupt?" |
40276 | Do you remember that part where Frank lifted up the skirts of his coat when passing through the greenhouse?" |
40276 | Do you use this in America?'' |
40276 | Give him but an oven and would he not turn you out fire- proof and cold- proof India- rubber, as fast as a baker can produce loaves of bread? |
40276 | He had tried all sorts of materials; why had none of them melted? |
40276 | He said to himself:"Why be sad, when you have found what you were seeking for? |
40276 | He then addressed himself to me, and said,''Benvenuto, if you had the opportunity, would you have the heart to make an attempt to fly?'' |
40276 | How was I to communicate my wishes to the landlady? |
40276 | Now really, Uncle Fritz, you must n''t laugh; but do you not think that most of the people whose lives we read have to begin horridly? |
40276 | The question then occurred, How was this to be avoided or remedied? |
40276 | Then called the devil dreadfully to Virgilius and said,"What have ye done?" |
40276 | They will say,"What was the ban on those men, what numbed them or held them still, as if in fear? |
40276 | WHAT CAREER? |
40276 | Was he married to all five at once? |
40276 | Was it to be a failure or a success? |
40276 | What hath all my knowledge of nature''s secrets gained me? |
40276 | When I arose, which was not till about noon, she accosted me in high spirits, and said merrily,''Is this the man that thought himself dying? |
40276 | Who has seen any of his work?" |
40276 | Why could they not embody them in useful inventions? |
40276 | Why did they not apply in daily life their own great discoveries of the central laws of Nature? |
40276 | Will the Vesuvius pass its dividend, or will it scatter its blessings right and left, so that we can go to Paris and all the world be happy?" |
40276 | said Blanche, in mock heroics;"are you in the sacred circle which decides? |
40276 | said Fergus;"and then may we not burn up old Fogarty''s barn with burning- glasses?" |
40276 | to all of them when he was only fourteen? |
44215 | But who wants to sit up all night watching a fire? |
44215 | But, honest now, is it not really too bad that there are no longer any hostile Indians? |
44215 | Chief.... Man of the East, is the Medicine Fire at Too- le- ze blazing? |
44215 | Chief.... Man of the South, how blazes the fire at Too- winks? |
44215 | Chief.... Man of the West, man of the plains and mountains, does the mystic fire at Kor- le blaze? |
44215 | Has the Red Badger come from its burrow to stand guard on the Red Mountain? |
44215 | Is He- le- jah, the Mountain- lion, on guard on the yellow mountain of the North? |
44215 | Is the Black Bear guarding the Blue Mountain, where the sun sets? |
44215 | Is the White Wolf on guard at the White Mountain, where the sun- maidens dwell? |
44215 | WHAT IS AN ELLIPSE? |
44215 | What care we for luxury and ease? |
44215 | What has this got to do with saddles? |
44215 | Why? |
44215 | Why? |
42220 | Do n''t you think this failure was due to too much bookkeeping? |
42220 | Do you think it needed a flaming poster effect to secure reading of that column? 42220 Do you want me naked or will you give me time to put on my duds?" |
42220 | How does he act when you do have the meals ready? |
42220 | Need I tell you how bravely and how well the army of the Union settled these questions? 42220 Shall we ask: Did the work prosper? |
42220 | About the third day he came into the office and took Mr. McCabe to the lodge room above and wrote:''What will they do to me if I talk?'' |
42220 | Another question may arise"is it practical?" |
42220 | Being assured that he would not be harmed and to the astonishment of the boss he reached out his hand and exclaimed,''How are you, Bob?'' |
42220 | Can you not bring forward some man besides Preston? |
42220 | Finally he took from his pocket a slip of dirty paper and wrote on it''do n''t you need some help?'' |
42220 | Forests of giant trees have come and gone over them, how many times? |
42220 | Had Shepherd sold this cabin to Hull after having driven Stone across the river? |
42220 | Harlan was asked on his return to the county seat, minus his prisoner,"Why did n''t you take Bill when you had him?" |
42220 | Has it been changed in fourteen hundred or in six thousand years? |
42220 | His enterprises were not always successful ones, whose are? |
42220 | If man once existed here, why may he not have always existed here? |
42220 | Leverich said,"Ai n''t you afraid of me?" |
42220 | The pure water which gushes from a spring on the hillsides, who can trace? |
42220 | Then he asked,"Is Harper here?" |
42220 | There were big posters, beginning with the couplet"O, dinna ye hear the slogan, boys? |
42220 | Thompson looked up and inquired,"Why so, Colonel?" |
42220 | Under these circumstances what policy does it become us to adopt? |
42220 | What great eulogy can we pronounce upon them? |
42220 | What is it these men, about whom we have been writing, have done? |
42220 | What is manufactured in Cedar Rapids? |
42220 | What of their age? |
42220 | What of their history? |
42220 | What of their life? |
42220 | Who knows? |
42220 | Who made the history of Iowa during that great struggle of our nation''s life? |
42220 | Why must I, who have always tried to do my duty, go to hell?'' |
42252 | Goin''wes''harvesin''? |
42252 | Goin''wes''harvesin''? |
42252 | Goin''west harvestin''? |
42252 | I suppose,said Mr. McSweeny, as he stood at his door to bow adieu,"you will harvest when you get a little further west?" |
42252 | What''d ya think of the fight? |
42252 | Will you walk back? |
42252 | And she asked me with a fraternal, confidential air,"What you sellin'', what you sellin'', boy?" |
42252 | And so I asked,"Why are you swearing so?" |
42252 | And what about the picnic?" |
42252 | And what shall fill his failing veins And lift his head, bowed down? |
42252 | But why linger over the question of wages till I show I earned those wages? |
42252 | Did you dare to make the songs Vanquished workmen need? |
42252 | Did you waste much money To deck a leper''s feast? |
42252 | Eating as I had, how could I take a stand against my benefactor even though the issue were the immortal one of man''s sinful weakness for drink? |
42252 | Every time I say"No"to the question"Goin''west harvestin''?" |
42252 | Eyes so strained and eager To see what you might see? |
42252 | He asked,"So you goin''to walk west to the mountains and all around?" |
42252 | He inquired,"Why did n''t you tell me two days ago you were going to be overcome by the heat, so I could have had a man ready to take your place?" |
42252 | He rolled his big white eyes at me:"What in the name of Uncle Hillbilly_ air_ you up to then?" |
42252 | How could they be so happy and seem so blest? |
42252 | How did these rules work out? |
42252 | I asked the looming figure I met in the dark:"Where is the boss of this place?" |
42252 | I asked:"Why are you swearing, sister? |
42252 | I have a good deal of sympathy for all this, for indeed is it not briefly comprehended in my own rule:"Carry no baggage"? |
42252 | I inquired"Where are you all travelling?" |
42252 | I went over the border and encountered-- what do you think? |
42252 | Is this mortifying the flesh? |
42252 | Love the truth, defy the crowd, Scandalize the priest? |
42252 | Mark my words, you''ll ride back!_"He asked a little later,"Goin''to harves''in Kansas?" |
42252 | ON THE ROAD TO NOWHERE_ On the road to nowhere What wild oats did you sow When you left your father''s house With your cheeks aglow? |
42252 | On the road to nowhere What wild oats did you sow? |
42252 | She answered,"Do n''t you know about the Sunday- school picnic?" |
42252 | Since Isadora Duncan has rediscovered the human foot æsthetically, who dares object to it in ritual? |
42252 | The old gentleman asked the inevitable question:"Goin''west harvestin''?" |
42252 | Then a fellow in citified clothes came to me and asked:"Can you follow a reaper and shock?" |
42252 | Were the tramp- days knightly, True sowing of wild seed? |
42252 | Were you thief or were you fool Or most nobly free? |
42252 | What do you suppose happened in New London? |
42252 | What you sellin''?" |
42252 | When a prophet hits it right on essentials like that, who would be critical? |
42252 | Where was I to sleep? |
42252 | Why do it at all?" |
42252 | Why do they not make up their minds to serve the devil sideways, like that sly puss with the butterfly bow? |
42252 | Why, in Heaven''s name, do it as a beggar? |
42252 | _ What?_ Well,_ almost_ every day. |
42252 | _ What?_ Well,_ almost_ every day. |
44440 | ***** Oh, who knows what the Clover thinks? |
44440 | 23 what grown- ups call Japanesque? |
44440 | And do you know that these flowers will fit on the ends of your fingers like tall caps on the heads of little fairies? |
44440 | CHAPTER IV CLOVER DESIGNS HAVE you ever admired the pretty patterns on wallpaper of flowers and green leaves? |
44440 | CHAPTER XXI THINGS TO MAKE OF ENGLISH- WALNUT SHELLS NUTS are the seed- vessels of the nut- trees; did you ever think of that? |
44440 | DO you know the cultivated foxglove with its tall spikes of thimble- shaped flowers, prettily spotted inside? |
44440 | Do you hear that deep, booming sound? |
44440 | Does n''t it look as if it had been copied from a printed pattern on a piece of Japanese cotton cloth? |
44440 | Five petals? |
44440 | From the brilliant- orange tiger- lily, with its dark- brown or black spots, we are going to make a-- tiger? |
44440 | Have you ever embroidered dainty designs in colors on white linen, and do you love it all? |
44440 | Is n''t it delightful to see so many, many apple- blossoms all at once? |
44440 | Is n''t it wonderful? |
44440 | It sounds good to eat, does n''t it? |
44440 | That is being active enough in such a small pulpit, is n''t it? |
44440 | The Greeny Girl The little green- pea greenies, cousins of the brownies, shown in the illustration are funny, are n''t they? |
44440 | The Wild Morning- Glory In your walks through the fields and along the country roadsides have you ever noticed the wild morning- glory? |
44440 | What do you see? |
44440 | When I say noticed, I mean have you thought about the flowers while you looked at them? |
44440 | Why not play that you are a little fairy and live among the grasses? |
44440 | With all these dangerous creatures prowling round, do you think it strange that the Filipino people put their houses on stilts? |
44440 | You can not say that of the humming- bird, can you? |
44440 | You have done this ever so many times when helping mother, have n''t you? |
44440 | [ Illustration: Fig.94-"Do you know the cultivated Fox Glove?"] |
12581 | ''Upon my word,''says Miss Flickers,''I believe you''ve got a frog in your pocket, Mr. Barnes; now, have n''t you?'' 12581 ''What on earth''s that?'' |
12581 | A fraud? 12581 A gimlet, Emma?" |
12581 | A large litter? |
12581 | ARE you goin''to fetch that ham from the smoke- house, or ARE you goin''to set there jabberin''and go without your supper? 12581 And Bolt& Burnam''s rod is not a fraud?" |
12581 | And how_ is_ Mr. Banger? 12581 And then he talked a whole lot of delirious slush of that kind, and about improving the tadpole crop, and so on, until I-- Wh- wh- what d''you say? |
12581 | Anything the matter with his meter? |
12581 | Are you goig to quid and led me breathe, or are you goig to stay here all day log? |
12581 | Are you going to put any on? |
12581 | Are you_ sure_ you did n''t give him_ anything_? |
12581 | Bless my soul, young man, how on earth did you know me? |
12581 | Brained them, love? |
12581 | Butter-- You do n''t mean to say Butterwick has twins? 12581 Ca n''t get damages for the piece that''s been bit out of me?" |
12581 | Ca n''t sue Potts, you say? |
12581 | Can a dead man violate the laws? |
12581 | Can you tell me if''amphibious''is an adverb or a preposition? 12581 Cemetery? |
12581 | Did I understand you to say Alexander P.? 12581 Did any of the shots strike her?" |
12581 | Did it ever occur to you to lecture? |
12581 | Did it make him calmer? |
12581 | Did n''t ye ask me afther the miners, sor? 12581 Did n''t, hey? |
12581 | Did the almanac say there''d be no moon last night? |
12581 | Did you ever hear of Herodotus? |
12581 | Do all of your friends refresh your memory in that vivid manner? 12581 Do it for? |
12581 | Do n''t want any kind of a dog-- not even a litter of good pups or a poodle? |
12581 | Do what? |
12581 | Do you mean to say that the law wo n''t make that infernal scoundrel Johnson suffer for letting his dog eat me up? |
12581 | Do you suppose I am Major Bing''s wife? |
12581 | Door- knobs, Emma? 12581 Forty, was it? |
12581 | Four, was it? 12581 Have you any views about the questions of the day? |
12581 | He did, did he? 12581 How d''you know the almanac is not wrong?" |
12581 | How did I try to do it? |
12581 | How do people treat you usually? |
12581 | How do you know they were worthless? |
12581 | How do you travel generally? |
12581 | How else would you do it? |
12581 | I just lost a tooth, and--"You lost a-- Who pulled it? |
12581 | I say are you married? |
12581 | I suppose you have known a great many celebrated people? |
12581 | I want to see if he knows Moses''--"Moses who? |
12581 | I''ll put up another, shall I? |
12581 | I-- I-- married did you say? 12581 Indeed?" |
12581 | Is i d thad thad smells so thudderig bad? |
12581 | Is it an elephant or a walrus? |
12581 | Is your memory generally good? |
12581 | It wo n''t, hey? |
12581 | Less see; who have we next? 12581 Maria, did n''t I tell you I gave it to the child to play with to keep him quiet?" |
12581 | Maria, do n''t you know me? |
12581 | Maria, do you think I would deceive you? |
12581 | Married? 12581 Mr. Banger, what do you mean? |
12581 | Mr. Butterwick, you have no insurance on your life, I believe? 12581 Mr. Fogg, will you please let me get a word in edgeways? |
12581 | Mr. Myers,said the widow, calmly,"had n''t we better send for the undertaker to come and bury these remains?" |
12581 | Now, I reckon you could run in some language about her eccentricities of vision, could n''t you? 12581 Now, how does_ that_ strike you? |
12581 | Now, my dear sir, I want to ask you how Longfellow_ could_ manage a gun? |
12581 | Now, what I want to see you about is this: Ca n''t I recover damages for assault and battery from Potts? 12581 Oh, well,"shouted Mr. Fogg, indignantly,"if you think you can tell the story better than I can, why do n''t you tell it? |
12581 | Oh, what? |
12581 | Old row of-- What d''you mean, you impudent vagabond? 12581 One? |
12581 | Patrick said that, did he? |
12581 | Really, sir,said Mr. Striker,"there must be some mistake about--""Oh no, there is n''t; your name''s Joe Striker, is n''t it?" |
12581 | S''posin''this, what I want to know is, could n''t you sue Johnson for damages and make him pay heavily for what that dog did? 12581 See here, my son, I never did you any harm, and what''s the use of your bringing up such disagreeable reminiscences? |
12581 | Talking of newspapers, how would you like to make an engagement as the traveling correspondent of the_ Patriot_? |
12581 | That''s so; and-- Er-- er-- Less-- see Er- er-- Mr. Bones, do you know what year this almanac is for? |
12581 | The horse is dead, then? 12581 Then I suppose we ca n''t trade?" |
12581 | Very well; what is it? |
12581 | Want to pay his gas- bill? 12581 Want?" |
12581 | Was she peculiar in other respects? |
12581 | Well, but how d''you account for the difference? |
12581 | Well, do you believe that they persisted in nominating me on the Republican ticket-- actually put me up as a candidate? 12581 Well, then, s''posin''you go in on the endowment plan and take a policy for five thousand dollars, to be paid you when you reach the age of fifty?" |
12581 | Well, then, what do you say to this? 12581 Well, then, why do n''t you break the news to Maria?" |
12581 | Well, what is it? 12581 Were you ever married? |
12581 | Whad d''you say? |
12581 | What d''you mean? |
12581 | What d''you mean? |
12581 | What did you say his last words were? |
12581 | What do you mean by four dollars tax on a weathercock? 12581 What do you mean, sir, by saying planted? |
12581 | What do you mean, sir? |
12581 | What do you mean, sir? |
12581 | What do you want at this time of the morning? |
12581 | What for? |
12581 | What hab you god i d that buddle? |
12581 | What kind do you offer? |
12581 | What on earth would we do if it should stay asleep for years? 12581 What was the matter with her eye?" |
12581 | What was the matter with the quarter? 12581 What was the object of the joke?" |
12581 | What''s your business? |
12581 | What? |
12581 | Who am I? 12581 Whom are you referring to?" |
12581 | Why ca n''t you? 12581 Why do n''t you tend to it and put it to sleep? |
12581 | Why dode you tague thad sbell frob udder by dose? |
12581 | Will you have a cigar, after eating? |
12581 | Will you take him as a gift, and give me a chaw of terbacker? |
12581 | Wo n''t you notice it, either? |
12581 | Yes, I know; but how did you get out of the cemetery? |
12581 | Yes, sweet; how is he getting along? |
12581 | You are not actually going to have the audacity to ask me to pay three hundred and fifty thousand dollars on account of that poker? |
12581 | You do n''t expect me to pay you, I hope? |
12581 | You do n''t mean a fire company? |
12581 | You do n''t mean to say that Longfellow actually_ beat_ General Harney? |
12581 | You do n''t really mean to say that you''re a preacher named Joseph Striker? |
12581 | You do n''t say I did that? 12581 You do n''t say?" |
12581 | You do, eh? 12581 You know Scudmore, who sold out the other day? |
12581 | You say the old rod was a fraud? |
12581 | You''re perfectly certain I''m dead, are you? |
12581 | _ Two_ horns did you say? |
12581 | ''How are you going to do it?'' |
12581 | A centipede, a mere ridicklous insect, has half a bushel of legs, and why ca n''t a man, the grandest creature on earth, own three? |
12581 | A goose saved Rome; why should not a rooster rescue America? |
12581 | A setter, hey? |
12581 | Ai n''t they splendid?" |
12581 | Ai n''t you a school- teacher? |
12581 | Am I to refuse to believe my own husband? |
12581 | And do n''t she look just lovely in that picture? |
12581 | And he is vigilant, for has he not for ages revolved upon church- steeples as the emblem of watchfulness? |
12581 | And how do I remedy that? |
12581 | And then that fire in Rome when he fiddled; made a splendid report for the papers, would n''t it? |
12581 | And then, if the room is dark, what I want to know is how he''s going to tell whether her eyes are smiling or not? |
12581 | And when I would n''t tell her where it was, do you know what she''d do?" |
12581 | And why do n''t you rouse it up again?" |
12581 | Applying at one of these, Mr. Lamb said,"Is Deacon Jones in?" |
12581 | Are you fond of poetry, Grady?'' |
12581 | Are you going to bandy words with me, sir? |
12581 | Are you in favor of soft money or hard?" |
12581 | Are you married?" |
12581 | As he withdrew the machine he smiled and said,"Elegant, is n''t it? |
12581 | As the major took him by the leg to haul him out of the_ débris_ Partridge opened his eyes wearily and said,"Awful clap, was n''t it? |
12581 | Awful, is n''t it? |
12581 | Beautiful story, ai n''t it? |
12581 | But how do I effect the cooling process? |
12581 | But how would you like to have one down inside of you there a- whooping every now and then in the most ridiculous manner? |
12581 | But how? |
12581 | But how?" |
12581 | But let''s see; what''s your age, did you say?" |
12581 | But no sooner was he well settled than she began to flirt with Mr. Smith, and what does he do but yield to her blandishments and marry her? |
12581 | But the Romans and Egyptians made their horses bob- tailed, and why? |
12581 | But what did I do? |
12581 | But what do these idiots around this town know about such things? |
12581 | But what does Mr. Potts say upon the subject?" |
12581 | But what does Murphy care? |
12581 | But when one woman scuttles three men and then ties to a fourth, what are you going to do about it? |
12581 | But you fix yourself with this artificial extremity, and then what do you care for dogs? |
12581 | But, anyway, how was he going to manage about Penn''s waistcoat? |
12581 | Butterwick?" |
12581 | By the way, did anybody ever tell you that you looked like Mohammed? |
12581 | By the way, when did you put that weathercock on your stable?" |
12581 | Ca n''t you find me a professional mesmerizer to come and undo the baby?" |
12581 | Can you release me?" |
12581 | Can-- you-- tell-- me?" |
12581 | D''you s''pose I''m going to give up a respectable business to become a kind of State undertaker? |
12581 | Did n''t you send word to me that you were? |
12581 | Did n''t you tell me to put those rods on your house?" |
12581 | Did you ever have a wife?" |
12581 | Did you ever hear of such impudence? |
12581 | Did you have a pleasant trip? |
12581 | Did you, now?" |
12581 | Do n''t it say full moon on the 20th? |
12581 | Do n''t want a dog like that?" |
12581 | Do n''t want a dog with an eye like a two- inch auger, that''ll sit and watch a thing for forty years if you''ll tell him to? |
12581 | Do n''t want to speculate on it? |
12581 | Do n''t you remember perfectly well that I emptied a bottle of milk into the umbrella twice? |
12581 | Do you hear me?" |
12581 | Do you hear me?" |
12581 | Do you know of such a person?'' |
12581 | Do you know what that beautiful group really represents? |
12581 | Do you make it with eggs?" |
12581 | Do you mean to insult the court, sir? |
12581 | Do you mean to profane this sacred temple of justice with untimely levity? |
12581 | Do you see? |
12581 | Do you think a desiccated codfish would rise to a fly, or would n''t you have to fish for him with a colander?'' |
12581 | Do you think we are to have him with us long? |
12581 | Do you understand? |
12581 | Exciting, was n''t it? |
12581 | Fine countenance, has n''t he? |
12581 | Fogg?" |
12581 | Fogg?" |
12581 | Four hundred, did I say? |
12581 | Great, is n''t it?" |
12581 | Handsome picture, ai n''t it? |
12581 | Has he been beating and ill- treating you?" |
12581 | Has he shown a fondness for door- knobs?" |
12581 | Having obtained Smyth, ought n''t she to have stood back and given some other woman a chance-- now, ought n''t she?" |
12581 | He looks like the man to do that, now, do n''t he? |
12581 | He said to him,"Mooney, what did you mean by telling me that our cow was dry and ugly? |
12581 | He says-- to Hannah, mind you--"The little birds sing sweetly In the weeping willows green, The village girls dress neatly-- Oh, tell me, do I dream?" |
12581 | He was a little frightened at first, but in a moment he summoned up courage enough to ask,"Why, how did you get here?" |
12581 | His friends explained his situation to him, and then he asked,"What drowned me?" |
12581 | Hoops, this is terrible news; and do you know I gave a lot of those seeds to Potts and Coffin?" |
12581 | Hoops? |
12581 | How are you?" |
12581 | How do I know, for instance, that an eighth of me does not belong to you? |
12581 | How do you know that your family will have enough when you are gone to pay your funeral expenses, to bury you decently?" |
12581 | How in the mischief can I tell that?" |
12581 | How in the thunder could he shoot bullets at her?" |
12581 | How is she going to sing to him while he kisses those lips, and how is he going to whisper good- bye? |
12581 | How''ll we make an equitable distribution of those men?" |
12581 | How''m I goin''to live, I want to know? |
12581 | I addressed one of the clerks:"How much gas did you make at the Blank works last quarter?" |
12581 | I can wash the china and the pans as well as anybody, and that''s enough, now, is n''t it?" |
12581 | I could make a good book fairly hum around this globe, though, do n''t you think?" |
12581 | I do n''t mind your shooting him, but why in the thunder did n''t you kill him while you were at it, and give me a chance? |
12581 | I say, is it just the thing?" |
12581 | I say, what is that? |
12581 | I''d better do it, had n''t I, hey?" |
12581 | I''ll take it off and wrap it up in paper for you; shall I?" |
12581 | I----""Wo n''t do it yet?" |
12581 | If a million of''em come at you, what''s the odds? |
12581 | If it''s good in building a house, why is n''t it good in getting up a horse? |
12581 | If you can do that to accommodate a friend, why, I''ll-- No? |
12581 | In half an hour he revived, and with a deep groan he said,"Where am I?" |
12581 | Is it ago?" |
12581 | Is it any wonder that the future seems dark and gloomy and hairless to him? |
12581 | Is it right, is it honorable, for that woman to go and marry another man, and take the share of two more women and an eighth? |
12581 | Is n''t that awful slush? |
12581 | Is n''t that just gorgeous? |
12581 | Is n''t that-- Well, now, is n''t that just the most fearful mess of stuff that was ever ground out of a lunatic asylum?'' |
12581 | Is the_ Patriot_ encouraging art when it goes on in this manner? |
12581 | It seems hardly likely, does it, that the horse would actually try to eat a child?" |
12581 | It was the watchman, and he said,"You know old Mrs. Biles up the street yer? |
12581 | It''s perfectly fearful, is n''t it?" |
12581 | It''s perfectly natural for them to feel that way about it; now, is n''t it?" |
12581 | Keyser jumped out of bed, threw up the front window and exclaimed,"Who''s there?" |
12581 | Lemme have your name, wo n''t you?" |
12581 | Let''s see: how long were you in jail the last time? |
12581 | Look at these plants, will you? |
12581 | Looks exactly like a high hat, do n''t it? |
12581 | May I put one up to show you? |
12581 | Maybe you ai n''t up in ancient history? |
12581 | Mention this to your murderer when you speak to him, will you? |
12581 | Mill, sir? |
12581 | Mrs. Butterwick said,"You know our horse, dearest?" |
12581 | Mrs. Potts got out of bed and turned up the gas, and said,"Mr. Potts, what in the name of common sense is the matter?" |
12581 | Mrs. Smy-- Banger, I mean; I hope I see you well? |
12581 | Need I tell you that I loved him? |
12581 | Never saw such an eye as that in a dog, now, did you? |
12581 | No? |
12581 | No? |
12581 | Not married yet, I reckon? |
12581 | Nothing mean about that, is there?" |
12581 | Now, can you?" |
12581 | Now, do n''t he?" |
12581 | Now, do n''t it?" |
12581 | Now, do they? |
12581 | Now, do you know I believe that chicken actually takes an interest in politics? |
12581 | Now, does it?" |
12581 | Now, how are you going to do it? |
12581 | Now, how does that celery strike you? |
12581 | Now, how would it do to breed the ordinary codfish with a sausage- chopper or a mince- meat machine? |
12581 | Now, how would it strike you if I levied on him as an''immigrant''? |
12581 | Now, if I had your peculiarities, do you know what I''d do? |
12581 | Now, is n''t it? |
12581 | Now, is n''t that splendid? |
12581 | Now, what do you suppose is the_ last_ sorrow that has come to blast the happiness of this persecuted being? |
12581 | Now, what do you think about it?" |
12581 | Now, what do you think of a man like that? |
12581 | Now, what is that?" |
12581 | Now, what''s the odds whether I put in the water or the cow does? |
12581 | Now, what''s the thing you want most this kind of weather?" |
12581 | Now, will you get me such a man?'' |
12581 | Now, you see how it is yourself, Grady, do n''t you? |
12581 | Oh, very well; what''s the odds? |
12581 | Oh, yes; the name of his father- in- law, you know, was Jethro, and--""Who was his wife?" |
12581 | One day he met Captain Hubbs; and when he mentioned that he thought of going out as a missionary, Captain Hubbs asked him,"Where are you going?" |
12581 | One what?" |
12581 | Or if you hate to go to the expense of amputation, why not get your pantaloons altered and mount this beautiful work of art just as you stand? |
12581 | Perhaps you''d like to come up on the bench here and run the court and sentence a few convicts? |
12581 | Perhaps you''ve heard sumfin about him? |
12581 | Rough on the Centennial, ai n''t it?" |
12581 | Rough, was n''t it? |
12581 | S''pose the baby should die while it is in that condition? |
12581 | See? |
12581 | Seem in pretty good health? |
12581 | Seems to me there''s material for poetry in that, is n''t there? |
12581 | Shall I run you one up?" |
12581 | Shall I unroll it?" |
12581 | She said,"Is n''t it strange, Wilberforce, that the baby stays asleep? |
12581 | She took the baby in her arms and kissed and hugged it, and then she said,"What do you think was the matter with him, doctor?" |
12581 | She''s put up there to tell which way the wind blows, ai n''t she? |
12581 | Smart, was n''t it? |
12581 | Smith?" |
12581 | So what does the sheriff do but come here with a gang of police and carry me out there by force? |
12581 | So what was a man to do? |
12581 | Struck by lightning, was n''t I?" |
12581 | Sure you wo n''t take him?" |
12581 | Surprising what some of these men have gone through, ai n''t it? |
12581 | Taking position upon a nail- keg, he remarked,"Mr. Brown, you do n''t want to buy a first- rate wooden leg, do you? |
12581 | Then, of course, she found herself face to face with a mighty unpleasant-- unpleasant-- Er-- er-- er-- Less see; what''s the word I want? |
12581 | There do n''t appear to be a demand for watch- dogs in this place, now, does there? |
12581 | Think of that, will you? |
12581 | Time flies, though, do n''t it? |
12581 | Too bad, ai n''t it? |
12581 | Tuesday? |
12581 | Two years, was n''t it? |
12581 | Want me to take my legs off that table and quit? |
12581 | Was he there? |
12581 | Was n''t it good?" |
12581 | We live and learn, do n''t we?" |
12581 | We took our eagle from Rome, as France did hers; would it not have been wiser if we had taken the cock instead, as France did after the Revolution? |
12581 | We''ve got a gunpowder- factory out beyond the turnpike, but will that ever go up? |
12581 | We, of course, have outlived that dispensation, but it still contains many things that are useful to us, as, for instance, the--""Was Moses married?" |
12581 | Well, Mr. Bradley, how many gallons do you estimate that there are in the Atlantic Ocean?" |
12581 | Well, can you name the hemisphere in which China and Japan are situated?" |
12581 | Well, if the governor_ will_ appoint such chuckle- head commissioners, what else can you expect? |
12581 | Well, now, do you know I was thinking all the time that it was_ Mr._ McGinnis that I buried in the first chapter? |
12581 | Well, that beats the very old Harry, now, do n''t it? |
12581 | Well, then, how''ll we do it? |
12581 | Well, why did n''t you-- What_ is_ the matter with it?" |
12581 | Were you referring to John or Thomas?" |
12581 | What am I to do? |
12581 | What are a few bumps and a sore shin or two compared with all that fatness? |
12581 | What cemetery? |
12581 | What d''you say?'' |
12581 | What day? |
12581 | What do I care how much this pump costs me if it spreads blessings through the community? |
12581 | What do the public care whether he is dreaming or whether he is drunk? |
12581 | What do they know about fishing? |
12581 | What do you mean by proposing to stop cooking in order to teach school? |
12581 | What do you mean by wanting Moses to settle a bet?" |
12581 | What do you mean, anyhow?" |
12581 | What do you mean?" |
12581 | What do you think it is?" |
12581 | What do you think of it?" |
12581 | What does Hannah care? |
12581 | What good''ll it do you if you''re champion? |
12581 | What is an adverb?" |
12581 | What is chalk? |
12581 | What kind of a school have you been teaching?" |
12581 | What makes cows drink so much water? |
12581 | What on earth do you mean?" |
12581 | What on earth does it mean?" |
12581 | What should I teach school for?" |
12581 | What then, is to be done?" |
12581 | What would you say to that?" |
12581 | What would you say, my dear madam, if I should tell you that the major had lost a leg? |
12581 | What''ll you charge me for them-- for the whole four?" |
12581 | What''s the last name?" |
12581 | What''s the matter with you, Potts? |
12581 | What''s the matter? |
12581 | What''s the name of that thing with two horns? |
12581 | What, under Heaven, are we going to do about it?" |
12581 | What_ can_ be the matter with him? |
12581 | When all of a sudden, as she came pelting down, a tornado struck her-- now, Maria, what in the thunder are you staring at me in that way for? |
12581 | When did you arrive?" |
12581 | When he was gone, Banger said,"My dear, who is that very odd- looking man?" |
12581 | When the crowd had gone, the coroner said to Potts,"You''re a mean sort of a man, now, ai n''t you?" |
12581 | Where did you say he was?" |
12581 | Where is the bill?" |
12581 | Which is handsomer, a flat wall or a wall with a surface varied with columns and pilasters? |
12581 | Which of''em kin leave his leg down stairs in the entry on the hat- rack and go to bed with only one cold foot? |
12581 | Which of''em kin unscrew his knee- pan and look at the gum thingamajigs in his calf? |
12581 | Which of''em''s got a leg like that? |
12581 | While he was speaking the engineer came up and said,"Mr. Bradley, what did you say was the capacity of your pump?" |
12581 | Who was she?" |
12581 | Who''d you think I was?" |
12581 | Who''n the thunder wanted a long tail on the horse? |
12581 | Why did n''t Coffin hunt_ him_ with a shot- gun?" |
12581 | Why do n''t you manifest the power of the human intellect?" |
12581 | Why do n''t you try to be honest and decent, and let prize- fighting alone?" |
12581 | Why do n''t you''tend to milkin''them cows? |
12581 | Why, what d''ye mean, judge?'' |
12581 | Why, you do n''t charge anything when I do n''t sue, do you?" |
12581 | Wo n''t you go up with me? |
12581 | Woman, what_ do_ you know? |
12581 | Would I have done that if I had n''t thought it was the baby?" |
12581 | Would it come in as''statuary''? |
12581 | Would you have me represent the lion as large as an elephant? |
12581 | You do n''t want to hear any more news about the fisheries? |
12581 | You hear me?" |
12581 | You ketch my idea, of course? |
12581 | You know Hough the tobacconist? |
12581 | You know Mrs. Banger? |
12581 | You know this, of course?" |
12581 | You observe how it works? |
12581 | You really do n''t want him?" |
12581 | You remember him, of course? |
12581 | You see the rod here in my trousers? |
12581 | You want to see me starve, do n''t you? |
12581 | You''d hardly''ve thought it, now, would you? |
12581 | You_ have_ got the worst temper of any woman I ever saw-- the very worst; now have n''t you?" |
12581 | [ Illustration: FORCED TO DO DUTY]"And do you know that on toward the end of my term they had the face to try to nominate me again? |
12581 | [ Illustration: HOW THE PIG WAS KILLED]"What in the mischief d''you do that for?" |
12581 | [ Illustration: JOE MIDDLES]"Who are you?" |
12581 | [ Illustration: MR. SMITH''S GRIEF]"Oh, you did n''t know her, you say? |
12581 | [ Illustration: THE HEATHEN CLOTHE THEMSELVES]"And then, you know, those trousers you sent out? |
12581 | aid you ever goig to quid?" |
12581 | and that''s the way_ you_ milk, is it? |
12581 | do n''t want him? |
12581 | said Hoops;"and they shoved that off on you for celery, did they? |
12581 | strike you? |
12581 | that is n''t the way you milk a cow, is it?" |
12581 | the receiver exploded, did it? |
12581 | where''s my little baby- bear?" |
12581 | wo n''t go in on William Penn and Washington and Smith, and the other heroes?" |
12581 | you did n''t think I was talking about human beings all this time, did you? |
29088 | A nobody? |
29088 | A what? |
29088 | About me, was it? 29088 About the business?" |
29088 | Ah? 29088 Ah?" |
29088 | And did it go off? |
29088 | And it does n''t hurt you now, does it? |
29088 | And you have to stay alone all night? |
29088 | Are n''t you awfully tired? |
29088 | Are you faint? 29088 Are you related to the Mays? |
29088 | Are you sick? |
29088 | Are you sure? 29088 But could n''t he take a lady to ride without marrying her?" |
29088 | But did n''t you hear us call? |
29088 | But how did you know what her name is? |
29088 | But how do you know he takes a lady to ride? |
29088 | But what if he should go back before I got home? |
29088 | But whatever did you do it for? 29088 But where''s the letter?" |
29088 | But why does n''t he come? |
29088 | But, Mrs. Jocelyn, have you estimated the cost? 29088 But, father, do n''t you really care''cause she called you that?" |
29088 | Ca n''t I keep it then? |
29088 | Ca n''t she stay alone? 29088 Can you come over? |
29088 | Chris Morrow''s father-- don''t you know? 29088 Could n''t find anybody home at your house, and that feller next door-- what''s his name?--""David Collins?" |
29088 | David Collins, are you afraid of him yet? 29088 David?" |
29088 | Did she come out all right? |
29088 | Did they come in that lovely car? 29088 Did we pass this big fountain?" |
29088 | Did you know it when I came away-- that you were coming, too? |
29088 | Did you, mother? |
29088 | Do I look as if I were for sale? |
29088 | Do I? |
29088 | Do you know her? |
29088 | Do you know, father? |
29088 | Do you like it here at the hospital? |
29088 | Do you love her? |
29088 | Do you s''pose they''re real fairies? |
29088 | Do you, honest? |
29088 | Does your father own it? |
29088 | Dr. Dudley, do you know of a suitable man for the head of''The House of Joy''? |
29088 | Father,she began, atilt on the arm of his chair,"should you like to buy this house yourself?" |
29088 | Geography, then? |
29088 | Going in? |
29088 | Had n''t yer better look at it, my dear,he proposed,"just to make certain it''s all right?" |
29088 | Has n''t anybody bought your house yet, has there? |
29088 | Have you had any supper? |
29088 | Have you had yours? |
29088 | Have you his address? |
29088 | Have you opened it? |
29088 | Have you sent word to Aunt Jane? |
29088 | Have you told Ilga? |
29088 | Have you? |
29088 | Have you? |
29088 | How can Mr. Morrow buy such jewelry, do you suppose? 29088 How did he come to be your father?" |
29088 | How did you get here? 29088 How did you know?" |
29088 | How do you do, my dear? 29088 How do you know?" |
29088 | How does it feel to be eleven? |
29088 | How''d you know there was anything? |
29088 | However come you kids out here, this time o''night? |
29088 | Hurt? 29088 I shall have to stay home from school, sha n''t I?" |
29088 | Ilga Barron? |
29088 | Is Uncle David home? |
29088 | Is he badly hurt? |
29088 | Is he in the stable, David? 29088 Is it a secret?" |
29088 | Is it as bad as that? |
29088 | Is it worse? |
29088 | Is n''t Patricia Illingworth lovely? |
29088 | Is n''t she sweet? |
29088 | Is n''t that perfectly beautiful? |
29088 | Is n''t that right? |
29088 | Is n''t your mother waiting for you? |
29088 | Is she going to be able to walk? |
29088 | Is that all? |
29088 | It is kind of mean, is n''t it? |
29088 | It is n''t because we''re so anxious for a drive; but, Polly, do n''t you see? 29088 It seems further afoot than in an automobile, does n''t it?" |
29088 | It was along here that you saw them, was n''t it? |
29088 | May I ask who''father''is? 29088 May I take you home?" |
29088 | Me? |
29088 | Miss Dudley, may Lone Star and I have the pleasure of your comradeship for the next hour? |
29088 | Mother, you would n''t keep more than three, would you? |
29088 | Nice boy, is n''t he? |
29088 | No, you have n''t; but wo n''t you tell me now, please? |
29088 | Now what shall we do? |
29088 | Oh, what is in it? |
29088 | Papa''s, or mamma''s? |
29088 | Patty, have you been meddling with my jewel cases again? |
29088 | Perhaps you missed a word in spelling? |
29088 | Polly, who was your father-- your own father? |
29088 | Say, where in the world were you when I came away from your house? |
29088 | She ca n''t; can she, Gustave? |
29088 | She did n''t tell you I was goin''to your school, did she? |
29088 | Something you did at school? 29088 Tell what?" |
29088 | That the pudgy girl we met the other day?--the one that did n''t have cloth enough for a decent dress? |
29088 | That you, Polly? 29088 That''s old to get married, is n''t it?" |
29088 | Then that is n''t it? 29088 Then you think there is demand for a children''s hospital in the city?" |
29088 | Then you wo n''t mind going to see her roses, shall you? |
29088 | They would, would n''t they? |
29088 | To me? |
29088 | Two? 29088 Up opposite Edgewood Park?" |
29088 | Wal, yer wo n''t let him, will yer? |
29088 | Was n''t that just mean? |
29088 | Was that all? 29088 We''d just spoken of it, had n''t we, Miss Price? |
29088 | Well, but, David, what good would it have done? 29088 Well, what is it, then? |
29088 | Well,he replied, in a half- ashamed tone,"she rides bronchos, does n''t she? |
29088 | Were n''t you lonesome? |
29088 | Were you sick, too? |
29088 | Wha''do you mean? |
29088 | What are they up to? |
29088 | What did you mean by treating Leonora so rudely? |
29088 | What do you mean, David Collins? 29088 What do you mean?" |
29088 | What do you think now? 29088 What do you think?" |
29088 | What do you want? |
29088 | What does fanfaron mean? |
29088 | What does he want to see me for? |
29088 | What does it mean? |
29088 | What in the world''s the matter? |
29088 | What is all this fuss about? 29088 What is it?" |
29088 | What is it? |
29088 | What is it? |
29088 | What is the matter? |
29088 | What is the matter? |
29088 | What relatives are they? |
29088 | What shall we do, then? |
29088 | What time do you s''pose it is? |
29088 | What''s the matter? |
29088 | What''s the matter? |
29088 | What''s your father''s business? |
29088 | Where are they? |
29088 | Where did you come from? |
29088 | Where do you s''pose it came from? 29088 Where is your mother?" |
29088 | Where''s David? |
29088 | Where? |
29088 | Who are you jealous of? |
29088 | Who is it? |
29088 | Who wants to go to ride with Lone Star and me? |
29088 | Who you going to marry? |
29088 | Who''s he? |
29088 | Who, I''d like to know? 29088 Whose do you really s''pose it is?" |
29088 | Why did n''t Julian come, too? 29088 Why did n''t you answer, then?" |
29088 | Why do n''t you have some roses? |
29088 | Why do n''t you want to take it? |
29088 | Why not? 29088 Why not?" |
29088 | Why not? |
29088 | Why, father,she cried,"what made you do it? |
29088 | Why, you''ll have to ask her sometime, sha n''t you? |
29088 | Will it hurt you? |
29088 | Will you promise not to? |
29088 | Would n''t after do? |
29088 | Would n''t it be wiser, my dear, to wait until the next day? |
29088 | Would you like one of my birthday roses? |
29088 | Yer do n''t s''pose the Doctor said anything to Jane about it? |
29088 | You and David been having a quarrel? |
29088 | You are n''t hurt at all? |
29088 | You are not doing this just to please Patricia? |
29088 | You did? |
29088 | You do n''t s''pose they''ve gone up to Cherry Hill Park, do you? |
29088 | You do n''t think I ought to go, do you, mother? |
29088 | You do n''t? |
29088 | You have n''t taken her to ride yet, have you? |
29088 | You say that Patricia gave you the money when you came away? |
29088 | You''ll have to go back to the hospital to live, sha n''t you? |
29088 | You''re not afraid I''ll think more of her than I do of you, are you? 29088 You''re not afraid he''s-- getting to gambling-- or drinking, are you?" |
29088 | You''re not afraid? |
29088 | A BACHELOR HUSBAND Can a woman love two men at the same time? |
29088 | And thinks I,''S''pose Susie''s goin''to stay up in Heaven away from me? |
29088 | And was that really the day you first knew about it?" |
29088 | And your mother''s name? |
29088 | Are n''t they sweet?" |
29088 | Are n''t you aching to know?" |
29088 | Are n''t you awfully surprised?" |
29088 | Are you up there?" |
29088 | Aunt Julia said she was coming to our school, and I think she''s lovely; do n''t you?" |
29088 | But how comes it that she speaks of me? |
29088 | But how is it that you are home from school so early? |
29088 | But what else has she been doing?" |
29088 | But what kind of a day did you call it?" |
29088 | But you can come and see mother and me, ca n''t you? |
29088 | But, Thistledown, do n''t you think you are a bit foolish to let that trouble you?" |
29088 | CHAPTER VI"NOT FOR SALE""Will your father be at home this evening?" |
29088 | Ca n''t you sit down here and tell me about it?" |
29088 | Catching her gently, in a voice not quite steady, she asked:--"Where are you going?" |
29088 | Come, let''s play-- what shall we play? |
29088 | Could it be really true? |
29088 | Could the fire have gone out? |
29088 | David, is that it?" |
29088 | Did n''t he ever say anything about it? |
29088 | Did you expect to marry him when he took you to ride on Elsie''s birthday?" |
29088 | Did you s''pose I''d want to?" |
29088 | Did you wish you were with him?" |
29088 | Did you, Polly?" |
29088 | Do n''t you feel well? |
29088 | Do n''t you just love father? |
29088 | Do n''t you remember, I told you it must stay where it is until you are of age?" |
29088 | Do n''t you remember? |
29088 | Do n''t you think your uncle will be as anxious to see you as you are to see him?" |
29088 | Do you know what Shakespeare says about that? |
29088 | Do you mind?" |
29088 | Do you recollect it-- a small rosewood box?" |
29088 | Dudley?" |
29088 | Father and mother are coming next week; wo n''t that be grand?" |
29088 | Had n''t you better lie down again before the pain comes on?" |
29088 | Have I, Polly? |
29088 | Honest?" |
29088 | Honestly, do n''t you wish you had?" |
29088 | How could they get along without any little girl?--without me?" |
29088 | How do you do, my dear? |
29088 | How do you do?" |
29088 | How do you think he''d like that?" |
29088 | How long are you going to keep me guessing?" |
29088 | How many does that make?" |
29088 | How old did you tell me you are?" |
29088 | How should I be?" |
29088 | How will that do?" |
29088 | I am, am I? |
29088 | I guess there could n''t much hurt him, could there?" |
29088 | I think she is a lovely lady, do n''t you?" |
29088 | I was afraid for a minute that you were not going to let me keep the money; but a present has to be kept, does n''t it? |
29088 | I wonder if she is to stay at the hospital longer than she expected-- that is n''t it, is it?" |
29088 | Is n''t it nice that I was hurt? |
29088 | Is n''t it, Polly? |
29088 | Is n''t that great?" |
29088 | It is not three o''clock, is it?" |
29088 | Jocelyn?" |
29088 | May I come in?" |
29088 | May n''t I run over and ask her to take my place for this once? |
29088 | Must he make her feel that her sacrifice had been in vain? |
29088 | No, I think eight will have to do, and it will be better to give to those that have to lie abed, wo n''t it?" |
29088 | Oh, say, will you go? |
29088 | Only very best friends call each other by their first names, do they? |
29088 | Or was it that she now understood her better? |
29088 | Phebe Illingworth?" |
29088 | Polly interrupted excitedly,"of mamma?" |
29088 | Polly, how came you here without permission?" |
29088 | Presently she asked:--"May I tell Ilga?" |
29088 | Rodman?" |
29088 | Shall I bring it along?" |
29088 | She is the adopted child?" |
29088 | She loves you more-- yis, more-- than you do her, an''do you think she stays away from you? |
29088 | She waited until the spasm had passed, and then said gently,"Ca n''t I get you something?" |
29088 | She was an added expense-- ought she to have gone to live with her uncle? |
29088 | So Leonora and I have been choosing-- what do you think of this,''The Children''s House of Joy''?" |
29088 | THE PHANTOM LOVER Have you not often heard of someone being in love with love rather than the person they believed the object of their affections? |
29088 | The head physician can live here, and both parts will be easy of access-- what do you say?" |
29088 | Ther''''s nothin''in all God''s universe so strong as love, and so what is there to keep love away from us? |
29088 | There would be no more"pinch,"--what need would there be of her going to Uncle Maurice? |
29088 | Want to try it?" |
29088 | Was it Illingworth? |
29088 | Was it a half- holiday?" |
29088 | Was it something dreadful, this mysterious"business"? |
29088 | Was n''t it lovely of him? |
29088 | Was there anybody hurt?" |
29088 | We shall have to draw cuts, sha n''t we?" |
29088 | We shall have to go alone, sha n''t we?" |
29088 | What could have happened now to make her look like that? |
29088 | What could have happened? |
29088 | What do you think of that?" |
29088 | What in the world started you up there this hot night?" |
29088 | What is it?" |
29088 | What was Patricia saying? |
29088 | What would Chris say, if she had to give back his beautiful present which she had promised always to keep? |
29088 | What''s he coming back for?" |
29088 | What''s your thorn, David?" |
29088 | Where do you live?" |
29088 | Where is he?" |
29088 | Where was that big stone gateway? |
29088 | Why did n''t you tell me before? |
29088 | Why do n''t you ask him, David?" |
29088 | Why do you care where your uncle goes?" |
29088 | Why do you care?" |
29088 | Why is n''t Miss Townsend''s school as good for me as it is for Patricia and David? |
29088 | Why?" |
29088 | Will you do this kindness for me? |
29088 | Will you?" |
29088 | Winship is n''t bothering you about it, is he?" |
29088 | Wo n''t that be enough?" |
29088 | Wo n''t your mother let you stay home from school? |
29088 | Would n''t it be grand if we are?" |
29088 | You know Mrs. Jocelyn, do n''t you?" |
29088 | You were surprised, were n''t you?" |
29088 | You''ll keep it always to remember me by, wo n''t you?" |
29088 | You''re not tired?" |
29088 | Your mother sick?" |
29088 | ai n''t it queer? |
29088 | are they? |
29088 | are you here? |
29088 | cried Polly in consternation,"did she fall?" |
29088 | cried Polly, adding faintly,"Are you ill?" |
29088 | cried Polly, the thought suddenly popping into her head,"why ca n''t we go round to Mrs. Jocelyn''s and see hers? |
29088 | did her father and mother wish she had gone? |
29088 | do you really s''pose that?" |
29088 | how? |
29088 | is she sick?" |
29088 | is that what you call our house?" |
29088 | she gasped, gazing, big- eyed, at the beautiful empty cases,"where are all your jewels? |
29088 | that will be a between birthday party, wo n''t it?" |
29088 | where have you been?" |
29088 | wo n''t you?" |
45080 | How do you carry on your trade? |
45080 | Why is this? 45080 You call that a river?" |
45080 | [ 226- 1] What is desirable in this federation to preserve ourselves from the menace of other civilizations? 45080 An American was one day asked by a cutlery salesman from Birmingham( England),Are you not humiliated by having no national language?" |
45080 | And if the policy of one government, or the use it makes of its navy, does lead to war, what is to be the position? |
45080 | And who is to defend the other five Britannic nations? |
45080 | Are the other governments to be involved? |
45080 | Are the self- governing colonies to be united to each other and to the Mother Country?--or to these and to the dependencies besides? |
45080 | Are we backing the Pax Britannica and the Pax Americana with sufficient power to ensure their maintenance? |
45080 | Assuming Pownall''s premises to be correct he inquired,''which is best-- to have a total separation or a change of the seat of government? |
45080 | But between the United States and the younger Britannic nations, what is the relation? |
45080 | How long can the British Isles alone bear the strain of its own naval defence? |
45080 | How shall we bind ourselves for that all- time, the indefinite future, so that we shall be gladly bound, and yet be freemen still? |
45080 | In either of these cases, what would the American courts decide? |
45080 | Is Great Britain to be responsible for the policy of the Dominions? |
45080 | Is there anything we are forgetting? |
45080 | Moreover, what do most of us care about what foreigners think? |
45080 | Must it fall and its people be led into the bondage of alien ways? |
45080 | Need other cases of failure be mentioned? |
45080 | Shall we continue to be called"just and upright"? |
45080 | They are undoubtedly friendly, but where is the formal evidence of such friendliness? |
45080 | Was it not Dr. Johnson who said,"All foreigners are mostly fools"? |
45080 | What will be the position of the Empire then, if it has to depend upon the navy of England alone? |
39975 | Had I any drawings to show? |
39975 | Pray, have you seen Mr. Audubon''s collections of birds? 39975 _ Not see Walter Scott?_"thought I;"I SHALL, if I have to crawl on all- fours for a mile!" |
39975 | A gentleman soon came to me, and asked if perchance my name was Audubon? |
39975 | Am I to lead this life long? |
39975 | And why, have I thought a thousand times, should I not have kept to that delicious mode of living? |
39975 | Are not we of America men? |
39975 | Bank Swallows in sight this moment, with the weather thick, foggy, and an east wind; where are these delicate pilgrims bound? |
39975 | Basil Hall think of a squatter''s hut in Mississippi in contrast with this? |
39975 | But this is not all,--who,_ now_, will deny the existence of the Labrador Falcon? |
39975 | But young heads are on young shoulders; it was not to be, and who cares? |
39975 | Cloud ten hours,--they told us fifty thousand(?) |
39975 | Comment va?" |
39975 | Did he forget to question the all- knowing police, or did the gentleman at the Messageries exaggerate? |
39975 | Did the ancient artists and colorists ever glaze their work? |
39975 | Do men forget, or do they not know how swiftly time moves on? |
39975 | Dost thou think I said"Yes"? |
39975 | Had not his wondrous pen penetrated my soul with the consciousness that here was a genius from God''s hand? |
39975 | Have we not the same nerves, sinews, and mental faculties which other nations possess? |
39975 | Have you seen Barons Vacher and La Brouillerie?" |
39975 | He said to me,"Why do not you write a little book telling what you have seen?" |
39975 | Here we were detained nearly an hour; how would this work in the States? |
39975 | How is it that our sages tell us our species is much improved? |
39975 | How many must the multitude of Mormons inhabiting this island destroy daily? |
39975 | I can not write at all, but if I could how could I make a_ little_ book, when I have seen enough to make a dozen_ large_ books? |
39975 | I could relate many curious anecdotes about him, but never mind them; he made out to grow rich, and what more could_ he_ wish for? |
39975 | I exclaimed,"why, who are they?" |
39975 | I had seen each individual when toasted, rise, and deliver a speech; that being the case, could I remain speechless like a fool? |
39975 | I heard the delightful song of the Ruby- crowned Wren again and again; what would I give to find the nest of this_ northern Humming- Bird_? |
39975 | I saw upwards of twelve of Harris''new Finch(?) |
39975 | I took my drawing of the Pheasant to Mr. Fanetti''s(?) |
39975 | If a boy, it was,''Well, my little man,''or a little girl,''Good morning, lassie, how are you to- day?'' |
39975 | In the evening I visited Mr. Howe, the editor of the"Courant"and then to the theatre with Mr. Bridges to see Wairner(?) |
39975 | Is it because the constant evidence of the contrast between the rich and the poor is a torment to me, or is it because of its size and crowd? |
39975 | Is it not shocking that while in England all is hospitality_ within_, all is so different_ without_? |
39975 | Is not this a curious story? |
39975 | It is both amusing and distressing to see how inimical to each other men of science are; and why are they so? |
39975 | It is dreadful to know of the want of bread here; will it not lead to the horrors of another revolution? |
39975 | It is wonderful to me; am I, or is my work, deserving of all this? |
39975 | Now is it not too bad that I can not do so, for want of talent? |
39975 | Now what will not man do to deceive his brother? |
39975 | Now, do those good gentlemen expect me to remain in Paris all my life? |
39975 | Now, my Lucy, who could have thought to make a thing like that? |
39975 | Now, my love, wouldst thou not believe me once more in the woods, hard at it? |
39975 | One of these pictures is from my sketch of an Eagle pouncing on a Lamb,[156] dost thou remember it? |
39975 | Query, is it the same which is found in Europe? |
39975 | Query: how many amongst my now long list of subscribers will continue the work throughout? |
39975 | Shall I ever again see and enjoy the vast forests in their calm purity, the beauties of America? |
39975 | The Captain wishes to write a book, and he spoke of it with as little concern as I should say,"I will draw a duck;"is it not surprising? |
39975 | The question presented was"Which was the more advantageous, the discovery of the compass, or that of the art of printing?" |
39975 | The service and sermon were long and tedious; often to myself I said,"Why is not Sydney Smith here?" |
39975 | To finish highly without destroying the general effect, or to give the general effect and care not about the finishing? |
39975 | To the great and good man himself I can never say this, therefore he can never know it, or my feelings towards him-- but if he did? |
39975 | Travelling wherever chance or circumstance may lead you? |
39975 | Very different, is it not, from looking up a large decaying tree, watching the movements of a Woodpecker? |
39975 | Was I inclined to cut my throat in foolish despair? |
39975 | Was I to repine because I had acted like an honest man? |
39975 | Was I to see my beloved Lucy and children suffer and want bread, in the abundant State of Kentucky? |
39975 | We had coffee, and the company increased rapidly; amongst them all I knew only Captain Parry, M. de Condolleot(? |
39975 | Well, is not this a long digression for thee? |
39975 | Were those talents to remain dormant under such exigencies? |
39975 | What brains he must have, and-- how long can he keep them? |
39975 | What has since taken place? |
39975 | What would I have been now if equally gifted by nature at that age? |
39975 | What would be said to a gang of Wild Turkeys,--several hundred trotting along a sand- bar of the Upper Mississippi? |
39975 | What would they say of a half- million of Robins about to take their departure for the North, making our woods fairly tremble with melodious harmony? |
39975 | When the president entered Mr. Combe said:"I have here two gentlemen of talent; will you please tell us in what their natural powers consist?" |
39975 | Where can I go now, and visit nature undisturbed? |
39975 | Where is the time gone when I was considered one of the best of players? |
39975 | Which way, pray, are you travelling? |
39975 | Whilst I looked at this mass I thought, What have_ I_ done, compared with what this man has done, and has to do? |
39975 | Who has not felt a sense of fear while trying to combine all this? |
39975 | Who would have expected such things from the woods of America?" |
39975 | Who, recalling her early married life, can wonder that she hesitated before leaving this home for the vicissitudes of an unknown city? |
39975 | Why did Mrs. Trollope not visit Halifax? |
39975 | Why do people make such errors with my simple name? |
39975 | Will the result repay the exertions? |
39975 | With her was I not always rich? |
39975 | With the exception of Mr. Harris, all were engaged by Audubon, who felt his time was short, his duties many, while the man of seventy(?) |
39975 | Yet, after all, who can say that it was not a material advantage, both to myself and to the world, that the Norway rats destroyed those drawings?" |
39975 | _ June 18._ Is it not strange I should suffer whole weeks to pass without writing down what happens to me? |
39975 | _ Why_ do I dislike London? |
39975 | and why should not mankind in general be more abstemious than mankind is? |
39975 | between us and them there existed a regular line of willows-- and who ever saw willows grow far from water? |
39975 | can not I return to America? |
39975 | canus_ as merely a straggler in North America, with the query,"accidental in Labrador?" |
39975 | how can I bear the loss of our truest friend? |
39975 | how dull I feel; how long am I to be confined in this immense jail? |
39975 | was this the way to use a man who paid you so amply and so punctually? |
39975 | what can I hope, my Lucy, for thee and for us all? |
39975 | what good work is here, but most of the painters of these beautiful pictures are no longer on this earth, and who is there to keep up their standing? |
44312 | But who would tell papa? |
44312 | Qui en a fait la chanson? 44312 Voulez- vous écouter chanter Une chanson de vérité? |
44312 | And are the Shushwaps such cowards, dastardly to shoot their benefactor in the back while his face was turned? |
44312 | Ca n''t you demonstrate that you are one of the descendants of one of the great clans?" |
44312 | Can a more terrible combination be imagined than this? |
44312 | Did ever British prestige suffer a more humiliating blow? |
44312 | Governor Semple answered,"What do_ you_ want?" |
44312 | He gesticulated wildly, and called out in broken English,"What do you want? |
44312 | How is this lake formed? |
44312 | I again called out,''Who is there?'' |
44312 | J''avons cerné la bande de grenadiers; Ils sont immobiles?--Ils sont démentés? |
44312 | My horse was startled and jumped on one side, snorting and prancing; but I kept my seat, calling out,''Who is there?'' |
44312 | Nous avons fait trois prisonniers Des Orcanais? |
44312 | Qui en a composé la chanson? |
44312 | Shall we strike?" |
44312 | The question arises, Was the Governor justified in the steps taken by him? |
44312 | The white men are not dogs; they love their own kindred as well as you; why should they not avenge their murder?''" |
44312 | Voulez- vous écouter chanter une chanson de vérité? |
44312 | Were there not all the elements of an explosion of a serious and dangerous kind? |
44312 | What do you want?" |
44312 | What, then, is to be the future of this Canadian West? |
44312 | What, then, were the conditions? |
44312 | Whence do its waters proceed? |
44312 | Wherefore did you kill him? |
44312 | Who has sung this song of triumph? |
44312 | Why do the white men let your children starve? |
44312 | Why is this? |
46227 | Ai n''t you afraid to hunt alone in the woods, when the Indians are making so much trouble? |
46227 | What is to be done with me after we get there? |
46227 | What is your name? |
46227 | He affected to be pleased, and called back, with a laugh,"How are you, friends? |
46227 | Page 61:"rendered the greater? |
46227 | When the sole survivor reached the town, and was asked,"What news?" |
46227 | is it not a sad fact that the forbidden pleasure is the one that tastes the sweeter? |
46227 | who are you?" |
26895 | ''And so Mr. Clyde is tired of trespassin'', is he?'' 26895 A complete outfit, and for him? |
26895 | A what? |
26895 | About the bishop? |
26895 | And Miss Dearborn? |
26895 | And Mr. Matlack, is he up? |
26895 | And how about everything else? |
26895 | And how did you get here? |
26895 | And if I were to arrange it otherwise,she said,"would you undertake to keep the others away?" |
26895 | And is that your only prospect? |
26895 | And now can you tell me where Mr. Archibald has gone? 26895 And so make matters three times as bad as they were at first?" |
26895 | And so you are really going to go? |
26895 | And so you want to go camping, do you? |
26895 | And those two have really been making love to you? |
26895 | And what can be nobler,cried Corona,"than to be, in the most distinctive sense of the term, ourselves?" |
26895 | And what does she expect Miss Raybold and her brother to do? |
26895 | And what in the name of common- sense are you here for? |
26895 | And where in the name of thunder are you goin''to? |
26895 | And where is that? |
26895 | And write a book about it? |
26895 | And you are really going to- morrow? |
26895 | And you knew it all the time? |
26895 | Are they on a honey- moon? |
26895 | Are you choking? 26895 Are you positively sure you are awake, Harriet?" |
26895 | Are you sick? |
26895 | Are you sure you understand rowing and the management of a boat? |
26895 | Before dinner? |
26895 | Bigger? |
26895 | Bishop,she cried,"what shall I do? |
26895 | Both? |
26895 | But ca n''t you tell me what it is that troubles you? |
26895 | But how can he know about the people out here in the woods? |
26895 | But what can I do? |
26895 | But what is your real name? |
26895 | But what on earth can be keeping Mr. Archibald? 26895 But where on earth,"asked Mr. Archibald,"did you hear that we were on a wedding- journey?" |
26895 | But would you prefer that I tell you of that first, or begin at the beginning and briefly relate to you what has happened since I saw you last? |
26895 | But,said Mr. Archibald,"how about your position? |
26895 | Ca n''t come? |
26895 | Ca n''t you simply go away and leave her when she begins in that way? |
26895 | Can I see you alone, sir? |
26895 | Can this be Sadler''s? |
26895 | Can you make a cast with a fly? |
26895 | Come, now,said the bishop,"he was n''t trying to do that?" |
26895 | Corona,said her brother, in a peevish undertone,"what is the good of all that? |
26895 | Depart, or--"Do you mean to threaten me? |
26895 | Did Mrs. Archibald tell you,said she,"that we have invited Mr. Clyde and Mr. Raybold to supper to- night?" |
26895 | Did he agree? |
26895 | Did n''t you tell me that day you was talkin''to me about the boat that he was a tough sort of a fellow? |
26895 | Did you dare to propose yourself to that classic being? |
26895 | Did you ever hear of a paradise without snakes? |
26895 | Did you fall overboard? |
26895 | Did you find her willing to wait on you, one at a time? |
26895 | Did you know that the Archibalds had gone? 26895 Did your uncle say how much he would leave you?" |
26895 | Do it? |
26895 | Do n''t you intend to be a hermit? |
26895 | Do n''t you know where he went to? |
26895 | Do n''t you suppose I can read a man''s character when I''ve had a good chance at him? 26895 Do you draw?" |
26895 | Do you hear what Mrs. Archibald says? |
26895 | Do you know what I think he is? |
26895 | Do you know,said she,"if there are panthers in these woods?" |
26895 | Do you mean by all that,said Mrs. Perkenpine,"that I cooked the supper?" |
26895 | Do you mean now? |
26895 | Do you mean that I am that? |
26895 | Do you mean to say,she said,"that you want to marry me? |
26895 | Do you really think I must leave this camp at the dictation of that person? |
26895 | Do you see that pile of logs and branches there? |
26895 | Do you see who it is addressed to? |
26895 | Do you suppose he could ketch a rabbit, no matter how fast he ran? |
26895 | Do you suppose,exclaimed Mr. Archibald,"that I am doing this for the sake of your sister? |
26895 | Do you wish anything else? |
26895 | Do you wish to go out on the lake? 26895 Does n''t the sun hurt your head?" |
26895 | Engaged? 26895 Even if I should send you away with one of the others?" |
26895 | Excuse me,said the bishop,"but in case I should not go away within the time specified, what would be your course?" |
26895 | Harriet,said Mr. Archibald, abruptly,"do you remember where I left my pipe? |
26895 | Has he been thrashing you? |
26895 | Has he so many books that he needs a librarian? |
26895 | Has he taken cold? 26895 Has this camp any name?" |
26895 | Have they engaged you as cook and general help? |
26895 | Have you got any complaints to make of me? |
26895 | Have you seen any of the Archibalds yet? |
26895 | He pulled up the stake, did he? |
26895 | Hermits? |
26895 | How could they have missed us so soon? 26895 How did you come to be a guide?" |
26895 | How did you find out all that about him? |
26895 | How do you feel about it? |
26895 | How do you feel about it? |
26895 | How does your individuality treat you? |
26895 | How in the name of common- sense did you happen to turn up at this minute? 26895 How in the world, Margery,"said Mrs. Archibald,"did you get acquainted so quickly with that young man-- and who is he?" |
26895 | How is this? |
26895 | How on earth did you happen here? |
26895 | How would you like me to do it? |
26895 | How would you like to walk that way? |
26895 | I have no business,said the other,"and--""And you are a stranger to everybody here?" |
26895 | I might have supposed that; but who on earth can be the other one? |
26895 | I say,repeated Martin,"did you bounce him, or did he go without it?" |
26895 | I think she must be in bed,said Mrs. Archibald; then stepping inside, she called,"Margery, are you there?" |
26895 | I thought you were going to bounce him as soon as he got up? |
26895 | I will speak to her,said Mrs. Archibald;"where is she?" |
26895 | I will try to avoid any unpleasantness,said he,"and I hope I may do so, but---- By- the- way, where is Margery?" |
26895 | I wonder,he said,"if there is anything the matter with Mrs. Archibald? |
26895 | If you keep in the middle we may get near them, and why should we be on one side of the lake and they on the other? |
26895 | If you wanted to go out in the boat, why did n''t you come to me for the key? 26895 Is Phil Matlack one?" |
26895 | Is assertin''like persistin''? |
26895 | Is he too big for you to bounce? |
26895 | Is it a good one? |
26895 | Is it possible,she said to herself,"that any of the others have come? |
26895 | Is it possible,thought the bishop,"that she can be annoyed by the smell of hot meat, potatoes, and coffee? |
26895 | Is it really in the woods? |
26895 | Is it them two sittin''over there? |
26895 | Is n''t she a work of nature? |
26895 | Is n''t there a State law against that? |
26895 | Is she leaking more than she did? 26895 Is there any hunting stories to be told?" |
26895 | Is there anything I can do for you, Miss Dearborn? |
26895 | Is this your first appearance? |
26895 | It is idiotic, is n''t it? |
26895 | Lake dry? |
26895 | Look here, Phil,said Peter,"is he dressed in black?" |
26895 | Look here,cried Martin,"how did you find out all that about the bishop?" |
26895 | Martin,said she, to the young guide,"is there a hammock among the things we brought with us?" |
26895 | Mr. Matlack,said Mrs. Archibald,"will you please sit down a moment? |
26895 | Mr. Sadler, do you mean? |
26895 | Mr.--the bishop? 26895 Now,"said he,"what have you got to say?" |
26895 | Oh, Martin,she said,"are you up so early?" |
26895 | Oh, that''s all, is it? |
26895 | Phil Matlack,he shouted,"what do you take me for? |
26895 | So soon as that? |
26895 | So you still eat together? 26895 Surely not before breakfast?" |
26895 | That delightful little girl whom I taught to ride a tricycle when you were visiting us? 26895 The bishop?" |
26895 | Then says he,''Would you mind steppin''down to the lake?'' 26895 This lady,"said the bishop, turning towards Raybold,"is your sister, I presume? |
26895 | Was n''t the fishing good? |
26895 | Was the water very cold? |
26895 | Was your diocese entirely meadow- land? |
26895 | Well, sir,said he,"have you any business with anybody here? |
26895 | Well,said Matlack, sharply,"what''s the matter with you? |
26895 | Well,said Matlack,"how did you find that out?" |
26895 | Well,said he,"did you bounce him?" |
26895 | Well,said she to Miss Raybold,"what do you want?" |
26895 | What I want to know is, are you going to make friends with that man and invite him to our table? |
26895 | What are you going to do? |
26895 | What are you going to do? |
26895 | What are you talking about? |
26895 | What are you trying to do? |
26895 | What can this mean? |
26895 | What did you expect? |
26895 | What do you mean by that? |
26895 | What do you mean? 26895 What do you mean?" |
26895 | What do you mean? |
26895 | What do you think? |
26895 | What do you want? |
26895 | What does that mean? |
26895 | What else did you find out? |
26895 | What for? |
26895 | What is a Number Three camp? |
26895 | What is it? |
26895 | What is it? |
26895 | What is the matter, my dear? |
26895 | What is the matter? |
26895 | What is the matter? |
26895 | What is there lofty about her? |
26895 | What is this? |
26895 | What makes me? |
26895 | What of him? |
26895 | What on earth is the matter? |
26895 | What was your system? |
26895 | What''s he doin''now? |
26895 | What''s he got to do with it? |
26895 | What''s that got to do with it? 26895 What''s that?" |
26895 | What''s that? |
26895 | What''s up now? |
26895 | What''s wrong at the camp? |
26895 | What''s your third bother? |
26895 | What, ma''am? |
26895 | What? |
26895 | When do you expect to get there? |
26895 | When do you want to move-- Monday morning? |
26895 | When you were in England,said Corona,"did you visit Newnham College?" |
26895 | When? |
26895 | Where are all our friends? |
26895 | Where are you going, sir? |
26895 | Where in Shakespeare is that? |
26895 | Where is Arthur? 26895 Where is Margery?" |
26895 | Where is he? |
26895 | Where shall I hang it? |
26895 | Which way do you intend to row? |
26895 | Why did n''t you? 26895 Why did you dress yourself in that fashion?" |
26895 | Why do n''t you do it yourself, then? |
26895 | Why need he stay? |
26895 | Why should n''t I? |
26895 | Why should n''t she,said Mrs. Archibald,"if she is just as good?" |
26895 | Why? |
26895 | Will you go of your own accord,he asked,"or do you wish me to take you away?" |
26895 | Will you not join us? |
26895 | Would you like a cup of tea, ma''am? |
26895 | Would you mind letting me see your sketch? |
26895 | Would you tell him to cook his own victuals and mend his clothes accordin''to his own nater? |
26895 | You are a fisherman, then? |
26895 | You are not goin''to walk back to camp? |
26895 | You did n''t fight him, then? |
26895 | You do n''t mean to say,cried Mrs. Perkenpine, now on her feet,"that you two elderly ones is the honey- mooners?" |
26895 | You know how to fish? |
26895 | You think he is too stupid to learn? |
26895 | You will wait until the reception is over, father? |
26895 | You''ve camped out before? |
26895 | Your husband rows, do n''t he? |
26895 | Yours? |
26895 | ''Do you want to stay here all night?'' |
26895 | ''If you see Mr. Clyde,''says he,''will you kindly tell him that I will come over and help him with his tent in about an hour?'' |
26895 | ''Then you are goin''to keep on insistin''on persistin''?'' |
26895 | And do you think, Uncle Archibald, that it is going to rain?" |
26895 | And now where are you going?" |
26895 | And now, Martin, do n''t you want to do something for me? |
26895 | And now,"he continued,"is n''t there somebody who can tell us a story? |
26895 | And where to?" |
26895 | And, Aunt Harriet, may I speak to you a moment?" |
26895 | Are you fond of fishin'', ma''am?" |
26895 | Are you never going to stop that everlasting preaching and give me a chance to talk to you?" |
26895 | Are you sure that you prefer going alone? |
26895 | Arthur, will you go and tell her?" |
26895 | Be himself? |
26895 | Bishop?" |
26895 | But perhaps you was a widow, mum?" |
26895 | But then, one might thrash him, but what can be done with her? |
26895 | But what are you going to do about it? |
26895 | But what could she do? |
26895 | But what do you think now? |
26895 | But what would he do? |
26895 | But why did you ask my permission to address Miss Dearborn? |
26895 | But why, may I ask, were you so disturbed when you came here, just now? |
26895 | By- the- way, do you know that we are all hermits here?" |
26895 | By- the- way, sir, have you met Phil Matlack?" |
26895 | CHAPTER IX MATLACK''S THREE TROUBLES"Have you asked those two young men to breakfast again?" |
26895 | Can we not, for the sake of knowing ourselves and honoring ourselves, give ourselves to ourselves for a little while? |
26895 | Can we take this young woman with us to camp? |
26895 | Can you imagine any reason for this extremely uncourteous action?" |
26895 | Corona, what are you talking about?" |
26895 | Could I have believed such rare fortune was in store for me?" |
26895 | Could it be possible that she had spoken, as she had spoken, simply to get rid of him? |
26895 | Could n''t you find some nice place in the woods, not far away, but where I would not be seen, and might have a little time to myself? |
26895 | Could n''t you see that? |
26895 | Did you get the place as librarian?" |
26895 | Did you think that if you had a permit from me for that sort of sport you could warn off trespassers?" |
26895 | Did you tumble overboard? |
26895 | Did your guides prepare your dinner as usual?" |
26895 | Do n''t you feel like giving us one?" |
26895 | Do n''t you intend to move?" |
26895 | Do n''t you remember, I used to call you that? |
26895 | Do n''t you see I am dressed?" |
26895 | Do n''t you suppose I know what I''m about?" |
26895 | Do n''t you think that you and I can carry that tent over?" |
26895 | Do n''t you want to take a little stroll, Aunt Harriet?" |
26895 | Do you care to hear of my permanent prospects?" |
26895 | Do you know Mr. Raybold''s sister? |
26895 | Do you know who that fellow is you were talking to? |
26895 | Do you like her?" |
26895 | Do you press your question, madam?" |
26895 | Do you see that shot?" |
26895 | Do you see that?" |
26895 | Do you think it is going to be a fine day?" |
26895 | Do you want any money? |
26895 | Do you want some one to row you?" |
26895 | Does n''t it have that effect on you?" |
26895 | For a moment Mr. Clyde did not seem to understand, and then he exclaimed:"You do n''t mean the young man who cuts wood and helps Matlack?" |
26895 | From the bottom of my heart I wish we had not brought you with us; but how could I dream that all this trouble would come of it?" |
26895 | From what gigantic bandbox could this well- dressed stranger have dropped? |
26895 | Has he any more of them?" |
26895 | Have I spoken plainly?" |
26895 | Have you secured a position? |
26895 | Have you seen him? |
26895 | Have you told Margery?" |
26895 | How do you like it?" |
26895 | How would you like to take Margery with you?" |
26895 | How''s things goin''on generally in the camp?" |
26895 | I did not think it would happen, but I am really dreadfully hungry, and could n''t you give me my breakfast now, by myself, before anybody else? |
26895 | I looked around, and says I:''Do you find that little tent you sleep in comfortable? |
26895 | I suppose I can not get rid of it?" |
26895 | I suppose you have a larger boat than the one that young man is in? |
26895 | I suppose, Mr. Matlack, that your life is one long assertion of individuality?" |
26895 | I--""Your heart? |
26895 | If Mr. Matlack is not quite ready, can he not postpone what he is doing? |
26895 | Is Miss Raybold about yet?" |
26895 | Is he sick?" |
26895 | Is n''t that somebody calling you?" |
26895 | Is n''t there some shady place where we might sit down? |
26895 | Is that bein''a hermick?" |
26895 | Is that it?" |
26895 | Is the room too close? |
26895 | Let him stay there?" |
26895 | May I ask to be allowed to sit down for a few moments? |
26895 | May I have permission to do so, madam and sir?" |
26895 | May I have the honor?" |
26895 | Mr. Archibald, should n''t he be allowed to rest a while?" |
26895 | Mr. Clyde, how do you do? |
26895 | No? |
26895 | Nobody knows how many men he killed when he was fighting Indians; and, would you believe it? |
26895 | Now do n''t you think that would be a fine plan? |
26895 | Now how about the stores-- have they all gone on?" |
26895 | Now how do you propose to assert your individuality?" |
26895 | Now what did he do to you?" |
26895 | Oh, when do we start?" |
26895 | Perkenpine?" |
26895 | Shall I open the door?" |
26895 | Shoes, did you say, sir? |
26895 | The Hermits Continue to Favor Association 248 ILLUSTRATIONS PAGE THE SUPPER Frontispiece"''CAN THIS BE SADLER''S?''" |
26895 | The world wrong? |
26895 | There are two camp- chairs; will you kindly place them under this tree?" |
26895 | Therefore, will you postpone the time at which you will definitely urge my departure until Monday morning?" |
26895 | What are you goin''to do about him? |
26895 | What are you talking about?" |
26895 | What can I say to my husband? |
26895 | What can I say to your mother? |
26895 | What could she do? |
26895 | What did you come for? |
26895 | What do you take me for? |
26895 | What is Mr. Archibald doing?" |
26895 | What is it in this peaceable, beautiful forest troubles you?" |
26895 | What is the matter?" |
26895 | What is the meaning of this?" |
26895 | What makes you talk in this way?" |
26895 | What should he tell her to do? |
26895 | What''s the matter? |
26895 | What''s the next trouble?" |
26895 | Where on earth, Margery, did you fill your mind with all that information?" |
26895 | Who do you wish to see?" |
26895 | Who''s there?" |
26895 | Why did he go? |
26895 | Why did n''t you fight him?" |
26895 | Why did n''t you go and do it just as you brought your tent here? |
26895 | Why was n''t I asked there?" |
26895 | Will she not be a dreadful drag?" |
26895 | Will somebody please call him? |
26895 | Will that hour suit you?" |
26895 | With this most important purpose in view, why should he waste his time? |
26895 | Wo n''t you let me call you so still?" |
26895 | Would it be convenient for you to give me something to eat? |
26895 | You know we were told that our camp in the woods has three rooms in it? |
26895 | Your soul?" |
26895 | [ Illustration:"''CAN THIS BE SADLER''S?''"] |
26895 | [ Illustration:"''WHERE ARE ALL OUR FRIENDS?''"] |
26895 | [ Illustration:"A LESSON IN FLY- FISHING"]"Goin''to leave us?" |
26895 | said he,"elope? |
45523 | ''What time did you break in here?'' 45523 ''Wo n''t you aid these little folk?'' |
45523 | And your favorite poem? |
45523 | Indeed,the visitor is said to have remarked;"and who may he be?" |
45523 | What do you consider the sublimest poetry in the world? |
45523 | What is your favorite novel? |
45523 | Who is your favorite novelist? |
45523 | Who, in your judgment, are the three greatest warriors the world has produced? |
45523 | Who, in your opinion, were the greatest American statesmen? |
45523 | Would a duck swim? |
45523 | ''Oh,''he said,''I''d like to send you each month a story like"The Lady or the Tiger?"''" |
45523 | Adam, what were you made for?'' |
45523 | And how do you suppose Mr. Churchill prepared for the big task of writing a historical novel? |
45523 | And was not the pilot''s a great and attractive post for a young man? |
45523 | And who is this Winston Churchill? |
45523 | And who on a boom shall rise To the height of an honest name? |
45523 | At this point naturally comes in the question, What was Bret Harte''s first book? |
45523 | But did Garland take any part in such experiences? |
45523 | But, I say, how came you by that name?'' |
45523 | Even more remarkable than the success of"Rudder Grange"was the success of"The Lady or the Tiger?" |
45523 | Hovey would not answer the question:"Who is the greatest poet born on Canadian soil?" |
45523 | It seemed that people all over the world were asking, Who is he? |
45523 | That''s a gay sight, ai n''t it now? |
45523 | That''s great, is n''t it? |
45523 | Was the attention justly merited? |
45523 | Well,''he laughed and shook his head,''I''ll be back there some day, wo n''t I,''he said, wistfully,''and hear it for myself?''" |
45523 | Will you? |
45523 | Would he take the position? |
32105 | ''Are you ready?'' 32105 ''Pardon me once more, my dear young friend,''he said,''ess zis your breakfast or your dinnaire?'' |
32105 | ''Pardon me, gentlemen,''he again said, addressing himself to me in a louder tone,''ess zis your breakfast or your dinnaire?'' 32105 ''Pardon me, sare,''remarked the old gentleman at our table, addressing himself to me,''ess zis your breakfast or your dinnaire?'' |
32105 | ''Sare, what you mean? 32105 ''Sare? |
32105 | ''Taint likely the road agents has stopped her, is it? |
32105 | Ai n''t yer tired, Benner? |
32105 | And Lizzi was well then? |
32105 | And concerns me? |
32105 | And my Gertrude,asked Mr. Plowden, anxiously,"how was she enjoying herself?" |
32105 | And poor father,Lizzi continued,"away out in the cabin alone, his wife dead and his daughter disgraced-- how will I tell him that mother is dead?" |
32105 | And pray why do you take me for a Democrat? |
32105 | And what about my affair? |
32105 | And what became of little Anna? |
32105 | And what if he should,retorted Miss Fithian;"who would believe the word of a bigamist?" |
32105 | And you''ll keep my secret, boys? 32105 Are we going to bed?" |
32105 | Are you Mrs. Robert Plowden? |
32105 | Are you awake, boy? |
32105 | Are you sure she died? |
32105 | Are your eyes open in heaven, mother? 32105 But how are you and Hunch goin''to keep up with the big McAnays? |
32105 | But what will my wife say-- she who never suspected that I had a wife before her, much less a child? |
32105 | But, Marthy, how''s it to be managed? |
32105 | By the proper authorities? |
32105 | Ca n''t you help me, Lizzi? |
32105 | Ca- ant yer see I lo- ve you better nor Dick and all the rest o''the fellers put together? |
32105 | Can you prove it? |
32105 | Did I hurt your feelin''s when I asked ef you had noos from home? 32105 Did Mrs.''Oney stay?" |
32105 | Did they call him Gill here? |
32105 | Do n''t you see, Lizzi? 32105 Do you know, Jim, that Squire Parsons is going to be hard to beat?" |
32105 | Do you mean that my husband is a bigamist? |
32105 | Do you, dear? 32105 Five years? |
32105 | Has he been here long? |
32105 | Have any of our guests disappointed us? |
32105 | Have any of you decided upon a course of action? |
32105 | Have you any money? |
32105 | Have you that letter? |
32105 | He did n''t? 32105 He is n''t wuss, is he?" |
32105 | His mother- in- law? 32105 How can you help find him?" |
32105 | How do you know that she is dead? |
32105 | How long ago was that? |
32105 | How should I know? |
32105 | How? |
32105 | How? |
32105 | I say, Joe, what ails you? |
32105 | I say, Parkenson, wot''s''appened to''er? |
32105 | I think so, too,Gill remarked, and then asked, as if the idea had just struck him:"Why not be married by the Squire?" |
32105 | I''m not much of a story- teller, boys,said Dan;"can anybody suggest a subject?" |
32105 | Is he employed here? |
32105 | Is it anything serious? |
32105 | Is there any person here present who knows any good reason why these two parties shall not be united in marriage? 32105 Jist find it out?" |
32105 | John, did you know it? |
32105 | John, would you marry me and give up the money-- marry me before people and send your mother word? |
32105 | Keep a secret? 32105 Kind of small potatoes beside of Levi''s pile,"Cassi replied;"but if Levi will write us an order, we''ll sign it, hey, Matthi?" |
32105 | Lizzi, what has happened to my fiddle? |
32105 | Lizzi,said Gill,"will you be my wife?" |
32105 | Nor mine either, I suppose you think? |
32105 | Parson,Hunch said, meeting the reverend gentleman at the church door,"what der yer think crazy Bill Kellar''s got inter his head now?" |
32105 | Pray why did you take me for a minister? |
32105 | Robbed me? |
32105 | Say, Benner, what''d yer call me a liar fer? |
32105 | Say, Benner, when did you leave the Sisters? |
32105 | Say, Bill,inquired the dwarf,"what''er yellin''at, the sky?" |
32105 | She talks mighty pretty, do n''t she, Hunch? |
32105 | Squire, can you keep a secret? |
32105 | Surely yer would n''t go back East to set the folks there to makin''fun of us, would yer, arter what they said agin our comin''so far away? |
32105 | That''s strange, is n''t it? |
32105 | That''s why you left Three- Sisters and joined the circus? |
32105 | The father of the wife he had here? |
32105 | The girl? |
32105 | Then who wrote this? |
32105 | Then why do n''t yer take a holt and do somethin''for Joe? |
32105 | Think so? |
32105 | Up? 32105 Well, ef Joe''s a woman, who is she, anyhow?" |
32105 | Well, yer would n''t think I''d objec'', would yer? |
32105 | Well? |
32105 | What am I for if you ca n''t tell me your troubles? |
32105 | What are you doing? |
32105 | What did he want to do that for? |
32105 | What did you tell your mother? |
32105 | What do you all think? |
32105 | What do you say to a quiet game of''draw''? |
32105 | What does it all mean? |
32105 | What fer? |
32105 | What if it had been some other man going through the grove? |
32105 | What then_ shall_ we do to preserve our dignity and get them back? |
32105 | What''ll it be? |
32105 | What''s the matter? |
32105 | What''s this? |
32105 | What, Lizzi, not scared by the dark? |
32105 | Where are you all going? |
32105 | Where is he? |
32105 | Where yer from? |
32105 | Where''s the woman who brought that card, Sam? |
32105 | Who are you? |
32105 | Who cares if you do? |
32105 | Who is it? 32105 Who is she?" |
32105 | Who is that youth? |
32105 | Who spoke of East or West or any other p''ints of the cumpis, I should like to know? |
32105 | Who told yer''bout thet? |
32105 | Why are you running so? |
32105 | Why are_ you_''ere, mother? |
32105 | Why did yer want ter burn the books? |
32105 | Why did you not tell her the truth before marriage? |
32105 | Why do n''t yer set a trap fer it? |
32105 | Why do n''t_ you_ make a clean breast of it at once? 32105 Why have you got such a long face, John? |
32105 | Will the doctor never come? |
32105 | Will you baptize my boy? |
32105 | Wot''s up? 32105 Would n''t you do it for Dick?" |
32105 | Would you like me to wear that dress? |
32105 | Yes? |
32105 | Yes? |
32105 | You have n''t got a mother, have you? |
32105 | You''re a doctor, ai n''t yer? |
32105 | ''A slight misunderstanding,''eh? |
32105 | ''What can we do?'' |
32105 | ''ow could you? |
32105 | After the dancers were seated when this quadrille was finished, Bill took Hunch aside and asked:"Hunch, are you afraid of the devil?" |
32105 | Ai n''t you glad to see me?" |
32105 | Although so long settled in Virginia, you are an Englishman?" |
32105 | An insult?'' |
32105 | And what the words my weary brain Discovers in your vague refrain? |
32105 | And yet, where are we? |
32105 | And, Hunch Blair, how dare you?" |
32105 | At last Blind Benner said:"Hunch, do yer mind the time Lizzi told me what she looked like?" |
32105 | Because I loved you? |
32105 | But are we going to stay here all Christmas, while they are having a good time by themselves?" |
32105 | But did n''t you hear anything of Gill?" |
32105 | But how came you to know all this?" |
32105 | But what is my position? |
32105 | But who comes now? |
32105 | Could it be after all that she was dishonest? |
32105 | Could it be that her mother had read her aright? |
32105 | Could it be that she had cruelly encouraged his faith in her, knowing the certainty of his discovery of the truth at last? |
32105 | Could you take me in?" |
32105 | Darting into the dining- room, she surprised Sam( was the artful Sam surprised?) |
32105 | Did any one of my readers ever read that neither the eagle nor the lion would eat anything they had not themselves slain? |
32105 | Did not William say he left me forever?" |
32105 | Did you observe how sweetly she bore the horrible revelation? |
32105 | Did you think I could n''t guess who left the cake there yesterday?" |
32105 | Do yer mind thet, Benner-- hot and scorchin'', not soft an''warm? |
32105 | Do you know what I thought? |
32105 | Does sorrow never lead to peace? |
32105 | E. S._ THE BELLS OF CHRISTMAS._ O bells that madly toll to- night, What is the meaning of your note? |
32105 | F. H._, 641 DOCTOR MERIVALE: A Story,_ Charles P. Shermon_, 811 DOES THE HIGH TARIFF AFFECT OUR EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM? |
32105 | For the pudding? |
32105 | Guess it was all a lie, eh?" |
32105 | Had you, ducky?" |
32105 | Has he a wife?" |
32105 | Have you made it all right with her?" |
32105 | He dodged, and said:"Ca n''t yer keep quiet? |
32105 | Here he caught Levi''s arm and asked in a whisper:"Did yer hear anything of him?" |
32105 | How can I ever repay you, Mr. Plowden, for your noble frankness?" |
32105 | How did I know? |
32105 | How then is it possible that a yearly excess of £ 70,000,000 could be paid in specie? |
32105 | However, he made an effort to prepare Bill for disappointment by asking:"Would n''t cotton in yer ears do as well as the hair in the box?" |
32105 | Hunch shouted familiarly:"Say, Bill, do n''t yer know yer old frien''s?" |
32105 | I ai n''t easy skeered, yer know, an''I set up ter git a better look, an''what do you think it wuz? |
32105 | I am dying even while I speak; but I shall die perfectly happy if you will tell me whether_ zat was your breakfast or your dinnaire_?''" |
32105 | I married you because-- what do you suppose, now? |
32105 | If Mr. Plowden left a legitimate wife in England, then what is my position? |
32105 | Into Nowhere? |
32105 | Is disappointment or delight The burden of each brazen throat? |
32105 | Is it surprising that after these manifold exertions his exhausted nature demands repose? |
32105 | Is n''t it just a little extraordinary to invite strangers?" |
32105 | Is there anything on earth that I can do for you or yours? |
32105 | Mrs. Rutherford sprang to her feet, instantly armed_ cap- à- pie_ with her never- failing jealousy:"What do you mean?" |
32105 | My dear sare, ess zis your breakfast or your dinnaire?'' |
32105 | No gentleman? |
32105 | Now, do you see?" |
32105 | Oh, how shall I ever forgive myself for wronging my own dear, innocent, faithful, self- sacrificing love by my cruel suspicions and hateful jealousy?" |
32105 | On his way home Bill muttered:"What infernal business had Old Nick at Lizzi''s party?" |
32105 | Pallid and quivering with wrath, she muttered half audibly:"So I''m''a mischief- making old cat,''am I? |
32105 | Perhaps not; but how much has this wonderful system done to arrest those evils? |
32105 | Plowden?" |
32105 | Rutherford?" |
32105 | She had a letter of introduction from Lydia Wildfen; and what do you think her business was?" |
32105 | She looked like a drooping lily, did n''t she, Wildfen?" |
32105 | So he opened a volume of legal forms and asked the question,"Are both parties of contracting age?" |
32105 | So you see, Plowden, that if you_ can_ stave off my wife''s suspicions until after Christmas, I will--""What?" |
32105 | So, you will keep my secret, my dear madam, will you not?" |
32105 | The silence was soon broken, however, by Wildfen saying to his wife:"A pretty row you''ve made all around, have n''t you?" |
32105 | Then the dreadful question presents itself, how is it to be cooked? |
32105 | Well, lads,"he continued, as he filled his pipe,"you want to know how I got the name of''Dead- Shot Dan''?" |
32105 | Well?" |
32105 | What am I?" |
32105 | What are you fighting about?" |
32105 | What can I say to your wife?" |
32105 | What do they mean?'' |
32105 | What have I done that you must select me for your soloist on the violin?" |
32105 | When I give you the nod, just take your cornet, sneak up on the roof and blow a hole through him, will you?" |
32105 | Where are you going with that basket of food?" |
32105 | Who is it?" |
32105 | Who''s that?" |
32105 | Why can not our gifted authors, such as Miss Mathews, for example, turn to these and give us a fiction worthy the name? |
32105 | Why do you ask me all these questions?" |
32105 | Why do you follow me?" |
32105 | Why is n''t it legal?" |
32105 | Wo n''t Lizzi be glad ter know it was Blind Benner what found him?" |
32105 | Would a country be richer for such a state of things? |
32105 | You are a surgeon; can you do anything for him?'' |
32105 | and I''m''deaf as a post and an adder,''am I? |
32105 | bad noos from the States?" |
32105 | do I? |
32105 | do yer take me fer a woman?" |
32105 | groaned Plowden,"could there have been any mistake about her death?" |
32105 | how could you, and in your mother''s name, too?" |
32105 | is he too a villain?" |
32105 | she demanded,"what does this mean?" |
32105 | what is that?" |
32105 | what''s the matter?" |
32105 | when will those discords cease? |
45610 | ''What time did you break in here?'' 45610 ''Wo n''t you aid these little folk?'' |
45610 | And your favorite poem? |
45610 | Indeed,the visitor is said to have remarked;"and who may he be?" |
45610 | Perhaps the most interesting thing about''The Lady or the Tiger?'' |
45610 | What do you consider the sublimest poetry in the world? |
45610 | What is your favorite novel? |
45610 | Who is your favorite novelist? |
45610 | Who, in your judgment, are the three greatest warriors the world has produced? |
45610 | Who, in your opinion, were the greatest American statesmen? |
45610 | Would a duck swim? |
45610 | ''Oh,''he said,''I''d like to send you each month a story like The Lady or the Tiger?''" |
45610 | Adam, what were you made for?'' |
45610 | And how do you suppose Mr. Churchill prepared for the big task of writing a historical novel? |
45610 | And was not the pilot''s a great and attractive post for a young man? |
45610 | And who is this Winston Churchill? |
45610 | And who on a boom shall rise To the height of an honest name? |
45610 | As I passed through the door I heard him call:"''Then you have positively decided to kill that baby?'' |
45610 | At this point naturally comes in the question, What was Bret Harte''s first book? |
45610 | But did Garland take any part in such experiences? |
45610 | But, I say, how came you by that name?'' |
45610 | Even more sensational than the luck of"Rudder Grange"was the luck of"The Lady or the Tiger?" |
45610 | Hovey would not answer the question:"Who is the greatest poet born on Canadian soil?" |
45610 | It seemed that people all over the world were asking, Who is he? |
45610 | That''s a gay sight, ai n''t it now? |
45610 | That''s great, is n''t it? |
45610 | Was the attention justly merited? |
45610 | Well,''he laughed and shook his head,''I''ll be back there some day, wo n''t I,''he said, wistfully,''and hear it for myself?''" |
45610 | Will you? |
45610 | Would he take the position? |
44962 | -------- Prepared for the New England Society in the City of New York[ 190-?]. |
44962 | 1657?] |
44962 | 1693?] |
44962 | 1720? |
44962 | 8=-------- New York: C. M. Saxton[ 1852?]. |
44962 | = Allen=, Mrs. Brasseya, 1760 or 1762- 18--? |
44962 | = Davis=, John, 1721- 1809? |
44962 | = NBB== Umphraville=, Angus, pseud.? |
44962 | = Standish=, Miles, the younger, pseud.? |
44962 | = Townsend=, Richard? |
44962 | Boston: Printed by Peter Edes[ 1784?]. |
44962 | Bound with and usually appended to, the author''s_ Mount Vernon, a poem_.... Philadelphia[ 1799?]. |
44962 | Green? |
44962 | H. Original poems, by a citizen of Baltimore[ i.e., Richard? |
44962 | Lines occasioned by the question--"What is love?" |
44962 | Philadelphia, 1800?] |
44962 | Samuel Green? |
44962 | [ 1728?] |
44962 | [ 1770?] |
44962 | [ 1776?] |
44962 | [ 1800?] |
44962 | [ 1800?] |
44962 | [ 1800?]. |
44962 | [ 1815?] |
44962 | [ A poem written at Yale College, 1815, by George Hill?]. |
44962 | [ Boston, 1730?] |
44962 | [ Boston? |
44962 | [ By James Rivington?] |
44962 | [ Cambridge? |
44962 | [ Newburyport, 1800?] |
44962 | [ Philadelphia, 1800?] |
44962 | [ Verses, n.p., 1815?] |
44962 | [ n.p., 181-?] |
44962 | n.t.-p.[ Boston? |
45238 | And see''st thou, and hear''st thou, And fear''st thou, and fear''st thou, And ride we not free O''er the terrible sea, I and thou? |
45238 | But how did you subsist until you reached the settlements? 45238 But, Richardson, did they take your horse also?" |
45238 | But what will not a New- England{ 3} man undertake when honor and interest are the objects before him? |
45238 | Have you any mules to sell?" |
45238 | He says:"Do the Oregon emigrants seek a fine country on the Oregon river? |
45238 | In all books of voyages and travels, who ever heard of the utmost distress for want of wood, leaves, roots, coal, or turf to cook{ 46} with? |
45238 | Now the question is how came our North American Indians with bows and arrows? |
45238 | Some of our company began to ask each other some serious questions; such as, Where are we going? |
45238 | The first question generally asked, is,"where do you come from, gentlemen?" |
45238 | The snake had doubtless killed the quadruped, but what had killed the snake? |
45238 | Water was now the desideratum, but where was it to be found? |
45238 | What cared we for the future? |
45238 | What have we done for their benefit? |
45238 | Where could they have gone? |
45238 | Who will say that this gallant body of cavalry were not wiser than the common run of white soldiers, to make peace for a_ quid_? |
45238 | _ kahtah pasiooks yahhalle?_( what is its English name?) |
45238 | _ kahtah pasiooks yahhalle?_( what is its English name?) |
45238 | and thereby save their horses and their own skins? |
45238 | and what are we going for? |
46733 | What, with food? 46733 Who stands at the head of your church in South- West Virginia?" |
46733 | And oh, my dear friends and breethring- ah, will not this be an awful condition to be found in- ah?" |
46733 | Brother Grant stepped back and gave the reverend gentleman a thorough inspection, and then said:"Did I understand you to say_ preacher?_""Yes, sir.'' |
46733 | He wound up by asking,"Have I stuck to the text, and does that satisfy you?" |
46733 | No doubt some of my young friends are ready to ask,"Why did you fail?" |
46733 | Now, how did those animals come to exist in the different and distant islands and continents?" |
46733 | The ministers became alarmed, and besought the people not to hear him, and a mass meeting of the law- abiding(?) |
46733 | They were somewhat startled at seeing me, and, after the first exclamation of surprise, Brother Mathews said,"Why, Brother S----, is it you? |
45797 | And what about Jose? |
45797 | Are there any crops on the farm this year? 45797 But who will do the work at home, Antonio? |
45797 | Did you get my post- card, Antonio? |
45797 | Do you live near here, boy? |
45797 | Have you learned yet to play the flute or violin, Jose? |
45797 | How did you guess, little brother? |
45797 | Is it truly you, Antonio? 45797 Is this your dog, Jose?" |
45797 | Like the old castle of Guimarães? |
45797 | Sometimes can I go, too? |
45797 | Then I_ can_ go to school, and learn as much as you know? |
45797 | What is your name? |
45797 | Who does that work? |
45797 | Why will it be better, Antonio? |
45797 | Will you drive the oxen to the yard? 45797 Will you take me there some time, Antonio, so that I can see a real train of cars?" |
45797 | Would you like to go to school this winter, Jose? |
45797 | Would you like to take a holiday with me to- morrow? |
45797 | Yes, have you ever seen that? |
45797 | You say the father can never walk again? |
45797 | A moment later he asked:"May I be the one to tell the family that you will stay at home with us, Antonio? |
45797 | Antonio straightened back his shoulders and asked:"Is this the boy who wanted so much to go to school?" |
45797 | Could it be Antonio? |
45797 | Had he caught the red- legged partridge? |
45797 | Half way up the hill do you see some rows of stone wall?" |
45797 | How are the father and mother, and the sisters? |
45797 | Jose raised himself upon his elbow and looked eagerly into Antonio''s face:"Do you really mean it?" |
45797 | Then he said slowly, looking off to the far Penha Mountain:"Jose, how would you feel if I told you I will stay at home?" |
45797 | To Guimarães?" |
45797 | Where would you like to go?" |
45797 | Where? |
45797 | Who could do the work?" |
45797 | You have come to stay at home?" |
45797 | You will help now? |
46190 | Am I not a priest? |
46190 | And do you know a spot called Fountain Dale, and a certain monk who is called the Curtal Friar of Fountain Abbey? |
46190 | But why should such a thing be done? 46190 Can any one hit inside that little garland at such a distance?" |
46190 | Could no one of these ten be Robin Hood in disguise? |
46190 | Do you know the country round about, good and holy man? |
46190 | Do you know whether this friar is now on the other side of the river or on this side? |
46190 | Have you no friends who could lend you the money? |
46190 | How is this, master? |
46190 | How is this? |
46190 | How many miles is it to thy true love? 46190 How much money did you borrow of him?" |
46190 | Is it across the river? |
46190 | Master, can we not prevent such a wrong? |
46190 | Now who are you who would stop a peaceful traveler on the king''s highway? |
46190 | Now, sweet lad,he said to himself,"canst thou not tune me a song?" |
46190 | Now, who are you? |
46190 | Now, will you not come into my band? |
46190 | What dost thou here? |
46190 | What is thy name? |
46190 | What is your name? |
46190 | What mercy have you ever shown to the poor? 46190 What wilt thou give me,"said Robin Hood,"In ready gold or fee, To help thee to thy true love again, And deliver her unto thee?" |
46190 | Who gives me this maid? |
46190 | And when he came bold Robin before, Robin asked him courteously,"Oh, hast thou any money to spare, For my merry men and me?" |
46190 | Maiden, is it of your own free will that you we d with this knight?" |
46190 | Page 18, moved punctuation inside quotes for"How is this?" |
46190 | Prythee, ask me not: dost thou not hear how I croak like a frog?" |
46190 | Then the friar leaped forth, crying,"What spy have we here?" |
46190 | Who are you, man? |
46190 | Why should such a dreadful thing be done to them?" |
46190 | Will you join my service?" |
46190 | Will you join yourself to my men?" |
46190 | the young man said,"What is your will with me?" |
31640 | ''Better a dinner of herbs where love is, than a stalled ox and hatred therewith''--and how dare you slander my new abode by calling it a hovel? |
31640 | A union of sects? 31640 Afteh them Alien an''Sedition outrages?" |
31640 | All Scripture is profitable-- but to whom? 31640 And if once across a shilling be an inch, As which is very near, Which had the better fortune, The round one or the square?" |
31640 | And is not Selim''s mistress glad to see me, too? |
31640 | Are you counting the freckles? |
31640 | Are you not mistaken? 31640 Are you not rash, Logan?" |
31640 | As to this Kentucky land, Uncle Richard,said Abner, presently,"when and how did Uncle Hite acquire it?" |
31640 | At least tell me this, Major Gilcrest: do you object to me personally, or is your refusal due to other reasons? 31640 But is n''t it the idea of this age and country that there should be a''free Bible for a free people''?" |
31640 | But when the man returned with me,asked Abner,"did you not then learn his full name, and something of his history?" |
31640 | But why not go down through the window of the lower room? |
31640 | But you did love Cousin Abby? |
31640 | But you surely believe in the beautiful doctrine of grace? |
31640 | But, Mason,asked Gilcrest,"you surely believe in the Confession of Faith of your church, do you not?" |
31640 | But, Stone,Abner exclaimed,"you surely do not deny the work of the Spirit in conversion, do you?" |
31640 | But, my dear girl, why should not I tell him? |
31640 | But,asked Dudley,"how can a child learn the way of salvation if not by Bible reading?" |
31640 | By heaven,Abner exclaimed, starting up,"if I thought he''d ever mistreat Betty, I''d----""You''d whut?" |
31640 | Can it be,he thought,"that both men are implicated in this nefarious matter? |
31640 | Can you tell me any more about them? |
31640 | Did I not command you to have nothing more to do with that worthless fellow? 31640 Did I understand you to say Uncle Tony was from Lawsonville?" |
31640 | Did he learn of the cruel deception of which she was the victim? |
31640 | Did you leave the women and children in Fort Houston? |
31640 | Did you see the rest o''the folks at Gilcrest''s? |
31640 | Did you settle at Boonesborough first? |
31640 | Do I know him? |
31640 | Do I understand you to mean that children should not read the Bible at all? |
31640 | Do you really believe,inquired Dudley,"that there will ever be a union of all the sects of Christendom?" |
31640 | Do you regret the step you have taken? |
31640 | Do you think she favors him? |
31640 | Does you think I''se feared ob you? 31640 Elizabeth what?" |
31640 | Father, why have you sent Abner away? |
31640 | Hain''t you no bowels ob marcy fur yo''own flesh an''blood? 31640 Has Dudley returned?" |
31640 | Has she other suitors? |
31640 | Has the fellow been adopting an alias? 31640 High- headed he may be,"said Rogers,"an''who hez a bettah right, I''d like to know? |
31640 | How about that passage,asked Abner,"''All scripture is given by inspiration, and is profitable for-- for-- for----''?" |
31640 | How can I be in radiant humor, Betty? |
31640 | How could a Virginian be anything but a supporter of the great Jefferson? |
31640 | How did you get here? |
31640 | How in the world did this paper fall into your hands? |
31640 | How long have you owned Uncle Tony? 31640 How many children have you?" |
31640 | How many signers did you git? |
31640 | How was that? |
31640 | How''d Cissy behave in all thet rumpus? |
31640 | Howdy? 31640 I never did thoroughly trust that fellow,"exclaimed Abner,"but I''ve no proof against him; so what can be done?" |
31640 | If the human race was utterly depraved to start with, how could one keep growing worse and worse all the time? |
31640 | Is everything going against me? |
31640 | Is he still pipin''on thet ole sum? 31640 Is not my wish reason enough?" |
31640 | Is she not above me in everything else as well? 31640 Is there a prize?" |
31640 | Kin you wuck it? |
31640 | Marstah, hez you seed anythin''ob a spotted heifer wid one horn broke off, anywhars on de road? 31640 Mayby you thought you wuz meek an''differential; but do n''t I know you? |
31640 | Mother, mother, have you no feeling for your daughter, that you have said no word to help her in all these months? 31640 No farther than that?" |
31640 | No, uncle, I''ve met no stray cows; but can you tell me how far it is to Major Hiram Gilcrest''s? 31640 Now, whut kind uv a fist do you write? |
31640 | Oh, what lie is this they have told you, my persecuted, darling Abner? |
31640 | Reckon Gilcrest put you through yer gaits, too, didn''he? |
31640 | Regret? 31640 Sarah never succeeded in locating him; but, years after, I, by accident, ascertained that without a doubt----""What?" |
31640 | Say,he continued eagerly, after a moment''s silence,"is the ole forge whut stood at the crossroads, jes''on the aidge o''the town, still thar? |
31640 | She was the wife of one of the Page brothers who were with us at Blue Licks, was she not? |
31640 | Sir,Abner broke forth hotly,"do you mean to insinuate that I have self- seeking motives in wishing to marry your daughter?" |
31640 | Tell me, is ole Jeems Little still livin''? 31640 Then, in the name of reason and common sense, what do you think it was sent for?" |
31640 | Then, what are your reasons for this course? |
31640 | Then, why do n''t she come to see us lak she usetah? |
31640 | This homely scene is a contrast to that Assembly ball, is n''t it? |
31640 | Uncle Richard, if that clandestine marriage with Sarah Pepper was valid, why the open marriage five months later? |
31640 | Was he married? |
31640 | Was it Sarah? |
31640 | Was no trace of the scoundrel, if scoundrel he was, who performed the clandestine marriage ceremony, ever found? |
31640 | Well, now,said Rogers, with a sly wink at his wife,"how much do you reckon''twould be right ter pay?" |
31640 | Well, whut ef he do n''t, so long ez he lives right an''preaches right? |
31640 | Were there two John Logans? |
31640 | What about Paul? |
31640 | What became of Sarah Pepper, or Sarah Logan? |
31640 | What could she have meant? |
31640 | What could the vicious old man possibly have heard or imagined about my history to lead him to utter so foul a charge? |
31640 | What diffruns would it mattah ef you could n''t wuck thet fool sum? 31640 What do you mean by this, girl?" |
31640 | What if she is a few years older than I? |
31640 | What is Betsy''s witchery to me, and why does Abby always try to divert my attention when I would give our conversation a personal meaning? |
31640 | What is his name? |
31640 | What is she doing here? 31640 What of that?" |
31640 | What of this Marshall Page, my stepfather? |
31640 | What right has a popinjay like you to demand? |
31640 | What was his wife''s name? |
31640 | Where was he from? 31640 Where was he from?" |
31640 | Where''s your mistress? |
31640 | Whip me? 31640 Who air the conditionals?" |
31640 | Who can? 31640 Who is this fortunate one destined to''win that heart of gold''?" |
31640 | Who''s there, baby, besides father? 31640 Who, then, is heir under the will?" |
31640 | Whut''s Bushrod Hinkson mekin''conditions fur, I''d lak to know? |
31640 | Whut''s the mattah, gal? |
31640 | Why did n''t Betsy come? |
31640 | Why do n''t you speak to her, Jane? |
31640 | Why do you sit there listless and dumb? 31640 Why do you wound me and slander yourself by such language?" |
31640 | Why will you not let me speak? |
31640 | Why, Major Gilcrest,Dudley exclaimed,"were you an Indian- fighter? |
31640 | Would not the name Elizabeth or Betty or Betsy Logan suit you better? |
31640 | Yes, it was Marshall Page, I think,answered Major Gilcrest;"but why your exclamation, Mr. Dudley? |
31640 | Yes, one hundred and four acres, if there were no other expenses, but----"Whut othah expenses kin you hev wuth namin''? 31640 You believe that the saints will persevere and get home at last to glory, do n''t you?" |
31640 | You certainly dispose of Paul''s case in a cool, offhand way; but how about the''Philippian jailer''? |
31640 | You surely expected me,he said;"you did not think I''d wait one hour beyond the time, did you? |
31640 | You thought I came like Abram from Ur of the Chaldees, bringing family, servants, goods and chattels, did you? 31640 ''Bout one hundred an''four, hain''t it? |
31640 | ''There''s something rotten in the state of Denmark'',"was Drane''s conclusion;"but how to discover it? |
31640 | An''hain''t thet whut preachin''s fur, to mek folks want to live bettah lives? |
31640 | An''say, whut''s become o''Si Johnson an''Mack Truman? |
31640 | An''who''d''a''thought uv them two a- lovin''each othah lak thet? |
31640 | And the little brown house jes''behind it with the big mulberry- tree in the yard? |
31640 | And what greater proof could I give that I love you?" |
31640 | And, uncle, how about the negroes I am to inherit?" |
31640 | Are you so under the thrall of that tyrant that you meekly submit without a protest to such treatment of me? |
31640 | But for my sake, and because it is for the best, you will be patient, wo n''t you?" |
31640 | But how to get more material to work upon? |
31640 | But tell me, how did you acquire so many negroes? |
31640 | But what about this other lover for Betty?" |
31640 | But what could have turned him so completely against me?" |
31640 | But,"she asked with a quick change of manner,"if you were at that ball, how happened it I did not see you? |
31640 | By what name, pray, should I be known but that of Mistress Betsy Dudley-- ugly though it be? |
31640 | Ca n''t I nevah l''arn you no mannahs?" |
31640 | Can we not seek a more retired place than this?" |
31640 | Could n''t I get Dudley to copy some law papers for me?" |
31640 | Cynthy Ann,"he called, striding to the back door,"you an''Dink skeer up somethin''extry fur suppah, ca n''t you? |
31640 | Dandy an''Roan in the best stalls? |
31640 | Did n''t I tell you you''d be jes''lak my own frum this time on? |
31640 | Did you know eny uv her people?" |
31640 | Didn''you see a lane forkin''off''bout a mile back by de crick, close to de big''simmon- tree? |
31640 | Do n''t you see she is not able to stand?" |
31640 | Do you know any one of that name?" |
31640 | Do you know the place?" |
31640 | Do you not love it all, my darling?" |
31640 | Dudley?" |
31640 | Gilcrest?" |
31640 | Gilcrest?" |
31640 | Hain''t you''shamed yo''se''f, layin''heah with yer haid lookin''lak a rat''s nest, an''yer laigs a- showin''?'' |
31640 | Have you any regrets, any unfilled wish? |
31640 | Have you no influence over the girl?" |
31640 | He did not therefore throw the stone for the purpose of hitting the person, did he?" |
31640 | He was at Oaklands again yesterday, was he not?" |
31640 | He was too absorbed to note this, and went on:"The question now is, my dearest, how soon will you marry me? |
31640 | Hev you boys picked thet basket o''chips?" |
31640 | His two shavers hain''t no fu''thah''long in ther books then my twins, air they, Susan?" |
31640 | How can I help being moody and bitter and harassed? |
31640 | How many of these dusky retainers are there remaining in my ancestral halls?" |
31640 | How, then, could I inherit through her, when it was never actually hers?" |
31640 | Is it because, knowing that you are becoming all the world to me, you would by avoidance and reserve spare me the pain of refusing my love? |
31640 | Is it not so?" |
31640 | Is n''t that happiness enough for you for awhile?" |
31640 | Is n''t that more to your taste, my lord?" |
31640 | Is she not bewitching?" |
31640 | Is you done persessed by de Debble, dat you treats dat pore lamb so, whut hain''t done nuthin''but be true to her sweetheart? |
31640 | It''s in po''try, ai n''t it?" |
31640 | It''s twenty- odd year ago, an''you see, I----""Was it Mary?" |
31640 | Like lightning came the thought,"Was it Betsy whom Abby meant?" |
31640 | Moreover, how can I ever win his consent to our marriage unless I ask him? |
31640 | Now, are there two plans of salvation, or only one?" |
31640 | Now, how many acres et a dollar an''two bits a acre kin be bought fer thet? |
31640 | Now, how to follow up this advantage? |
31640 | Now, you do n''t look lak one o''the lazy kind; so I reckon you air a sproutin''lawyer, hey?" |
31640 | Oh, why,"he went on bitterly,"was I not told, years ago, my true history? |
31640 | Ole Dilsey? |
31640 | Presently he asked:"Of what are you thinking? |
31640 | Rogers?" |
31640 | Shall we ride on?" |
31640 | So what am I to answer?" |
31640 | The two conversed for a time at the stile, then Drane, as he was preparing to ride on, asked,"Any commissions I can execute for you in town, Dudley?" |
31640 | Then, resuming her conversation with Henry, she said,"If I am of the elect at all, Henry, I am elected already, before conversion, am I not?" |
31640 | Therefore, why should not I do the thing that pleaseth me best, whether it be good or bad? |
31640 | To Charles M. Brady, Williamsburg, Va."Now, what does this mean?" |
31640 | To such-- the elect, the called-- how are the Scriptures profitable? |
31640 | Was he a man calculated to make my mother happy?" |
31640 | Were you not among the dancers?" |
31640 | Whar''d you say you hailed frum?" |
31640 | What cared he for the lament of the leaves? |
31640 | What do you mean?" |
31640 | What if I did''stoop to bribe a servant''to carry a message to my lover? |
31640 | What is the prize to be?" |
31640 | What schemes were you hatching? |
31640 | When may I speak?" |
31640 | Which brother was it, Mason?" |
31640 | Which o''them ponies wuz he ridin''this mawnin''?" |
31640 | Whut diffruns whuthah he b''lieves in Ca''vinism, or not? |
31640 | Whut part o''Virginny air you frum, suh?" |
31640 | Whut you got thar?" |
31640 | Why, boy, whut you tek me an''Cynthy Ann fur? |
31640 | Why, instead, did not she still hide the fact of the clandestine marriage, and refuse to go through with the open ceremony?" |
31640 | Will you eveh furgit thet seventeenth o''August, Hiram, an''the tur''ble days whut follehed on its heels?" |
31640 | Will you not come?" |
31640 | Will you return with me now?" |
31640 | Wo n''t you speak to me, dearest?" |
31640 | Working out some abstruse mathematical problem, or calculating how much money your year''s crops will bring? |
31640 | Wuzn''t thet the way uv it, Cynthy Ann?" |
31640 | You give yourself to me, do you not?" |
31640 | You hain''t gwinetah be sick, is you, chile? |
31640 | You hain''t? |
31640 | You have never been in their company before to- day, have you?" |
31640 | You heahs me, doan you?" |
31640 | You know the ole sayin''''bout brooms, Betsy? |
31640 | You surely did n''t bring them with you?" |
31640 | You trust me, sweetheart? |
31640 | You''ll listen to me now, wo n''t you, dear?" |
31640 | and what were you doing with that stick? |
31640 | and where''s mother?" |
31640 | but perhaps you can direct me to Mister Mason Rogers''house? |
31640 | hain''t we got reason to brag? |
31640 | howdy? |
46513 | Do n''t you want to learn the trade? |
46513 | Besides, was not the rich valley of the Connecticut a better place for homes than the rocky and barren hills around Boston? |
46513 | But what is that sound--_click_,_ click_,_ click_--that comes from the distance? |
46513 | Does the imagination of the epicure revolt at the suggestion of so rude a dish? |
46513 | How could it be otherwise? |
46513 | In asking where they were from we generally asked,"What are you?" |
46513 | Let us ask, What was the West? |
46513 | Pioneer mining life-- what was it? |
46513 | The ranchman does not ask his guests if they would like to go to bed; he says:"Well, gents, are you ready to spread your blankets?" |
46513 | Thus it came that the American genius broke entirely away from salt- water traditions, asked no longer"What cheer?" |
46513 | WHAT WAS THAT WEST? |
46513 | WHAT WAS THE WEST AT THIS TIME OF DOWN- STREAM? |
46513 | WHAT, THEN, WAS THE FIRST TRANSPORTATION OF THE WEST? |
46513 | What caused its growth and its changes? |
46513 | What future is there for the West to- day? |
46513 | What time had folk like these for powder- puff or ruffle, for fan or jeweled snuff- box? |
46513 | What was the Western man, and why did his character become what it was? |
46513 | Where is the money coming from?" |
46513 | Why? |
46513 | You see that mesquit- tree over there? |
31590 | A road? |
31590 | Alone? |
31590 | And James was not with you? |
31590 | And if they do not shoot and you make captives of them, do you promise that you will not harm them when you take them to your village? |
31590 | And is it true? |
31590 | And now? |
31590 | And powder? |
31590 | And second? |
31590 | And the place where the Indian was hugged by the bear? |
31590 | And why should I complain? |
31590 | And you are not afraid? |
31590 | And you have sufficient bullets? |
31590 | And your mother? |
31590 | Are all here who are expected? |
31590 | Are the Indians near us? |
31590 | Are there many Shawnees here? |
31590 | Are you coming with us, Peleg? |
31590 | Are you not afraid to go to the Blue Licks? |
31590 | Are you to lead the scouts on the south? |
31590 | But it is true, is n''t it? 31590 But we are not to stay here, are we?" |
31590 | But will you dare to come back with your family with only you and Israel to protect them? |
31590 | Can you find the place where you dropped her? |
31590 | Did I not tell you what I would do? |
31590 | Did the Cherokees sell to him? |
31590 | Did they expect to throw us off the trail in that way? |
31590 | Did you call to him? |
31590 | Did you say he is here now? |
31590 | Did you shoot him? |
31590 | Did young Boone go with you? |
31590 | Do you find anything new? |
31590 | Do you know how many of the Indians were killed? |
31590 | Do you make that as a motion? |
31590 | Do you mean,asked Boone once more,"that if they do not shoot, you will not?" |
31590 | Do you mean,inquired Boone,"that my friends will be taken prisoners and not shot?" |
31590 | Do you still plan to go on? |
31590 | Do you think I ever can learn? |
31590 | Do you think the Indians are planning another attack? |
31590 | Do you think they have taken him? |
31590 | Do you think they will come back again? |
31590 | Do you think we can hold this place? |
31590 | Do you think we ought to stop for that? |
31590 | Do you think your father is fearful the redskins may attack us before we come to the Licks, where he affirms he will make our settlement? |
31590 | Do you want to see Daniel Boone? |
31590 | Does he? |
31590 | Go where? |
31590 | Has he? |
31590 | Have they followed you, lad? |
31590 | Have you seen any more signs? |
31590 | Have you shot a good many of them? |
31590 | Have you tried it? |
31590 | Have you? |
31590 | Henry? 31590 How about men?" |
31590 | How did you come? |
31590 | How did you get to the fort? |
31590 | How far have we come? |
31590 | How far is that from here? |
31590 | How is Jemima this morning? |
31590 | How is it,inquired Peleg,"that you find your way through the forests? |
31590 | How long did they keep you? |
31590 | How many Indians did you say there were at the door? |
31590 | How many Indians were in that ambuscade? |
31590 | How many are here? |
31590 | How many are here? |
31590 | How many captives do you think they have taken with them? |
31590 | How many warriors were in the band? |
31590 | How many were there altogether? |
31590 | How many? |
31590 | How old is your father? |
31590 | How was that? |
31590 | If the Shawnees do not go on the warpath, why should we? |
31590 | If they burn us at the stake? |
31590 | If you go with me, is this the gun you will take? |
31590 | Into their house? |
31590 | Is Sam Oliver here again? |
31590 | Is it far from here? |
31590 | Is it on our way? |
31590 | Make a pet of him, are you? 31590 Me fader have sleep and see----""What do you mean, he had a dream?" |
31590 | Now, then,he continued after a moment,"is it your judgment that the best thing for us to do is to return to Bryant''s Station?" |
31590 | Peleg,said Daniel Boone quietly,"would you prefer to remain here in the settlement, or go with me on a scout?" |
31590 | Peleg,whispered Israel,"what do you think will be done to the girls if the Indians see us before we get within rifle shot?" |
31590 | Sam got the two ermine then, did n''t he? |
31590 | Seen any signs o''redskins? |
31590 | Shall we start now? |
31590 | Shall we stop at night? |
31590 | So you came? |
31590 | So you have your share, too, do you? |
31590 | So you started right away, did you? |
31590 | Suppose they do not have anything in the house to eat? |
31590 | That''s more than half that went out, is n''t it? |
31590 | Then there is no one to whom you can turn? |
31590 | To stay there? |
31590 | Was he not with you? |
31590 | Was it an arrow? |
31590 | Was the bear running from them? |
31590 | Were any shot after you had crossed the river? |
31590 | Were they both armed? |
31590 | What are you doing? |
31590 | What are you going to do now? |
31590 | What are you going to do? |
31590 | What are you planning to do next? |
31590 | What can we do? |
31590 | What can we do? |
31590 | What did he do? 31590 What did he dream?" |
31590 | What did you say you have named it? |
31590 | What do you mean? |
31590 | What do you mean? |
31590 | What do you think is the best thing to do, then? |
31590 | What do you think? |
31590 | What do you want? |
31590 | What does he want? |
31590 | What does that mean? |
31590 | What does this mean? |
31590 | What for? |
31590 | What girls? 31590 What happened to Captain Estill?" |
31590 | What happened to the gun? |
31590 | What have you named it? |
31590 | What is it, Master Hargrave? |
31590 | What is it, Master Hargrave? |
31590 | What is it? |
31590 | What is that, sir? |
31590 | What is that? |
31590 | What is the meeting for? |
31590 | What is the plan? |
31590 | What is your name? |
31590 | What mean you by that? |
31590 | What was his promise? |
31590 | What was it? |
31590 | What was the trouble? |
31590 | What will happen to us? |
31590 | What will he do now? |
31590 | What word? |
31590 | What you goin''to do with your friend? |
31590 | What''s that? |
31590 | What''s the matter, Master Hargrave? |
31590 | What''s the trouble, Peleg? |
31590 | What''s wrong, lads? |
31590 | When do we go? |
31590 | When do you go? |
31590 | When? |
31590 | Where are they now? |
31590 | Where can I find him? 31590 Where can we go?" |
31590 | Where do we meet? |
31590 | Where is he now? |
31590 | Where is my wife? 31590 Where is that, and what is it?" |
31590 | Where is that? |
31590 | Where? |
31590 | Which means that you will take us all to your village? |
31590 | Who are they? |
31590 | Who was he? |
31590 | Who was that? |
31590 | Why are you here? 31590 Why did Colonel Richard Henderson,"repeated Peleg,"and the other gentlemen wish to purchase so much land?" |
31590 | Why did he not return with you? |
31590 | Why did n''t you hit her? |
31590 | Why did n''t you stay with him then? |
31590 | Why did not that man stay all night? |
31590 | Why do you cling to the desk in that manner? |
31590 | Why do you not prefer to remain in the settlement? 31590 Why do you say that?" |
31590 | Why do you say that? |
31590 | Why do you think that? |
31590 | Why does he do that? |
31590 | Why is that? |
31590 | Why not? |
31590 | Why not? |
31590 | Why not? |
31590 | Why should I be? |
31590 | Why? |
31590 | Will the Indians leave? |
31590 | Will they not do it yet? |
31590 | Will you be one of the advance guard? |
31590 | Will you stay here while I go back over the trail a little way to see if I can find any signs of the varmints? 31590 You are not going to allow it, are you?" |
31590 | You do n''t think anything will happen to- night, do you? |
31590 | You have lost Singing Susan? |
31590 | You have never been troubled that way, have you, Sam? |
31590 | You know the way to the Station? |
31590 | You know who I am, do n''t you? |
31590 | You like tobacco? |
31590 | You say you and your Shawnee father and brother buried the canoe in which you came down the river? |
31590 | Are they coming?" |
31590 | As soon as he spied the lads he said,"Is Daniel Boone in this settlement?" |
31590 | CHAPTER XXI FLIGHT"What do you think, Peleg?" |
31590 | Can you, son?" |
31590 | Changing his tone, Boone said:"Have you seen anything in your friend to make you feel suspicious of him?" |
31590 | Daniel laughed derisively and said:"Pray, Mr. Venerable Barnes, how long since you were a boy yourself?" |
31590 | Did the master get him?" |
31590 | Do n''t you remember what your name was when you were a white boy?" |
31590 | Do you know that they were the first white women ever to stand on the banks of the Kantuckee River?" |
31590 | Do you know what that word means?" |
31590 | Do you think we can ever get through?" |
31590 | Does he rap your knuckles with his ferrule?" |
31590 | Gesticulating forcefully, the young man inquired,"He me fader?" |
31590 | Glancing at the object to which his attention had been directed, Sam whistled and then said,"Seen any more?" |
31590 | Had his enemies already killed his son or had they made him a prisoner? |
31590 | Have you seen any?" |
31590 | How have you been this long time?" |
31590 | How is Singing Susan?" |
31590 | How would they be able to defend themselves from an attack? |
31590 | I suppose a beating does not trouble him much?" |
31590 | I wonder if they are all really gone?" |
31590 | If a man steals, is n''t that the place where he belongs?" |
31590 | Ignoring his suffering, the schoolmaster managed to gasp out a tolerably full explanation:"What do you suppose? |
31590 | Instantly running toward the log house, Peleg was met by the frightened woman, who, touching him on the arm, said:"Do you hear that sound? |
31590 | Is it true that he is having a record kept of the places he has found and the journeys he has made?" |
31590 | Is that true?" |
31590 | Me white Shawnee, where go? |
31590 | Or was it doubly dangerous because the Indians were attempting from the other three sides to drive the unfortunate men into a trap? |
31590 | Peleg suggested,"Was it an iron kettle?" |
31590 | Peleg,"inquired Boone, turning to the young scout,"how many do you make out were in this band that stole Jemima?" |
31590 | Reluctantly the young men halted, and Peleg said:"Why do you not want us to chase them? |
31590 | Some of them said:"If the men were afraid that they might be shot, why should they ask the women to go in their place?" |
31590 | Tell me, how is Blackfish these days?" |
31590 | There was a slight smile on the face of Daniel Boone as he said,"Did they? |
31590 | Was he killed?" |
31590 | Was it necessary?" |
31590 | Was the border in front of him unguarded? |
31590 | What do you mean?" |
31590 | What do you think?" |
31590 | What do you want?" |
31590 | What had become of James? |
31590 | What is it?" |
31590 | What shall I do with you?" |
31590 | Where are my children?" |
31590 | Where?" |
31590 | Which do you like better?" |
31590 | Who''s Henry?" |
31590 | Why can you not find it when you go back?" |
31590 | Why did you fight the lynx in that way?" |
31590 | Why do you not go with them?" |
31590 | Will you come?" |
31590 | You can not blame him for that, can you?" |
31590 | Your father is not living?" |
31590 | [ Illustration:"''What is that?'' |
31590 | [ Illustration:"One of the men who had been stationed as a guard was shot early in the morning"]"What are you doing here? |
31590 | demanded Israel when he saw his younger brother Daniel among the men in the assembly,"What are you doing here?" |
45609 | Are not two more than one? 45609 If the Union can no longer protect us,"they asked themselves,"why should we remain parties to that compact? |
45609 | And have not we the two to our enemy''s one? |
45609 | Are we, after all, only savages under a thin veneer of pretended civilization? |
45609 | At the North no less than at the South men anxiously asked of themselves and of their neighbors"What is going to happen?" |
45609 | But how much did this resolution signify? |
45609 | Did Halleck? |
45609 | For who was this$ 800 Galena clerk? |
45609 | Has the reader any conception of what it means to have an eleven- inch shell penetrate the side of a vessel and explode within its wooden walls? |
45609 | If so with what boundaries? |
45609 | If the contract was to be repudiated on the one hand, why, they asked, should it not be equally repudiated on the other? |
45609 | If we can not be members of the Union upon equal terms with other members of the Union, why should we continue to be members of the Union at all?" |
45609 | Is there any wonder that McClellan found it necessary to devote many months to the task of creating an effective army out of such stuff as this? |
45609 | Should California be admitted to the Union as a free state? |
45609 | Should that part be open to slavery? |
45609 | The Nation having acquired the vast Louisiana territory, invitingly fruitful as it was, the question arose"What shall we do with it?" |
45609 | The question at once arose, What shall we do with these new lands? |
45609 | The question remained"will they come?" |
45609 | What right had he to plan campaigns and carry them to a success that reflected no credit upon his regular army military superiors? |
45609 | What right had he to the credit of any victories he had been graciously permitted to win? |
45609 | Who was Grant, anyhow? |
45609 | Why should General Halleck permit this interloper Grant to go on winning victories? |
45609 | Why should McDowell, who had remained in the regular army, give place to Sherman, who had resigned to become a professor in a school? |
45609 | Why should it continue to exist at the dawn of the twentieth? |
45609 | Why should this hideous wrong have existed after the middle of the nineteenth century? |
48724 | And then old Sport he hangs around, so solemn- like an''still, His eyes they keep a- sayin'':"What''s the matter, little Bill?" |
45733 | ''Did you take notes, Mr. Webster, of Mr. Hayne''s speech?'' 45733 ''You reply in the morning?'' |
45733 | Are you going to let me be devoured by these people? |
45733 | Attack, sir; attack what? |
45733 | Dinna ye hear the pibroch? |
45733 | Do n''t you know me? |
45733 | Had you not better defer your speech? |
45733 | If there is a second battle to- morrow,he said,"what troops shall I fight it with? |
45733 | If we succeed, what will the world say? |
45733 | Was there ever,says Parton,"a public man, not at the head of a state, so beloved as he? |
45733 | What is the matter? |
45733 | What is to be done? |
45733 | Who are you? |
45733 | 39, shown by Parker''s ships?" |
45733 | A hundred years more have passed over our heads, and what do we behold? |
45733 | Blücher''s Prussians, or Grouchy''s pursuing French? |
45733 | Did he not ask himself then: what are glory and power worth, if this is the end of kingly greatness?] |
45733 | Had they been swept away and the old wrongs of the people been brought back? |
45733 | Hayne has made a speech?'' |
45733 | How does the nineteenth century compare with its predecessors? |
45733 | In 1829, the long debate on the question:"Does the Constitution make us one sovereign nation or only a league of separate states?" |
45733 | Is our signal for''close action''still flying?" |
45733 | It is an idea that sounds well in rhyme and song, but it must stand the test of practice as well; and is it capable of this? |
45733 | Looking back for a century, what do we see? |
45733 | May this large Gospel of the Christ be realized by a nation, and this nation become in spirit and fact a church? |
45733 | Shall it not in its turn be overthrown, and liberty and equality in this direction be also attained? |
45733 | Shall this third of the great tyrants of the world retain its supremacy? |
45733 | Should these haughty islanders contemn his power and defy his armies? |
45733 | Three hundred years have passed, and what is the warship of to- day? |
45733 | What are we not to lose by peace? |
45733 | What are we to gain by war? |
45733 | What brought about this great change? |
45733 | What does it mean?" |
45733 | What was it that stirred the larger patriotism that gave shape and purpose to this growing feeling of national pride and unity? |
45733 | Who ever heard such cheers, so hearty, distinct and ringing, as those which his name evoked? |
45733 | Who that ever read or heard it can forget the closing passage of that glorious speech? |
45733 | Who were they? |
45733 | [= Education, Discovery and Commerce=] In what else does the beginning of the twentieth stand far in advance of that of the nineteenth century? |
45733 | [= Great Discoveries of the Nineteenth Century=] Now what has been the record since 1800? |
45733 | [= How the Indians Live=] What, then, is the condition of the Indian to- day? |
45733 | [= Peace Propositions of the Emperor of Russia=] What else shall be said of the state of affairs at the dawn of the twentieth century? |
45733 | [= The Rights of Man=] As for the rights of the people, what had become of them? |
45733 | [= The War with the Pirates of Tripoli=] But, after all, what else could the Government do? |
43589 | Has Man a Conscience? |
43589 | Have you finished harvesting? 43589 Well with the child?" |
43589 | Well with the child? |
43589 | Well with the child? |
43589 | Well with the child? |
43589 | And in what arm of the service? |
43589 | And must he not arise? |
43589 | And perhaps you may ask, does it meet my expectations? |
43589 | Besides, it prohibited fire- water, and does not a father prevent his children from drinking fire- water? |
43589 | Ca n''t we learn from our enemies? |
43589 | Daniel is a first- rate business man, and, as he likes farming, why not make it his business? |
43589 | Did I not come through your country one year since? |
43589 | Did I then make promises to you? |
43589 | Did you gather many walnuts? |
43589 | Do you run as erect as you walk?" |
43589 | Do you think the characters of Pitt, Fox, and Burke, as described by the author in the former work, are correct? |
43589 | Do you think we could get Governor Everett?" |
43589 | Does my venerable friend Seattle object? |
43589 | Governor Stevens:"Does any one object to what I have said? |
43589 | Great Chief, what shall we eat if we do so? |
43589 | Have I told you that we are living in the government palace? |
43589 | Have you any school in view now for next summer? |
43589 | Have you ever read any volumes of the''Spectator''? |
43589 | How could Oliver and the girls, if any are at home, pass the time better than reading or studying till perhaps ten in the evening? |
43589 | How long a leave had I better get? |
43589 | Is he not needed? |
43589 | Is it good? |
43589 | Is it not because your young men go out on war parties, and thus the flower of your tribe is cut down? |
43589 | Is it not better that your young men should have wives and children, and that your numbers should increase? |
43589 | Is it to be wondered at? |
43589 | Is it vacation with John Loring now? |
43589 | Is not here a work for a Moses or an Alfred? |
43589 | Is not his speech in the case of Blake v. Wilkins admirable? |
43589 | Is not the dissolution of the Union a subject of fearful foreboding? |
43589 | Is this good, and do you want this? |
43589 | Now, what have you to say? |
43589 | Shall I hear from you there, and how many letters will await me? |
43589 | Shall I hear from you there? |
43589 | The Great Father desires this, and why am I able to say this? |
43589 | The Indians had some discussion, and Governor Stevens then put the question:"Are you ready? |
43589 | The first question Isaac put,"Can a sincere Universalist be saved?" |
43589 | The following beautiful lines were written by Mr. Brooks, in condolence upon the sad loss:--"Well with the child?" |
43589 | To this the governor rejoined:--"''Why is it that you have two or three women to one man? |
43589 | Was this meant to vanish into thin air? |
43589 | Were not many of you now present witnesses of the fact? |
43589 | What are we to do?" |
43589 | What did the Whigs gain by representing General Jackson to be in leading- strings? |
43589 | What do you think of them generally? |
43589 | What had I best do? |
43589 | What is the lowest grade that you would be willing to accept? |
43589 | What should they do, they asked, in case the Blackfeet came near their camp at night? |
43589 | What will a man do for his own children? |
43589 | Where, then, shall we find these? |
43589 | Why not let us live together with you? |
43589 | Why not send them to the east? |
43589 | Why should we sell all? |
43589 | Will you meet them in council?'' |
43589 | Wo n''t your women prefer husbands to scalps and horses? |
43589 | Would you desire such a transfer? |
43589 | You say you will give us land, but why should you give us the mouth of the river? |
43589 | p. 373 dress of a chief? |
31452 | A ghost can squeak, ca n''t it? |
31452 | A scout has got to be loyal, has n''t he? |
31452 | A welcome home fire, hey? |
31452 | All right, you''re so clever,said Roy;"how far is ten miles?" |
31452 | And what''s that? |
31452 | Anybody else working up there? |
31452 | Anyway, maybe we killed two birds with one stone, hey? 31452 Are n''t you going, Kid?" |
31452 | Are you asking me? |
31452 | Are you fellows all one outfit? |
31452 | Are you going to get a soda while you''re up at Woodcliff? |
31452 | Are you going to wear your Sunday uniform? |
31452 | Are you staying up there? |
31452 | Are you used to camping? |
31452 | At dinnertime? |
31452 | Belong around here? |
31452 | Blythe all right? 31452 Blythe? |
31452 | But what''s the usual way? |
31452 | Can you beat that? |
31452 | Can you eat as many as eleven? |
31452 | Can you eat as many as eleven? |
31452 | Can you hike home with your ankle like that? |
31452 | Cut out the middle man, huh? |
31452 | Deficits are good; did you ever hear of those? |
31452 | Did he come too? 31452 Did n''t I find a dime in a sewer- pipe?" |
31452 | Did n''t I say for us all to go into Bennett''s? 31452 Did n''t I say to stop here?" |
31452 | Did n''t I say we were going to have two desserts that day I stalked a hop- toad up at Temple Camp, and was n''t I right? |
31452 | Did n''t I tell you I was going to find that girl, and did n''t I find her? 31452 Did n''t you say that''s all roofs are good for?" |
31452 | Did you ever hear of anybody rolling up? |
31452 | Did you feel in the pockets? |
31452 | Did you hear her call-- loud? 31452 Did you pick up all the sticks?" |
31452 | Did you study rhetoric? |
31452 | Did your brother kill someone? |
31452 | Do I get three helpings of stew for supper? |
31452 | Do n''t you see this coat? 31452 Do you go up in that?" |
31452 | Do you hear that voice again? |
31452 | Do you know what I''d like to do? |
31452 | Do you know what I''m going to do? |
31452 | Do you know what a legal document is? |
31452 | Do you know where you are, Blythey? |
31452 | Do you like fudge? |
31452 | Do you mean that we should protect that-- that fellow? |
31452 | Do you mean to say I did n''t study the heavens when I was a tenderfoot? |
31452 | Do you mean to say I have n''t the badge for camping? |
31452 | Do you mean to say it is n''t important-- that dinner? |
31452 | Do you remember the name of the soldier that did come? |
31452 | Do you suppose he has n''t any money? |
31452 | Do you think I do n''t know that? |
31452 | Do you think I do n''t know? 31452 Do you think I''m a freight car?" |
31452 | Do you think I''m going to have Mr. E. going over the ground and putting anything over on me? 31452 Do you think I''ve got the North Star?" |
31452 | Do you think the Silver Foxes commit murders just because they''re out of their heads? 31452 Do you think you could stick?" |
31452 | Do you want to do a good turn? |
31452 | Does he have to go soon? |
31452 | Does he have to go to Canada? |
31452 | Ever been there Blythey? |
31452 | Have n''t you got any adventures to tell? |
31452 | Have you got your flashlight? |
31452 | Have you got your note book? |
31452 | Have you got your note book? |
31452 | Here in town? |
31452 | How about the label, Kid? |
31452 | How about writing the satisfactory account? |
31452 | How are you? |
31452 | How did you know? |
31452 | How far is Woodcliff? |
31452 | How is it you boys are n''t off camping this summer? |
31452 | How? |
31452 | How_ far?_"That''s what I said. |
31452 | I guess he was going to mail the letter to his mother in New Milford, hey? |
31452 | I suppose these youngsters could get a commission to haul down several buildings themselves if they wanted to? |
31452 | I wonder where he came from? |
31452 | If folks is dead and yer see''em, it''s sperits, ai n''t it? |
31452 | Is he a scout or a sprout? |
31452 | Is it any trouble? |
31452 | Is it true? |
31452 | It sounds kind of spooky, huh? |
31452 | It was when I went up on the windmill, was n''t it? |
31452 | Joey, my eyes is not what they wuz, I''ve seen you so much when I was alone here-- in all the trouble-- you would n''t fool me-- Joey? |
31452 | Just because I like you, that does n''t prove that I''m out of my head, does it? |
31452 | Let''s see the finger prints? |
31452 | Like camping? |
31452 | Maybe that old windmill is haunted, hey? |
31452 | Montreal? |
31452 | Not even his name? |
31452 | Oh I just adore it,said the girl,"but where did you get my card? |
31452 | Oh, does he? 31452 Oh, then you do n''t work for the wrecking concern?" |
31452 | Oh, you mean Camp Merritt? 31452 Probably he was crazy when he did it.... Was n''t he?" |
31452 | Shall I wear all my stuff so you can make fun of me? |
31452 | Should we maybe hide his coat? |
31452 | Speaking of eating, how about the stew? |
31452 | Sure,said Roy;"did n''t you ever roll up and go to sleep? |
31452 | Tain''t the law, is it? |
31452 | That''s all right,Pee- wee said with great vehemence;"if you got a letter that went astray you''d want it, would n''t you?" |
31452 | The description is a scout test? |
31452 | The question is, are we to consider Pee- wee a scout? |
31452 | The same kind we use in school, hey? |
31452 | There''s a grasshopper, get out your note book.... Do you know what he did once? |
31452 | They ai n''t a goin''to stop sendin''you your pension? |
31452 | This Blythe, he does n''t belong around these parts, does he? |
31452 | To roll off of? |
31452 | Toronto''s up near there, is n''t it? |
31452 | Toronto? |
31452 | We believe you; tell us about it? |
31452 | We do n''t need any proof,said Pee- wee;"have n''t we got proof enough? |
31452 | We wo n''t be finished next week? |
31452 | Well now what do_ you_ think? 31452 Well, how do you find him?" |
31452 | Well, what are we going to do? |
31452 | Well, what do you find to interest you, boys? |
31452 | What are we going to do when we find him? |
31452 | What are we going to do? 31452 What are you talking about?" |
31452 | What did he do? 31452 What do you boys know about this chap?" |
31452 | What do you mean I ca n''t be loyal? |
31452 | What do you mean, a second class scout? |
31452 | What do you mean, crazy? |
31452 | What do you mean? 31452 What do you mean?" |
31452 | What do you suppose it is? |
31452 | What do you think? 31452 What do_ you_ say to do?" |
31452 | What good is a Sunday dinner that somebody ate a couple of years ago? |
31452 | What good is a letter when the fellow who sent it is already home? |
31452 | What kind of hours? |
31452 | What shall we do? 31452 What use is a leave of absence that expired two or three years ago?" |
31452 | What would you do if you did n''t have the North Star, I''d like to know? |
31452 | What''s his name? |
31452 | What''s that? |
31452 | What''s the matter? |
31452 | What''s the nature of the work? |
31452 | What''s the use of doing that? |
31452 | What? |
31452 | Where can we find you up there? |
31452 | Where did you get this? |
31452 | Where''s Warde? |
31452 | Where''s the fire department? |
31452 | Who is this fellow anyway? |
31452 | Who''s going to tell a yarn? |
31452 | Who? |
31452 | Whose picture-- Blythey? |
31452 | Why did he try to do that-- Blythey? |
31452 | Why did n''t Roy get from under? |
31452 | Why did n''t you ask him if he had been there? 31452 Why did n''t you kill him and be done with it?" |
31452 | Why did n''t you mention Quebec? |
31452 | Will they hang him, I wonder? |
31452 | Yes, I''m all right,said Roy;"how about you?" |
31452 | Yes, but why did n''t he? |
31452 | Yes? |
31452 | You belong hereabouts? |
31452 | You do n''t think so, do you? |
31452 | You do your own cooking? |
31452 | You go back on what you said? |
31452 | You liked him, eh? |
31452 | You mean intuition, Kid? |
31452 | You''re not going to get out a warrant for him? |
31452 | You''re-- you''re_ sure_ he''s the one? |
31452 | You''ve got to say, is he a murderer or not? 31452 Your foot all right?" |
31452 | Your left foot? |
31452 | 49 IX Around the Fire 54 X The Fall of Scout Harris 62 XI Young Mr. Blythe 69 XII Three''s a Company 72 XIII Warde Is in Earnest 79 XIV Baffled? |
31452 | A. W. O. L. How many truckloads of uproarious boys had it seen driven away? |
31452 | All we need is a treasury; you did n''t happen to see one around anywhere, did you?" |
31452 | And that''ll be good because we''re the three that stick up for Blythe, hey? |
31452 | And the brother? |
31452 | And the outcome of all this business was another article in the Bridgeboro Record: CRIMINAL TENDENCIES CAUSED BY CRACKED SKULL? |
31452 | Are you all right? |
31452 | Been telling you about his brother?" |
31452 | Been trying to string you, huh? |
31452 | Better?" |
31452 | But how came that injury, discovered by the merest chance, which had wrapped his early life in a blackness like the blackness of night? |
31452 | CHAPTER XXII THE BANSHEE"What does it mean, anyway?" |
31452 | Ca n''t you tell them, so I can stay here? |
31452 | Could n''t I always tell when we were going to have apple dumplings? |
31452 | Did n''t I say that scout up at Temple Camp would get well? |
31452 | Did n''t I send that letter? |
31452 | Did n''t I tell you?" |
31452 | Did the brother know that Joe was a soldier in the camp? |
31452 | Did you ever see a deed?" |
31452 | Did you start jollying yet?" |
31452 | Do n''t we, Westy?" |
31452 | Do n''t you remember all about camp- fire, and Pee- wee, and all the fun we had? |
31452 | Do you hear it? |
31452 | Do you see this? |
31452 | Do you think I ca n''t tell a murderer? |
31452 | Do you think he''d go away without his coat? |
31452 | Do you think that sound is a tree toad? |
31452 | Everything can turn out to be something different, ca n''t it? |
31452 | Everything-- it looks like-- everything is changed-- all the fun and-- what do I care about the old badge?" |
31452 | Had it any tragic secret? |
31452 | He did, did n''t he?" |
31452 | He''d like to see me now, eh?" |
31452 | Hey, Pee- wee?" |
31452 | Hey, Roy?" |
31452 | How about that, Sport? |
31452 | How about you, Blythey?" |
31452 | How about you, Roy?" |
31452 | How came he to that shack? |
31452 | How came that little trinket there? |
31452 | How many maimed and suffering brought back? |
31452 | How''d_ you_ like to go to the gallows, hey?" |
31452 | I bet your father will be glad when you tell him you''re in the first class, hey?... |
31452 | I''ll say a lot of things about the Silver Foxes, hey? |
31452 | I''m out of work-- I--""And it''s best for youngsters to have a boss, eh?" |
31452 | If I can get an envelope big enough I''ll write everything on it that will help the post office people, and maybe they''ll be resourceful, hey?" |
31452 | If he''s innocent--""What do you mean,_ if?_"Pee- wee asked. |
31452 | Is he a murderer or is n''t he?" |
31452 | It give me a shock because-- what''s this?" |
31452 | It has her picture?" |
31452 | It overlooked the obscure path along which they had come; how many forms in khaki had it seen stealing to or from the camp? |
31452 | It''s Blythe''s picture, is n''t it?" |
31452 | My dear boy saved his life when he was your age as I suppose, and do you know how? |
31452 | Not scared, are you?" |
31452 | Now what have you all got to say? |
31452 | Now you have to be brave, see? |
31452 | Now you have to be brave, see? |
31452 | O. K.? |
31452 | Of his wanderings, likewise, who shall tell the full truth? |
31452 | One o''clock._"What do you make out of it? |
31452 | Putting gangs to work up there?" |
31452 | Remember what you said then? |
31452 | Remember what you said then? |
31452 | See how real I am? |
31452 | See? |
31452 | See?" |
31452 | See?" |
31452 | See?" |
31452 | Speak? |
31452 | Stand up, ca n''t you?" |
31452 | Tell us, ca n''t you? |
31452 | Then he added anxiously,"Do you?" |
31452 | Then he spoke, his voice weak but tense,"Is he all right?" |
31452 | Try to find him? |
31452 | Was he lying in wait for him in that secluded spot? |
31452 | We do n''t want it, do we, Westy?" |
31452 | Well, would n''t that be nice?" |
31452 | What are they doing? |
31452 | What care us, quoth we? |
31452 | What did he do it for?" |
31452 | What does it mean? |
31452 | What more do you want? |
31452 | What news?" |
31452 | What''s the matter? |
31452 | What''s the trouble?" |
31452 | When?" |
31452 | Where''s_ your_ home?" |
31452 | Who shall say what actually transpired between these brothers in that lonely spot? |
31452 | Who shall say? |
31452 | Who wants to buy some stock in the Riverside Scout Camp? |
31452 | Who was he anyway?" |
31452 | Wo n''t you sit down?" |
31452 | Yes or no? |
31452 | You kids never knew that, hey?" |
31452 | You never rolled_ down_, and went to sleep, did you? |
31452 | You remember better than you used to?" |
31452 | You saw the pictures, huh? |
48428 | (_ c_) If the soldier were knocked unconscious, would knife drop from hand? |
48428 | But could this solution of the vital shipping question be dovetailed into the industrial situations of the various nations concerned? |
48428 | But what of the gun that these plants were making-- the British Enfield rifle? |
48428 | Do you get me all right?" |
48428 | How should we meet it? |
48428 | What must be the conditions in the mess kitchens of the Army where the cooks, with no expert knowledge of butchery, cut the meats? |
48428 | What occasioned this change in policy on the part of governing authorities? |
48428 | What would constitute overwhelming superiority in the air? |
48428 | Why, then, was not the manufacture of Springfields extended to the private plants? |
35493 | A hopper? |
35493 | About what? |
35493 | All set, Bud? |
35493 | And why not? |
35493 | Anything else, Bud? |
35493 | Are n''t you sorry? |
35493 | Are these wild dogs really bad? |
35493 | Are you going deer hunting? |
35493 | Are you sorry? |
35493 | Bud, eh? 35493 But why, if you''ve built up a flock of Eichorn Wyandottes from one single pen, do you have only enough money to buy some berry plants?" |
35493 | But you heard nothing? |
35493 | Can I go along? |
35493 | Can Mr. and Mrs. Bennett help you at all? |
35493 | Can you leave the hose for now? |
35493 | Can you sit up without help? |
35493 | Could wolves be chasing these? |
35493 | Did I scare you, Bud? |
35493 | Did n''t you see Sammy Toller''s dead sheep? |
35493 | Did you do the morning chores, young feller? |
35493 | Did you get into that little house, too? |
35493 | Do n''t you want to do anything? |
35493 | Do you feel all right, Delbert? |
35493 | Do you have any money? |
35493 | Do you know what those are? |
35493 | Do you make these, too? |
35493 | Do you think that hunting is more important than your academic career? |
35493 | Do you think you''ll like it here? |
35493 | Do you want to sign or do n''t you? 35493 Dreaming today?" |
35493 | Ever do any milking? |
35493 | Friends? |
35493 | Got a name? |
35493 | Got it? |
35493 | Had n''t you better go to bed, Allan? |
35493 | Have you tried trap- nesting your hens? |
35493 | He told you to go to college, did n''t he? |
35493 | His mother will really come back to care for him? |
35493 | How are they most remarkable? |
35493 | How can a dog scare trout? |
35493 | How come? 35493 How do you know?" |
35493 | How do you know? |
35493 | How do you know? |
35493 | How does a body go about stopping''em? |
35493 | How does he know? |
35493 | How has he tricked himself? |
35493 | How is it going? |
35493 | How many of those plants you got, Bud? |
35493 | How many you got laid by? |
35493 | How much will I need? |
35493 | How much will I owe you? |
35493 | How will he tie that in with being worked like a Mexican slave his first two days with us? |
35493 | How''d you like Old Shark? |
35493 | I mean, what about Old Shark? |
35493 | I suppose you were hunting today? |
35493 | I''m a what? |
35493 | If you''re done, Bud, how''bout giving me a hand with the milking? |
35493 | Is Delbert about? |
35493 | Is Gramps sick? |
35493 | Is something stopping you? |
35493 | Is that all your name? 35493 It''s no mind if he did, and why do you suppose I wrote in''stead of going in? |
35493 | It''s sort of special, eh? |
35493 | Its what? |
35493 | Just how do you aim to make it? |
35493 | Leave him? |
35493 | Little house? |
35493 | More? |
35493 | Moving? |
35493 | Perhaps we should stay home? |
35493 | See? 35493 Shall we get the chores done?" |
35493 | So? |
35493 | Sure you know what a bean looks like? |
35493 | Surely you''re not going to keep him? |
35493 | That all they taught you to say at that there orphanage? |
35493 | That''s all? 35493 That''s so,"Bud conceded,"but how do I know which one?" |
35493 | The black buck? |
35493 | The difference? 35493 Then what is it?" |
35493 | Then what is your problem? |
35493 | Tote road? |
35493 | Twenty cents each for those piddling little plants? |
35493 | Understand? |
35493 | Want to get yourself a buck, eh? |
35493 | Was Gramps ever kicked by a horse? |
35493 | Was he ever kicked in the head? |
35493 | Was that really Old Yellowfoot? |
35493 | Well, Delbert? |
35493 | Were you here all day yesterday, when those sheep must have been killed? |
35493 | Were you here when the lumbermen came? |
35493 | What can we do? |
35493 | What did you fish for? |
35493 | What did you say, Bud? |
35493 | What do you make of it? |
35493 | What do you think I am? 35493 What in tunket are you doing?" |
35493 | What is it? |
35493 | What is your name? |
35493 | What makes the beans grow big and strong, if not the goodness of the earth? 35493 What makes you so all- fired sure?" |
35493 | What now? |
35493 | What the blazes do you want? |
35493 | What were you going to say? |
35493 | What will he do when you go to college? |
35493 | What''d you call Mother? |
35493 | What''d you do? 35493 What''d you pay for''em?" |
35493 | What''d you say? |
35493 | What''s Gramps doing? |
35493 | What''s money for? 35493 What''s on your mind, son?" |
35493 | What''s the matter, Bud? |
35493 | What''s the trouble? |
35493 | What''s your scholastic average? |
35493 | When did what happen? |
35493 | When do you think my hens will turn broody? |
35493 | Where do you get them? |
35493 | Where do you want her, Del? |
35493 | Where have your ears been? |
35493 | Where? |
35493 | Who''s Old Yellowfoot? |
35493 | Why did n''t you call me? |
35493 | Why do n''t I? |
35493 | Why do they call them tote roads? |
35493 | Why not? |
35493 | Why not? |
35493 | Why? |
35493 | Why? |
35493 | Why? |
35493 | Why? |
35493 | Why? |
35493 | Will the dogs be back? |
35493 | Will you have another tart? |
35493 | Will you let me finish? |
35493 | Will you watch over Gramps very carefully today, Allan? |
35493 | With a couple of shotguns and number six shot? |
35493 | Yes, but was n''t that unusual? |
35493 | Yes? |
35493 | You ai n''t going to stop hunting? |
35493 | You aim to get yourself a couple of grouse? |
35493 | You can see? |
35493 | You doctors ever talk anything''cept nonsense? |
35493 | You going out? |
35493 | You have? |
35493 | You know anybody who was n''t? |
35493 | You mean it had no father? |
35493 | You must not what? |
35493 | You shoot the deer? |
35493 | You''ll make a sled? |
35493 | You''re sure he''ll be all right? |
35493 | ''Sides, did you ever know a deer hunter-- I''m talking of deer hunters and not deer chasers-- who took it anything''cept easy? |
35493 | ''Sides, who''d want the President''s head hanging on his setting- room wall?" |
35493 | ***** Bud rose and turned to face the old man, who said,"Do n''t the sun tell you it''s noon?" |
35493 | *****"What''d you find, Bud?" |
35493 | A baby? |
35493 | A moment later when Bud had drained his final glass of milk, Gramps said,"How about getting back to work?" |
35493 | Ai n''t we got a young''un round the place again?" |
35493 | And if he did not work, how could he justify his existence? |
35493 | And remember the black buck we ran across while we were fetching a load of wood a while back? |
35493 | And what else do the weeds live on? |
35493 | Anyway what does it matter? |
35493 | Are you sure?" |
35493 | As he was keeping the line in the air, he said,"See that little hunk of grass, maybe thirty- five feet out and a little up? |
35493 | Bud asked,"Do you think we''ll get Old Yellowfoot?" |
35493 | Bud concentrated on the bean until a full minute later when Gramps said,"Know what it looks like?" |
35493 | But he was troubled by Gramps''silence until the old man spoke,"When''d it happen, Bud?" |
35493 | Did you ever stop to consider what a remarkable thing a punkin is? |
35493 | Do you know where we''ll find that black buck?" |
35493 | Do you like it here with us?" |
35493 | Do you like to fish for trout, Bud?" |
35493 | Do you think anybody who knows anything about poultry will pay you breeding- stock prices for chickens from an untried pen?" |
35493 | Doc Beardsley said I could come deer hunting, did n''t he? |
35493 | Dogs were dogs; did running wild make them so very different? |
35493 | Don''cha eat at noon?" |
35493 | Got a few minutes?" |
35493 | Gramps asked, far too casually,"How do I look?" |
35493 | Gramps grinned, and then he said,"How long do you figure on being busy, Bud?" |
35493 | Gramps''voice sounded like a lion''s roar as he said,"You the boy from the orphanage?" |
35493 | Had Gramps brought him this way so Bud could see for himself that the black fawn was safe? |
35493 | Have n''t you been able to sell any breeding stock from your Wyandottes?" |
35493 | He asked finally,"How long have you been hunting Old Yellowfoot?" |
35493 | He was coaxing a final trickle of milk from Susie when Gramps said,"Let me have your pail and turn''em out, will you?" |
35493 | How could he describe all the terror, all the loneliness and all the fear that he had felt to one who had never known these things? |
35493 | How many eggs can you put under a setting hen?" |
35493 | How will you get home?" |
35493 | How''bout it?" |
35493 | I''ll show you the biggest gosh- darned brown trout as ever sucked a fly off Skunk Crick, and ai n''t that a heck of a name for a crick? |
35493 | If he had, what lay behind it? |
35493 | If the copse could swallow Old Yellowfoot as though he had melted into the air, how could you expect to find the grouse? |
35493 | If you''re dead set on having that worry off your mind, why do n''t you sell some eggs?" |
35493 | In the second, if you should get him, who''s going to eat him after you''re through showing him to everybody in Dishnoe County? |
35493 | Interested in spite of himself, Bud asked,"What''s the difference?" |
35493 | Is n''t that nice? |
35493 | Just Bud?" |
35493 | Now how many eggs have you been getting a day?" |
35493 | Now you know about choke?" |
35493 | Or maybe you''ll do it?" |
35493 | Ready, Bud?" |
35493 | So what else is bothering you?" |
35493 | Sock the principal?" |
35493 | The old man was folding it in his wallet when Gram said,"What nonsense is this?" |
35493 | They''ll need it if anything goes wrong with either of them and I wondered if I could work my way through agriculture college?" |
35493 | Think I wanted that horse- faced old bat who runs the place to have fits?" |
35493 | Want to help me fetch the Christmas tree tomorrow?" |
35493 | What are you aiming to be when you grow up?" |
35493 | What are you getting at, Allan?" |
35493 | What say?" |
35493 | What was the world coming to, anyhow? |
35493 | What were you shooting at, Bud?" |
35493 | What''s up?" |
35493 | When Bud remained silent, Gramps asked again,"What say? |
35493 | When the season rolls round, are you and me going to hunt Old Yellowfoot?" |
35493 | Where was the trap, he wondered? |
35493 | Who''s been telling you fairy tales?" |
35493 | Why do n''t you go ahead and build your run?" |
35493 | Why do n''t you go for a walk in the woods?" |
35493 | Why do you need money?" |
35493 | Wo n''t we, Delbert?" |
35493 | You aim to get out in the next hour or so?" |
35493 | You aim to hatch those eggs?" |
35493 | You did n''t think I''d take you grouse hunting''thout you know which end of the gun the shot comes out of, did you?" |
35493 | You never got six?" |
35493 | You would n''t want to worry Gram, would you?" |
40366 | ''Off agin, gone agin,''are you? 40366 A fine country home built of logs and furnished with beautiful old heirlooms? |
40366 | And do you know a place in Lloydsboro Valley called the Log Cabin? |
40366 | And the little girl? |
40366 | And then,asked Phil,"after that?" |
40366 | And then,she continued,"you remember when we met Phil and Elsie Tremont on the train, as we were going out to Arizona to live?" |
40366 | And you''ll give me your hand on it? |
40366 | Are n''t they dear? 40366 Are you sure?" |
40366 | But I may write about Elsie''s wedding and say that you''ll all be going West? |
40366 | But the question is,_ what_? |
40366 | But what could an outsider do with them if their own family has failed? |
40366 | But what makes you think that I''ll always go it alone? |
40366 | But will you promise? |
40366 | But,asked Norman,"what if Goldilocks and her sister both want to play with it at the same time? |
40366 | By the way, what are you going to do next? 40366 Did n''t I say that she''d soon adjust herself-- find something to amuse herself and all the rest of us as well?" |
40366 | Did n''t you all go out in a big red automobile this afternoon? 40366 Did what?" |
40366 | Did you see me fencing for time when Little Sister demanded to be told what I''d teach them first? 40366 Do you believe that is true?" |
40366 | Do you ever get desperate over things? |
40366 | Do you know where the children are? |
40366 | Do you realize that we could keep house for a week on what it costs the four of us to stay here just one day? |
40366 | Doctor Tremont thinks he can cure him? |
40366 | Happy time adoing_ what_? |
40366 | Has n''t she, Sister? |
40366 | Here, Matilda, kitty, kitty, where are you? |
40366 | How could you give him the impression they were false, when you know very well they grow tight on your own scalp? |
40366 | How long have you been there? |
40366 | How? |
40366 | If you think that_ I_ can fill that position will you tell them about me? 40366 In what way is it different?" |
40366 | Is n''t any one responsible for them? |
40366 | Is n''t it funny the way history repeats itself? |
40366 | Is that all? |
40366 | It amounted to the same thing,persisted Gay, and in answer to Mary''s gasping question,"What_ did_ you say?" |
40366 | Jack,she said hesitatingly,"did you ever hear this verse? |
40366 | Mary,he said, slowly,"would you be surprised if Phil were to come by Bauer on his way to California?" |
40366 | Oh, is he coming again? |
40366 | See? |
40366 | So you''ll never marry a man who has only the shelter of a salary to offer you? |
40366 | Something of a chameleon, eh? 40366 Strong-- and husky and active-- as Phil?" |
40366 | That I''ll never have any one to-- protect? 40366 That was n''t very considerate of us,_ was_ it?" |
40366 | The Reverend Paul Rochester came to call, and where, of all awkward impossible places, do you suppose he found me? 40366 We--"Then he paused as if some sudden recollection warned him to ask,"What have you heard from home lately?" |
40366 | Well, do you think they''ve learned their lesson in one dose, Sammy? |
40366 | Well? |
40366 | What are you going to do with such a wonderful creature when you find it? |
40366 | What do you want to resurrect all those old horrors for? 40366 What for? |
40366 | What for? |
40366 | What is it, Joyce? 40366 Whatever are we going to do?" |
40366 | Whatever can she be writing to_ her_ about? |
40366 | When did you come? 40366 Why?" |
40366 | You ca n''t mean that he-- will ever be able-- to_ walk_? |
40366 | _ We_ do n''t believe in being harsh with children,_ do_ we, Beautiful? |
40366 | _ What you going to teach us first? 40366 _ Where_ did you get all that?" |
40366 | ''Where shall we lair to- day? |
40366 | Almost breathless in her eagerness she exclaimed impulsively,"I beg your pardon-- but are n''t you_ Gay_?" |
40366 | Are n''t you afraid?" |
40366 | At what hotel can I find you? |
40366 | Bad news from home? |
40366 | But he was the one to be surprised, for her face paled and she exclaimed, in a voice tense with suppressed excitement,"Oh, is your father going, too? |
40366 | But the puzzle now was, who was good enough and sweet and high and fine enough to follow Lloyd? |
40366 | But you''ll be savage enough by and bye, wo n''t you? |
40366 | But, oh, boy, why did n''t you give me a little warning, so that we might have had time to make ready a''fine, fatted calf?'' |
40366 | Did n''t some one say something about the_ scrap- bag_ habit awhile ago?" |
40366 | Did n''t that sound like the children crying or calling?" |
40366 | Do n''t you remember,''there was no room in the inn''for the Child and His mother? |
40366 | Do n''t you want to try it?" |
40366 | Do you know what they call me at home? |
40366 | Forgetting that her presence was unknown to the anxious watcher, she leaned forward through the dark, saying politely,"Can I help you, Madam?" |
40366 | Had n''t I dreamed of that first meeting for weeks-- what we''d say and what she''d say? |
40366 | Has he really consented to attempt the operation?" |
40366 | Have n''t I heard the Warwick Hall seniors talk of her by the hour? |
40366 | Have you been to the house? |
40366 | He started towards her, stopping to say in an aside to Gay,"What''s the little girl''s name? |
40366 | How did you know about--_that_?" |
40366 | How ever did you get on without my seeing you? |
40366 | How long has it been since you''ve seen a sight like this?" |
40366 | How much of a supper are you going to claim, young man?" |
40366 | I wonder what will be the matter with these?" |
40366 | Invariably one of the first questions asked her was,"Anyone sick in your family?" |
40366 | Is Jack worse?" |
40366 | Is n''t that always the way? |
40366 | Is n''t that_ enough_?" |
40366 | Is that why you are so silent this evening?" |
40366 | Is_ that_ what you came to tell me?" |
40366 | Jack laughed and quoted, teasingly:"''What makes the lamb love Mary so?'' |
40366 | Mary put her head out of the window again and looked anxiously up and down, whispering in a flutter of nervousness,"Oh,_ why_ does n''t he come? |
40366 | May I occupy this end of the seat?" |
40366 | Norman turned around exclaiming,"Did you see that? |
40366 | Of course I had n''t given him the slightest encouragement, or it would have been different--""Roberta,"interrupted Gay sternly,"how can you say that? |
40366 | Oh, are you_ sure_?" |
40366 | Page 21,"Jask"changed to"Jack"("Well?" |
40366 | Presently Mary turned to the woman, saying,"It''s pretty,_ is n''t_ it?" |
40366 | Shall we tell them''Sandy Claws''sent it?" |
40366 | The next instant the girl was splashing through the water across to Mary, calling,"Excuse me, but_ is_ that a wildcat? |
40366 | Then Jack asked,"Did n''t you have any adventures down in the dining- room? |
40366 | Then with a keen look into Mary''s face, she added, kindly,"Why, you poor child, what''s the matter? |
40366 | Was Jack very much surprised?" |
40366 | Well, at quarter to five, then, I''ll meet you-- where?" |
40366 | What did I tell you?" |
40366 | What do you suppose that square tower is at the other end of town?" |
40366 | What have they done to earn such a name?" |
40366 | What particularly funny things did she say this time? |
40366 | What was it we were talking about? |
40366 | What will the left- out one do?" |
40366 | What_ are_ you going to do with them?" |
40366 | Which way this time?" |
40366 | Who in the world told you anything about that?" |
40366 | Why? |
40366 | Why_ does n''t_ he come? |
40366 | Will you be starting back to Warwick Hall again in September, now that Jack is sure of taking his old position in the mines then?" |
40366 | Wot is it?" |
40366 | Would n''t it be romantic if the friendship that started between them as children should grow into something more? |
40366 | Would n''t it have made a sensation? |
40366 | Yet how could he tell her, when she was all a- giggle and a- dimple and aglow from her romp with Norman? |
40366 | You always have pictured yourself as cutting quite a wide swath on your first appearance in society, have n''t you? |
40366 | You were singing about a Christmas tree, were n''t you? |
40366 | You''re crowded back there, are n''t you, with that dog sitting on your feet? |
40366 | _ Ca n''t_ you, pet?" |
40366 | _ What for?_ WHAT FOR?" |
40366 | _ What for?_ WHAT FOR?" |
40366 | _ What''s that?_"Her glance and question indicated a bundle that her mother had brought in from the back doorstep and laid on the bed. |
40366 | _ Where_ are you going?" |
40366 | _ Wo n''t_ we, Miss Mayry?" |
40366 | scolded Mary affectionately,"How am I ever going to get over this stone wall with you acting so?" |
40366 | will you?" |
42322 | And pray, let me ask, where do you intend that desirable operation to be performed? |
42322 | Anything to trink, shur? 42322 Is this proceeding just and honourable"towards that unfortunate race? |
42322 | What''s your_ name_, any how? |
42322 | Who gave you your invulnerable life, Your strength, your speed, your fury, and your joy? 42322 Will you be pleased, sir, to register your name?" |
42322 | Amid what terrible convulsion of the elements did these great ocean- plains heave themselves into being? |
42322 | And did the dust Of these fair solitudes once stir with life And burn with passion? |
42322 | Are they_ indeed_ to us no more than the dull clods we tread upon? |
42322 | Around the couch of suffering humanity, who could not outwatch the stars? |
42322 | But many a year of toil and privation must first have passed away; and who shall record their annals? |
42322 | But what pencil has wandered over the grander scenes of the North American prairie? |
42322 | But where is Joe Smith? |
42322 | But, with such an admission, what is the crowd of reflections which throng and startle the mind? |
42322 | By what race of beings was the vast undertaking accomplished? |
42322 | Can imagination boast, Amid its gay creations, hues like hers? |
42322 | Charles, Mo._ XXIII"Say, ancient edifice, thyself with years Grown gray, how long upon the hill has stood Thy weather- braving tower?" |
42322 | Clair Co., Illinois._ XV"Are they here, The dead of other days? |
42322 | France: who will aver that it was popular_ ignorance_ that rolled over revolutionary France the ocean- wave of blood? |
42322 | Has war, or famine, or pestilence brooded over these beautiful plains? |
42322 | Have we too many memorials of the olden time? |
42322 | Have we visited them with so_ many_ returns of kindness that this would overflow the cup of recompense? |
42322 | If knowledge, pure, defecated knowledge, be a conservative principle, why do we witness these appalling results? |
42322 | Is it in individual villany? |
42322 | Is it in legal enactment? |
42322 | Is it in public sentiment? |
42322 | Is not"knowledge omnipotent to preserve; the salt to purify the nations?" |
42322 | Is there no hallowing interest associated with these aged relics, these tombs, and temples, and towers of another race, to elicit emotion? |
42322 | It is a question daily becoming of more startling import, How may these fatal occurrences be successfully opposed? |
42322 | Many believed-- was there ever faith too preposterous to obtain proselytes? |
42322 | Of what_ other_ nation of Europe, if we except the Highlands of Scotland, may anything like the same assertion with truth be made? |
42322 | On learning, in reply to his inquiry,"Whence do ye come, stranger?" |
42322 | Or can it mix them with that matchless skill, And lose them in each other, as appears In every bud that blooms?" |
42322 | Or to what else shall we refer those collections of enormous seashells, heaped upon the soil, or thrown up to its surface from a depth of fifty feet? |
42322 | Plack your poots, shur? |
42322 | Shall the book of knowledge be taken from the hands of the people, and again be locked up in the libraries of the few? |
42322 | We are reproached as a nation by Europeans for the contemptible vice of avarice; is the censure unjust? |
42322 | What bard has struck his lyre to the wild melody of loveliness of the prairie sunset? |
42322 | What changes in its form and magnitude have taken place? |
42322 | What the associations which throng the excited fancy? |
42322 | What vicissitudes and revolutions have, in the lapse of centuries, rolled like successive waves over the plains at its base? |
42322 | What was its purpose? |
42322 | What woman does not love to tell over those passages of her history in which the_ heart_ has ruled lord of the ascendant? |
42322 | What, then, shall be done? |
42322 | When a scene like this is developed, what shall adequately depict it? |
42322 | When have the French,_ as a people_, exhibited a prouder era of mind than that of their sixteenth Louis? |
42322 | When was this stupendous earth- heap reared up from the plain? |
42322 | Where lies the fault? |
42322 | Who has not gazed with anguish on the sunken cheek and the emaciated frame of the young aspirant for literary distinction? |
42322 | Why did not intelligence save Greece? |
42322 | Why linger fondly around them, and meditate upon the power which reared them and is departed? |
42322 | Why now so lone and desolate? |
42322 | Why tear away the last and only relic of the past yet lingering in our midst? |
42322 | Why, then, does the wanderer from the far land gaze upon them with wonder and veneration? |
42322 | Yet was the emigrant satisfied? |
42322 | [ 128] What are the reflections to which this stupendous earth- heap gives birth? |
42322 | [ 33]_ Ohio River._ IV"Who can paint Like Nature? |
42322 | _ Greene County, Ill._ XVIII"What earthly feeling unabash''d can dwell In Nature''s mighty presence? |
42322 | and all that quiet{ 56} intermingling of heart with heart which divests grief of half its bitterness by taking from it all its loneliness? |
42322 | and what, and where are they and we, when evening''s lengthening shadows are gathering over the landscape of life? |
42322 | for who shall tell the emotions which may swell the bosom of many a dying emigrant who here shall find his long, last rest? |
42322 | mid the swell Of everlasting hills, the roar of floods, And frown of rocks and pomp of waving woods? |
42322 | shave your face, shur?" |
42322 | so she was: but why was not the subtle element neutralized in the cup of_ knowledge_ in which it was administered? |
42322 | to what those vast salt- plains of Arkansas? |
42322 | what do you reckon of sending this young Jack Stewart to Congress?" |
30415 | Alma, dear, do you remember how high we decided the new chimney was to be? 30415 Am I to be brought up at every second by a pert schoolgirl when I am expounding the mysteries of life? |
30415 | And the lady? |
30415 | And then Miss Waring was selected as the guilty party? |
30415 | And what is the use of it? |
30415 | And why not? |
30415 | And you think the message from him will come soon now? |
30415 | And your wife? |
30415 | Are n''t you almost ready? |
30415 | Are you interested in geology, Miss Denny? |
30415 | Are you sure, Mr. Franklin? 30415 Are you? |
30415 | But,said I,"did you say_ four_ children?" |
30415 | By all the saints, Herr Ritter, what has thrown you in the sand? |
30415 | Come,added he, with an effort, after covering his eyes a moment with his hand,"what have we now? |
30415 | Did you hear that? |
30415 | Did you, Violet? |
30415 | Do I understand,asked General Scott,"that the regiments report as they come here to the Honorable Secretary of State?" |
30415 | Do with what? |
30415 | Do you feel better? |
30415 | Do you know now-- know both of them, I mean? |
30415 | Do you see the mean, practical, commercial spirit of these women? |
30415 | Do you think you could telegraph to me from your pocket? |
30415 | Do you think you really love him? |
30415 | Friend then? |
30415 | Give it away,said Black Beaver--"give away to greatest----""Chief?" |
30415 | Graced,did I say? |
30415 | Have you? 30415 How are you, Quilibet First?" |
30415 | How can you repeat such absurdity, McCormack? |
30415 | How could I see him? 30415 How does he look, father? |
30415 | How much will that bring in? |
30415 | How much? |
30415 | How? |
30415 | How? |
30415 | I understand that well enough, Violet,said he gently,"but do n''t you think you ought to go for the very purpose of conquering that feeling? |
30415 | Indeed? 30415 Is that all of the story?" |
30415 | It is so, sir,added Mr. Belford; and then, waxing bolder, he said,"How could this young person, just from school, know anything of such matters? |
30415 | May I go too? |
30415 | Miss Waring? |
30415 | Morse''s? |
30415 | Mother, why do they keep back his letter? 30415 Mr. Denny, I presume?" |
30415 | My children? |
30415 | Not quite plumb, is it? |
30415 | Not this autumn? |
30415 | Photos? 30415 Seen anything of the railroad coach? |
30415 | Shall I tell you, Violet,he continued, gravely and gently,"why I want you to come with us? |
30415 | Shall we go for the flowers to- day? |
30415 | That is all the evidence you can give me? |
30415 | The first suspicion, I suppose, rested on Merrick? |
30415 | The same thing that the dentists use? |
30415 | Then I owe you to Mr. Floyd after all? |
30415 | Then what is in the trunks? |
30415 | Then you mean to keep it and use it yourself? |
30415 | There is not any letter yet? |
30415 | Thinking of what? |
30415 | We shall be together, shall we not? |
30415 | Well, well? 30415 What can that boy know about such things? |
30415 | What did he mean by that? |
30415 | What disease do you call it? |
30415 | What do you mean to do with it? |
30415 | What do you mean? |
30415 | What do you mean? |
30415 | What does he do that for? |
30415 | What does he do with them? |
30415 | What does the publisher say? |
30415 | What does this mean, sir? 30415 What effect did that report have on Merrick?" |
30415 | What royalty on all work executed by utilizing the tidal currents? |
30415 | What was the end of the story so far as Miss Waring was concerned? |
30415 | What will you do with it? |
30415 | What''s in that iron box, Elmer? |
30415 | What''s the matter? |
30415 | Where are you going, Alma? |
30415 | Where did your father get them? |
30415 | Who has said that I was a witness of the murder? |
30415 | Who''s a better right? |
30415 | Why did you say''how''? |
30415 | Why not rest here? |
30415 | Why not rest here? |
30415 | Why not? |
30415 | Why will you take me up so sharply, Lawrence? 30415 Why, you did n''t touch it?" |
30415 | Why? |
30415 | Will it be painful? |
30415 | Will you kindly give yourself the trouble to send the box to M. Delille, Friedrich strasse 30? |
30415 | Will you sell it to me? |
30415 | Wo n''t it be too dark? |
30415 | You are not going to leave us, Violet, just after we have found you? |
30415 | You are not really going to Scotland, are you? |
30415 | You did n''t know it was Alice Green? |
30415 | You did not hear the white man''s voice? |
30415 | You did? 30415 You have a tramway car that goes down to the pier, have you not?" |
30415 | You have it here? |
30415 | You have not yet been presented to her? |
30415 | You know the letters now perfectly, and if you had your hand on an armature, you could send off messages quickly? |
30415 | You mean that Simms''s murderer was never found? |
30415 | You think her feeling is unchanged for him? |
30415 | You-- you know all? |
30415 | You? 30415 _ Monsieur_,"he said,"_ peut- on douter_? |
30415 | _ Why Four Gospels?_By Rev. |
30415 | ( can you doubt?) |
30415 | 30?" |
30415 | 4 shot this year for the sea birds?" |
30415 | And I have been told you can get a small yacht for about £ 40 a month, crew and everything included, and what is that? |
30415 | And along with this wild grief came as keen remorse, for was this the conduct required of an attendant upon an invalid? |
30415 | And has not the charge of beefiness been brought much nearer home to us than that? |
30415 | And she? |
30415 | And then the brisk air of the hills, and of the yachting, will be better for you than the hot summer here, wo n''t it? |
30415 | Are you ill?" |
30415 | Are you ready now? |
30415 | Are you well this happy summer''s day?" |
30415 | At last she said:"Will you get down for a minute or two, and walk along the road? |
30415 | Being barely able to navigate those straits on a calm day, what could she be expected to do in a tempest? |
30415 | But does the Radical Club itself know anything at all about Apogée and Perigée? |
30415 | But how can we learn about our own dying by experience-- which is what we die to know about? |
30415 | But how if he had not yielded? |
30415 | But is not cyder an important thing to everybody? |
30415 | But is not that enough? |
30415 | But one day a friend of both questioned the father why he allowed his son such abused license? |
30415 | But the Cordial Liquor is doubtful; and then are there no girls in the sweet bloom of maidenhood left to Comfort up our lives? |
30415 | But was W. S. present? |
30415 | But what are they to the enduring genius of Abbotsford? |
30415 | But why are you dragging out that wretched affair?" |
30415 | But----Well, what do you make of her-- her face now?" |
30415 | Could anything be finer than that? |
30415 | Did God make us to mock us, on the earth? |
30415 | Did he build a staging, or did he climb up the inside like a chimney sweep?" |
30415 | Did he live to be a man? |
30415 | Did he weigh eight pounds or ten? |
30415 | Did n''t I answer all your questions about Minna Lawson while I was talking with her by tapping on the table with a spoon?" |
30415 | Did she not come from the delectable mountains, and did I not have a sort of filial regard for her as toward my foster mother? |
30415 | Did the Native mean that woman then was silly and man then noble? |
30415 | Did you ever hear of that cook?" |
30415 | Did you smell no hay or cropped herbage, see no summer pastures with circles of cool shade, hear no voice of herds among the hills? |
30415 | Do n''t you agree with me, William?" |
30415 | Do n''t you think we might come upon another Mount Glorioso?" |
30415 | Do n''t you think, Mrs. Warrener, that it will be very dangerous to go to Portsea?" |
30415 | Do they? |
30415 | Do you ever buy an Almanac for five cents? |
30415 | Do you know the alphabet?" |
30415 | Do you know what it is?" |
30415 | Do you know what that is? |
30415 | Do you know, gentle reader, what an interesting, valuable, and useful book an"Almanack"once was? |
30415 | Do you observe anything peculiar in her face or manner?" |
30415 | Do you remember that cook? |
30415 | Do you see those wires? |
30415 | Do you see? |
30415 | Do you take pictures?" |
30415 | Do you understand that?" |
30415 | Does he live far from here?" |
30415 | Does he mean that winter had come back and given May a late frost? |
30415 | Does he mean the worshippers of Mercury, thieves, and that sort? |
30415 | Does he mean to speak ill of Christmas-- to stab it? |
30415 | Even his most disinterested advice pivots on the thought,"What will pay me best?" |
30415 | For what may well be said of prophets when A world that''s wicked comes to call them good? |
30415 | Franklin?" |
30415 | Had Alma fainted? |
30415 | Had he better place himself so utterly at the mercy of this young man? |
30415 | Had he black eyes or blue? |
30415 | Had he cut the wires? |
30415 | Had he not better preserve it? |
30415 | Had it come to this already? |
30415 | Had they no wild, despairing thoughts about him? |
30415 | Had they seen none of those things? |
30415 | Has W. S. grown lazy? |
30415 | Has she a ring? |
30415 | Have you been ill treating my cousin?" |
30415 | Have you not made some mistake?" |
30415 | Have you voices, merry birds? |
30415 | He nodded pleasantly, and said,"Would you like to see some of my traps?" |
30415 | Her eyes seemed to say to him:"I heard you call? |
30415 | How could I go back to all those places?" |
30415 | How should I? |
30415 | I returned his own answer:"Monsieur, peut- on douter?" |
30415 | I tried a bit of it on your chimney this morning, and what do you think I found?" |
30415 | If I fain Would lean beyond the barrier, do you see The wounding and the stain? |
30415 | If all at Once are Mov''d, and by one Spring, Why so Unequal in their Annual Ring?" |
30415 | If not, why that"Why"? |
30415 | Is his cardinal weakness a vice or only a foible-- a crime that degrades or only a pettiness that narrows him? |
30415 | Is his hair dark, or has he blue eyes? |
30415 | Is it body or spirit that rules him-- his fear, lust, vanity, gluttony, surliness, or sloth? |
30415 | Is it really out?" |
30415 | Is it too warm for assiduous tasks, or has a new element come into his life? |
30415 | Is there_ really_ to be a war?" |
30415 | It would be a pity that we should separate so soon, after that long time, would it not? |
30415 | Listening, were you?" |
30415 | May I look at it?" |
30415 | May we not put a_ dis_ before it? |
30415 | Might not her refusal to marry him be caused by the same fear? |
30415 | Mother, are all my dresses ready?" |
30415 | Mr. Denny looked surprised, and said,"What?" |
30415 | Mr. Denny takes a cup of coffee, and while sipping it remarks:"How many more window- frames shall you require for the new mill, Lawrence?" |
30415 | Must this be all? |
30415 | Must we indeed? |
30415 | Not that you are going away without me? |
30415 | Not you?" |
30415 | Nothing more?" |
30415 | Now what threat could have been strong enough to keep a weak girl silent for years, and to separate her from her lover on their wedding day? |
30415 | Now, in order that we shall all reach this earthly paradise, what is to be done? |
30415 | Now, will the government grant me a patent?" |
30415 | Oh, citizen, was it only a plodding, unsightly brute that went by? |
30415 | Or will you try the islands-- Jura, or Islay, or Mull?" |
30415 | Pleasure? |
30415 | Presently Mr. Denny said:"I presume, Mr. Franklin, that you are greatly interested in your school studies?" |
30415 | Queer sound, is n''t it?" |
30415 | See those two people sitting on the little bridge that crosses the race beyond the mill? |
30415 | Shakespeare, On Reading_ Richard Grant White_ 70, 233 Shall Punishment Punish? |
30415 | Shall I take it out for you?" |
30415 | Shall the brougham be bottle- green or coffee- colored?" |
30415 | Shall we try to get some lodging in an inn or farmhouse about the Moor of Rannoch? |
30415 | Should I send Drewer, the colored patriarch, for her? |
30415 | Should she go toward Kendall Green to- day, or follow the Tiber, or over by the Big Spring, or out around Lincoln Hospital? |
30415 | Should_ Orpheus_ come in there, or are orphans children of Orpheus? |
30415 | Smoke?" |
30415 | Some of the young people had gathered in the library-- Paul Merrick and his sisters and-- you were there, William?" |
30415 | Speak: wilt thou AVORICE or PLEASURE Chuse To be thy Lord? |
30415 | Suddenly she turned upon him, and said, with ill- suppressed excitement:"What did you do with it, Elmer?" |
30415 | Take one? |
30415 | That is a wild goose, a gray lag, that has been driven in by bad weather;_ now_ can you say we have no waves, and winds, and sea in the south?" |
30415 | That was all very well as a spectacular exhibition; but how when he was apparently instructing them in some serious matter? |
30415 | The King, then, does not greet or regard him as a messenger, but exclaims,"What bloody man is that?" |
30415 | The bargaining man, who, partly by instinct and partly by practice, judges everything from the point of view,"How is that going to affect me?" |
30415 | The chimney, the two in the photo, and the strange paper: what did they all mean? |
30415 | The clock, the cyder, the thermometer, the little Bille: what more important matters had he or have we to record? |
30415 | The elder woman noticed something strange about Violet''s expression, but she did not speak of it, for surely the girl was happy enough? |
30415 | The most faithful, the most gentle, the purest, the----""But is she so dangerously ill?" |
30415 | The motive I had guessed to be strong as her love: what if it were her love? |
30415 | The question is, which of these men and women are the best? |
30415 | To whom? |
30415 | Two years passed, when one day, in a lonely part of the Thiergarten, I met-- whom do you think? |
30415 | Was he as fond of turning the cards as the other young fellows?" |
30415 | Was he like his father or his mother? |
30415 | Was he little or big? |
30415 | Was he not growing to like her-- perhaps love her? |
30415 | Was it a kind of far- sightedness and near blindness? |
30415 | Was it wise to destroy it? |
30415 | Was there no chord in your bosom, long silent, that sweetly vibrated at the sight of that patient, Herculean couple? |
30415 | Were there but these two ways? |
30415 | What am I?" |
30415 | What but a dream would have been even the realization of all his hopes? |
30415 | What can I do for you? |
30415 | What chance is there? |
30415 | What did it mean? |
30415 | What did you do with it?" |
30415 | What do you intend to do about it?" |
30415 | What do you mean?" |
30415 | What do you say-- a fortnight hence?" |
30415 | What does he mean? |
30415 | What farm- yard has this one left?" |
30415 | What had happened? |
30415 | What had happened? |
30415 | What have Dr. Scheffer''s habits been, by the way? |
30415 | What have you discovered?" |
30415 | What have you said or done to Miss Denny?" |
30415 | What have your twopenny- halfpenny science primers to do with the grand secret of toddy? |
30415 | What is it that you say?--what is it that you mean? |
30415 | What is it?" |
30415 | What is that-- that queer thing on the table? |
30415 | What is this? |
30415 | What made her instinctively throw her arms round him, with terror in her eyes? |
30415 | What matter? |
30415 | What mattered it that a girl should give up her friends and her home? |
30415 | What may it have been? |
30415 | What need of those things? |
30415 | What new blunder had he committed? |
30415 | What of her? |
30415 | What should he do or say? |
30415 | What should he do with it? |
30415 | What then? |
30415 | What though thy sounding song be roughly set? |
30415 | What was any human being to make of this rambling nonsense? |
30415 | What was the nature of the documents? |
30415 | What were a heaven with but one only star? |
30415 | What were those old Vikings but thick- hided bulls that delighted in nothing so much as goring each other? |
30415 | What were you saying?" |
30415 | What wicked waggery is here hidden, who can tell? |
30415 | What would happen next? |
30415 | What, just after all this grief of separation, you would go away from us again? |
30415 | When the close of the year sets us to reckoning up how much we have made of life, pray what is that"success"of which we all talk so glibly? |
30415 | When they had gone some distance she stopped and said in a low and earnest voice:"Do n''t you know why I can not go to the Highlands with you? |
30415 | Where is Dr. Scheffer now? |
30415 | Where is that clock now? |
30415 | Where, for example, could she go for sweeter consolation, for more cheering solace than to the simple and reassuring services of the church? |
30415 | Who can tell? |
30415 | Who could he be? |
30415 | Who could they be? |
30415 | Who else could have written this passage, not only for its excellence but for its peculiarity? |
30415 | Who will teach him? |
30415 | Who will tell him? |
30415 | Who would not hang a negro- mancer like that? |
30415 | Who would not, under thy benign influence, forget all rancor and bitterness, even though his deadliest enemy sat opposite? |
30415 | Why did he fuse our spirits by His word, Then set His awful Angel in our path, His Angel with the sword? |
30415 | Why does my blood thrill at your fancied touch-- Stop and leap up at your ideal caress? |
30415 | Why endure sciatica pains after this? |
30415 | Why should I disturb his happiness even though it might be a dream? |
30415 | Why should he be obliged to make reports of the revenue which his own financiering had secured to the mission, to the head at Montreal? |
30415 | Why should she disturb the gentle confidence of his sister and her daughter? |
30415 | Why should the confidential clerk hide papers in his bed? |
30415 | Why should we bring in a famous lawyer to sit in judgment on her as if the girl were a criminal? |
30415 | Why were both father and daughter in such evident distress? |
30415 | Why, therefore, should not our fortune be made at once, and the gates of Bayswater thrown open to the Peri? |
30415 | Why? |
30415 | Will it not come again? |
30415 | Will you have breakfast out here in the porch?" |
30415 | Will you not join us, Lawrence?" |
30415 | Will you sit?" |
30415 | Wo n''t you open one of the trunks and let us see some of the things?" |
30415 | Wonder if he''s spooney on her?" |
30415 | Wonder what it all means? |
30415 | Would n''t you like to help me?" |
30415 | Would you like to try a whiff? |
30415 | You are quite sure everything is ready?" |
30415 | You knew all the circumstances of that terrible night?" |
30415 | You remember him surely-- of the Henrico branch of Warings?" |
30415 | _ November_-- Now what remains to Comfort up our lives, But Cordial Liquor and kind, loving Wives? |
30415 | cou-- Mr. Franklin, what is that?" |
30415 | he makes arrow- heads, does he? |
30415 | his humility, generosity, piety, sense of justice, sense of duty? |
30415 | said the inventor peevishly,"why do you tack on these petty details to my grand conception? |
30415 | some crushing disgrace or misery which threatened her through the murder, and which she feared to bring upon her husband? |
40875 | ''Then, why do you not go out and see? 40875 Am I not right?" |
40875 | An''is it a drum ye hear? |
40875 | And before then? |
40875 | And of what, pray, are you afraid? |
40875 | And why did you not see the bear? |
40875 | Are you ill? 40875 But how do you know it?" |
40875 | But how in the world could I get anything to them? |
40875 | But you did not come at nine o''clock? |
40875 | Come, now,said he,"you ca n''t deny that''s your cart, can you?" |
40875 | Did n''t you send the medium, only yesterday, a horse and cart to be dematerialized? |
40875 | Did you know that Charlie M. is dead? 40875 Do you mean to say that they wear jewelry in the other world?" |
40875 | Ever been in a street- car accident? |
40875 | Ever seen one? |
40875 | For me? |
40875 | Has he anything particular to say to me? |
40875 | Have you any objection to my hypnotizing you? |
40875 | Have you seen him lately? |
40875 | How do you know it is n''t? |
40875 | How long have you been suffering in this way? |
40875 | I wonder if A is really dead-- for good and all? 40875 I wonder what he''s doing in town, anyway?" |
40875 | Is it only odd- numbered cars that affect you? 40875 Is that all you are afraid of?" |
40875 | Look here,said the foreman, pressing him gently into a seat,"where do you suppose you are, anyway?" |
40875 | On my arrival my first question was:''Is he still alive?'' 40875 The more I think of it,"Stevenson continues,"the more I am moved to press upon the world my question:''Who are the little people?'' |
40875 | Then what have you got your hat on for? |
40875 | What are you looking at? |
40875 | What in the world is the matter? |
40875 | What is the matter, Doctor Langtry? |
40875 | What makes you say that? |
40875 | What next? |
40875 | What''s the difference? 40875 When was it?" |
40875 | When? |
40875 | Which is it? |
40875 | Who did, then? |
40875 | Who in the world is he? |
40875 | Whose ghost? |
40875 | Why do I say what? |
40875 | Why do n''t you get your clothes off and go to bed? |
40875 | Why do you call me Smith? |
40875 | Why do you say this? |
40875 | Why was it? |
40875 | Why, yes, ca n''t you hear it? 40875 You are quite sure as to that?" |
40875 | You do n''t? |
40875 | Aloud she asked:"Whose portrait is that?" |
40875 | But now, accepting telepathy as an established fact, the problem remains: How are we to explain it? |
40875 | But where could he have read it? |
40875 | But why do you ask?" |
40875 | But, the reader may well ask, what does all this mean? |
40875 | Ca n''t you see it? |
40875 | Ca n''t you see them? |
40875 | Can I be of any use to you?'' |
40875 | Can I do anything for you?'' |
40875 | Can it be that she is really suffering from some kind of paralysis?" |
40875 | Can there really be more than one self, one personality, in human beings? |
40875 | Do you not understand that it is only the name of the fine gentleman in blue and green, whom you see marching up and down? |
40875 | Doctor Lià © geois immediately put him into the hypnotic state, and demanded:"Do you know why you came here this morning?" |
40875 | Does death end personality? |
40875 | Does it follow that the self perishes with bodily death? |
40875 | For the time she thought no more of it, but at dinner she turned to her host, the Earl of Airlie, and asked:"My lord, who is your drummer?" |
40875 | Had he been attracted by the light through the shutter? |
40875 | Has Lord Ogilvy brought a band with him?" |
40875 | Have you never heard of the Drummer of Cortachy?" |
40875 | Hazard?" |
40875 | How about odd- numbered houses, for instance?" |
40875 | How did I get here? |
40875 | How explain? |
40875 | How, then, does it come into your hands?" |
40875 | How_ can_ I bear it? |
40875 | Hypnotizing the patient as usual, he demanded:"What is this''cholera''that troubles you so much? |
40875 | I trust she is well?" |
40875 | If so, what are we? |
40875 | In the evening papers? |
40875 | Is it that she will have to spend the rest of her life in an asylum?" |
40875 | Is man soulless? |
40875 | Is there any truth in that? |
40875 | It occurred to me to ask:''Was it, 1, Earl''s Square?'' |
40875 | It read:"Are you hurt or ill? |
40875 | Must we be separated, she and I? |
40875 | Now, what were you doing last night, at that time?" |
40875 | Oh, ca n''t you see them?" |
40875 | On seeing Z. a few days afterward, I inquired:"''Did anything happen at your rooms on Saturday night?'' |
40875 | Perceiving I was alarmed about something, she asked:"''What is the matter?'' |
40875 | Shall I be, after I have ceased to exist here on earth? |
40875 | Tell me, Doctor Prince, am I going insane?" |
40875 | Tell me, doctor, is my poor Justine mad? |
40875 | That has been the real obstacle, has it not?" |
40875 | What are my capabilities? |
40875 | What does he say?" |
40875 | What does it mean?" |
40875 | What does this mean? |
40875 | What had become of his normal ego, the ego of which alone he had formerly been aware? |
40875 | What have you done with mine?" |
40875 | What if I should catch the cholera? |
40875 | What is the end to be? |
40875 | What is the true nature of man? |
40875 | What will become of me?" |
40875 | Whatever is the matter?" |
40875 | When did you get here? |
40875 | Whence the origin of these odd apparitions? |
40875 | Where am I? |
40875 | Where, it may well be asked, was this man''s original self during these two years? |
40875 | Why should I do things which so mortify my pride? |
40875 | Why should Miss Morison and Miss Lamont, among all the thousands of visitors to the Petit Trianon, alone have had such an experience? |
40875 | You do not believe this? |
40875 | says I,"am I going crazy?" |
35509 | ''Non, Monsieur,''he insists;''what of the casks of good red wine I find spilled upon the floor the morning following midsummer eve?'' |
35509 | A call to the beautiful, the wholesome, the healthful for body and mind and soul, where I might meet my fellows and become their friend? 35509 A whole circus?" |
35509 | Ah, I thought so.... What has he done? 35509 Ah, my little jade,"said he, with an obvious note of sympathy and gratitude in his voice,"so you have heard the call of the road?... |
35509 | An elf- arrow? |
35509 | And what do you think of it all, my children? |
35509 | And your Aunt Barbara? |
35509 | Are you certain? |
35509 | Are you feeling quite strong enough, Monsieur Jacques? |
35509 | Are you still web- footed? |
35509 | Are you sure of it? |
35509 | Are you sure, sir? 35509 Could you-- do you suppose she would come to- morrow? |
35509 | Did you ever hear the story of''The King of Bohemia and the Beggar from Bagdad''? |
35509 | Did you notice that dear dimpled little red one at the house where we bought the milk? |
35509 | Do I what? |
35509 | Do n''t you know the elf people, Nance? 35509 Do you live here?" |
35509 | Do you think I shall be ill for any length of time? |
35509 | Do you wish to go? |
35509 | Do you, Bricktop? |
35509 | Father Picot?... 35509 Felix, you are positively indecorous.... Cultivate a tramp?" |
35509 | First? |
35509 | For the night, you mean? |
35509 | For who? |
35509 | Has n''t he said so? 35509 Have you heard it too-- the call of the road? |
35509 | He looks familiar,said the Captain;"what other name is he called?" |
35509 | He''ll be here in less than a fortnight.... Have any of you heard from him? |
35509 | Hello, Nance,said I, careless like, as I came forward,"been wading?" |
35509 | How do you stand it? |
35509 | How would it suit you, Nance Gwyn of the sun- colored hair, to one day be mistress of the mansion? |
35509 | I have been Romeo, but no more for me.... Nance, you red- headed little jade, how old are you? |
35509 | I suppose I''d better lecture you? |
35509 | I wonder what has kept him so long? |
35509 | I wonder where he is? |
35509 | If you love it, why do n''t you follow it then? |
35509 | Is he a_ real_ poet? |
35509 | Is that as you like it, my dears?... 35509 Jesus, the good Master,"said he,"loved the roads, the Judean hills, the laughing Jordan, and to sleep out under the stars at night, did he not?" |
35509 | Know anything? |
35509 | Let me see,said the doctor reminiscently;"when did I first discover the happy pedler?... |
35509 | Meantime, my dears, do n''t you think it would be pretty fine for you to grow up and live in this old home as your very own? 35509 More than likely-- more than likely,"he repeated reflectively,"and who knows save the good God-- and who knows?" |
35509 | My friend,said he rather abruptly,"if I should need a nurse other than old Prosper, whom would you likely get for me?" |
35509 | Nance,he said earnestly as he flicked the burning match into the dust,"I do not think I would make much of a preacher, do you?" |
35509 | Shall you go? |
35509 | She is beautiful, now, is n''t she, my dears? 35509 So you two are just discovering my friend, Jean François?... |
35509 | So you would really like to grow up and live in the Abbé''s house? |
35509 | The old home of the many pillars? |
35509 | Well, Nance? |
35509 | Well, does n''t he? |
35509 | What ever made you think of babies? |
35509 | What has she been doing then? |
35509 | What is it, my brother? |
35509 | What of you? |
35509 | What will you do? |
35509 | What would you have? |
35509 | What?... 35509 Where are we going, Jean François?" |
35509 | Where''d I come from? 35509 Who is?" |
35509 | Why do n''t you follow it? |
35509 | Why not, my girl? |
35509 | Why not? |
35509 | Why should I? |
35509 | Why? |
35509 | Will we? |
35509 | Will you place some pillows behind me? |
35509 | With what?... 35509 Would n''t it be exceedingly funny?" |
35509 | You asked me, my dear Jean François, what I would do were I Monsieur l''Abbé Picot and heard the call of Pan? |
35509 | You have n''t stolen anything? |
35509 | You impulsive jade,said he, evidently pleased,"would you banish me from Oldmeadow?" |
35509 | You knew him all of the time? |
35509 | You say I shall die? |
35509 | You wo n''t go, Jean François? |
35509 | Your master is wrong, my lad.... Tell me, your face seems familiar to me,said the Abbé,"have I ever seen you before?" |
35509 | *****"Who is that little priest with his robes tucked up, struggling through the street with the yelling dirty brat in his arms?" |
35509 | A road like that, my friend?" |
35509 | Ah, he told himself, was there anything better than to be a maker of dreams? |
35509 | Ah-- ah-- you know who she is, Charles?" |
35509 | And his heroes, were they not Porthos, La Fayette, D''Artagnan, Washington, and Napoleon? |
35509 | And if you were impolite enough to ask me where I was going, that''s where-- down the road.... Where do I live?" |
35509 | And pray, why not? |
35509 | And what would become of Columbine, Rogue, and Pierrett without the dingle and_ le long trimard_? |
35509 | Any silk, any thread, Any toys for your head, Of the new''st and finest, finest wear- a? |
35509 | Any silk, any thread, Any toys for your head, Of the new''st and finest, finest wear- a? |
35509 | Any silk, any thread, Any toys for your head, Of the new''st and finest, finest wear- a? |
35509 | As long as we were lusty and the road was at the morning, why should we care? |
35509 | At least a half dozen times did she sing the pedler''s favorite air:"Will you buy any tape, Or lace for your cape, My dainty ducky, my dear- a?" |
35509 | Aye, on occasions even to find the very hideousness of things containing some inner, secret loveliness for the souls of men? |
35509 | Besides, can not I make the people good Catholics?" |
35509 | Besides, were they not waiting for their happy pedler in another far- off gracious land?... |
35509 | But do you think she would come?" |
35509 | But for one of the least: Do you think,"said he,"that vagabondia would mix with the average conventional church community?" |
35509 | But, as for the other, why not? |
35509 | CHAPTER THREE JEAN FRANÇOIS''VAST POSSESSIONS Would it make you happy to know that you possessed, as your heart''s own, a long, white, alluring road? |
35509 | Come?'' |
35509 | Did n''t I know it? |
35509 | Did n''t I sense the real river and the road and the happy hills long, long ago?... |
35509 | Did not the dominant spirit within her bear a close likeness to his own phantasmagoric soul? |
35509 | Did we not want him forever? |
35509 | Did you hear me? |
35509 | Do you remember?" |
35509 | Eh, Charles?" |
35509 | Eh, Pierrett? |
35509 | Eh, Pierrett?" |
35509 | Eh? |
35509 | Eh?... |
35509 | Eloped with your Aunt Barbara?... |
35509 | Finally, as if exhausted, he asked rather meekly:"From what star did you drop?... |
35509 | Had he not shown to her the ways of fairies and elf- kings?... |
35509 | Had not father often remonstrated with mother at too much washing, insisting that it was part of a small boy''s portion to get dirty and to sniffle? |
35509 | Had she not grown exceedingly bold and saucy?... |
35509 | Have you ever given study to the sins of back yards?... |
35509 | He has a wife who is comely and smiling, and three or four daughters about.... Now, lady, let me ask you a question?" |
35509 | He is doing nothing worthy of enjoying such a charming house, is he? |
35509 | He knew what she would have advised straightway.... What would Nance expect? |
35509 | He was authority, for was he himself not an elf- child but a few generations removed? |
35509 | I think I should not mind turning back right now, would you? |
35509 | I wonder when, Charles?" |
35509 | I''m with you.... Now tell me how you got here?" |
35509 | I--""Of my barefoot years?" |
35509 | If I should choose the merry pack, what of it? |
35509 | In fact was she-- the real, true, immortal she-- not his creation? |
35509 | Is it any wonder that the elves, the fairies, the children came and ministered unto him? |
35509 | It must come from her heart to his soul.... She turned to him:"Dear old friend, you''ll give me a little time?... |
35509 | It was a joyous, beautiful, glorious road with never a sigh nor a fret, for were they not homeward bound with hearts set to rights? |
35509 | It will be enough, I am sure.... That sum should pay a passage to New Orleans and return and buy a little mare, should it not, Monsieur?" |
35509 | Jacques?... |
35509 | Just imagine, you mean?" |
35509 | May not old Pan with his pipes be the brother of the Man with the heart of God?" |
35509 | Monsieur Jacques, where are your poor? |
35509 | No?" |
35509 | No?" |
35509 | Now what better could a man want? |
35509 | Now would n''t that pretty well indicate that a man had some privileges? |
35509 | Now, in the first place, how was I to know Miss Nance Gwyn had sauntered down there in the middle of the afternoon? |
35509 | Prettiest color on earth? |
35509 | Shall I tell you things, Jean François?" |
35509 | She holds my dreams.... What more could you ask? |
35509 | She is a part of this estate and my will gives her into hands that love.... Would this be asking too much, Monsieur Doctor? |
35509 | Should he stop at the next farmhouse and leave her a victim for the spare bedroom? |
35509 | So I crept silently over the fence, stepped around a tree, and how should I know with what my eyes were to be greeted? |
35509 | Some even thought that the touch of his strong rough hands had wrought things miraculous.... Had he not-- but why tell of it to the unbelieving? |
35509 | Tell me frankly, shall I be very sick?" |
35509 | That is quite enough.... What do you want, my dear unwearied sister-- a frilled shirt- front? |
35509 | Their dances and their songs? |
35509 | Then suddenly, with a questioning glance of reproach at Jean François:"You did not know I was here?" |
35509 | Then you know how ambitious youth can become wrapped utterly in its expectations?... |
35509 | Then, after a moment''s study of Nance, who had resumed her gazing into the fire:"Of what has the fire been speaking to- night?... |
35509 | Then, frowning and with a touch of sarcasm:"I suppose you will disapprove of me?" |
35509 | Until to- night?" |
35509 | Was she not a part of the great life? |
35509 | Was there any rare and startling tale stirring his heart? |
35509 | Was there anything of greater interest, I ask you, than my possibilities, my plans, my expectations? |
35509 | Was there ever a time, which the business of the moment did not demand, that I was not building a thousand fancies of her? |
35509 | Were they not a part of the tradition of Oldmeadow? |
35509 | Were they not time- honored? |
35509 | Were we not interested in getting her just as black as possible? |
35509 | What did we care about all of this? |
35509 | What do you know about my task? |
35509 | What do you say? |
35509 | What else, pray you, could one have wished? |
35509 | What if we should never die? |
35509 | What is it?" |
35509 | What were the struggles and experiences of the soul of this adventurous brother of St. Francis of Assisi? |
35509 | What would a man do?" |
35509 | What would you do, I ask?... |
35509 | Where I could and would at times bring gentleness and love into their lives? |
35509 | Where I should meet children and make them see? |
35509 | Where are the pinched hungry mouths with whom you once shared your crusts?... |
35509 | Who ever heard of a circus without an audience? |
35509 | Who knows, my children? |
35509 | Who were Ariel and Puck, anyhow? |
35509 | Who would dare to say this was not his privilege? |
35509 | Who, dear friends, could think of greater recitations than these? |
35509 | Why did you run away?" |
35509 | Why not an heir by love? |
35509 | With who?" |
35509 | Women and teach them the value of life?... |
35509 | Yes?" |
35509 | Yes?" |
35509 | Yes?" |
35509 | Yes?" |
35509 | Yes?" |
35509 | Yes?... |
35509 | Yes?... |
35509 | You would n''t believe it, now, would you? |
35509 | Your shabby little brothers of the Parisian street? |
35509 | Your supper will be served_ al fresco_.... Will you deign to share it with me?" |
35509 | was she not always in my mind, my heart? |
49141 | Aw, wait a minute, ca n''t you? |
49141 | Did n''t you once roll down the hill in a churn? |
49141 | Getting it? |
49141 | How about Farmer in the Dell? |
49141 | Know what day it is, Mumsie? |
49141 | Little- tot, where are you? |
49141 | Mother,asked Blacky- ears as they waited for the door to be unlocked--"Mother,--was Bad Boy Mischief there at the picnic?" |
49141 | Mumsie, we fellows want to play pirate, and first may we have some bread and molasses? |
49141 | Now, Spotty, what does your side choose to play? 49141 Oh, Miss Pinky, do you suppose Santa will really, truly come here to see us?" |
49141 | What do you mean? |
49141 | What were you trying to do? |
49141 | Why will you do such things? 49141 Wo n''t you come back again next Thursday?" |
49141 | Yes-- why it''s-- Wednesday, is n''t it? |
49141 | You will promise to be good, my dears? |
49141 | And what do you suppose? |
49141 | And you know all about how Old Mother Pig sent them forth to seek their fortunes, do n''t you? |
49141 | But where? |
49141 | Come on, will you play too?" |
49141 | Do you know--?" |
49141 | Do you wonder that they laughingly told each other that they would have no idle minutes that day? |
49141 | Have you lived in this house always, Mother Grunty?" |
49141 | How many hours ago did it strike 2?" |
49141 | How many want to play hide and seek?" |
49141 | I''m sorry-- honest I am,--but where''s the picnic?" |
49141 | Just what do you think that table looked like a half- hour later? |
49141 | Page 5, added missing quote after"be good, my dears?" |
49141 | You do n''t want to be called Johnny shoestrings, do you?" |
49141 | may we go over where the music is?" |
44777 | But what, Doctor, what do you mean? 44777 Did you try, Jim?" |
44777 | Do you see this knife and bloody cravat, gentlemen? 44777 Have you seen him?" |
44777 | I have been told,said one of the ladies,"that some of the Indians have a number of wives: is that so?" |
44777 | In what way? |
44777 | Oh, I am so happy to have the honour of seeing you, Sir, and of speaking to you-- you have made all these paintings? |
44777 | Seen him? 44777 Seen them? |
44777 | So he did,said Jim;"and who could say otherwise, when the Doctor poked his ugly face so suddenly in amongst them? |
44777 | Then you have seen them''? |
44777 | Then you have seen them? |
44777 | There,said he,"is n''t she a roarer? |
44777 | This leather strap-- gentlemen, do you see it? 44777 Well, Jim,"said I,"what do you think of the King, Louis Philippe?" |
44777 | Well, now,said Jeffrey,"you do n''t say so?" |
44777 | Well, tell the Doctor I want to know what they do with so many? |
44777 | Well,said I,"never mind, he and I will manage that; it is after midnight, and I suppose the other houses are all shut?" |
44777 | Well,said Jim, in broad English,"some_ fish_ there, I guess, ha? |
44777 | What do you call a tax? |
44777 | Where you live? |
44777 | Why is that? |
44777 | Why not kill them? |
44777 | You sweep dirt in the road? |
44777 | You think so? |
44777 | ''Do you know the white chief who is visiting his friends this night on the bank yonder where we see the lights?'' |
44777 | --e--(hic)--e-- and the-- r breathin, he--(hic)--e-- in thee-- ir noses?" |
44777 | And they naturally put the question at once--"What state would the country be in if the military and police were all taken away?" |
44777 | But I dare say a little_ washing_ and living in a city would bring them nearly white? |
44777 | But stop, he wo n''t tell the Doctor that, will he? |
44777 | By the way, these fellows are not from the coast-- they are from a great way back, I dare say?" |
44777 | Come, will you, Daniel? |
44777 | Do n''t you think it is wrong?" |
44777 | Doctor,"said she,"I hope you do n''t accuse the ladies of London of drinking gin?" |
44777 | He said, the gentleman asked him if he believed it? |
44777 | He said, the gentleman then asked him why he thought those poor ignorant animals the hyenas would go there? |
44777 | He''ll recollect me, wo n''t he, Daniel? |
44777 | How can any good result from this? |
44777 | How long have_ you_ bin from there, sir?" |
44777 | I do n''t suppose there is another house open in this darned outlandish place at this time of the night; what the devil shall I do? |
44777 | I hope you have not so bad an opinion of white women as that?" |
44777 | I suppose you are going to stop awhile in Birmingham?" |
44777 | I suppose you kept pretty much back in the mountains? |
44777 | I told her I was n''t from_ any quarter_, I was from_ half_--half the globe, by God, and the better half too-- wasn''t I right, stranger? |
44777 | I would n''t for the world hurt the poor old man''s feelings-- no, Daniel, not for twenty bracelets-- what shall we do?" |
44777 | I would now ask why it do n''t make good people of the pale faces living all around us? |
44777 | I''m damned anxious to meet them: you''ve seen them, I suppose?" |
44777 | In advancing towards them, the one who seemed to be the leader of the party turned around and exclaimed,"Oh, here comes Mr. Catlin, I believe?" |
44777 | Jeffrey said,"Why, ma''am, it is what in our country means a''_ lot_:''you know what they call a''_ lot_''here?" |
44777 | Jim asked,"What have all those poor animals and birds done that they should be shut up to die? |
44777 | Madam,"said he,"what have you?" |
44777 | Some one of the ladies then told him she feared he did not admire the ladies enough? |
44777 | That_ Roman- nose_ is a magnificent fellow-- he''s got no wife, has he, Daniel?" |
44777 | The chief said,''But you did not intrust your dog to my care, did you?'' |
44777 | The reverend gentleman inquired--"Do you not think that the Great Spirit sometimes punishes the Indians in this world for their sins?" |
44777 | These are fine men-- they grow tea, I suppose, though?" |
44777 | They had first asked him if he was married? |
44777 | They never have murdered anybody-- they have not been guilty of stealing, and they owe no money; why should they be kept so, and there to die?" |
44777 | They then asked him why he did not get him a wife? |
44777 | Two or three inquired what a"_ heap_"was? |
44777 | When he got through, and entered his estimates in his book, Jim asked him"if he found anything in his head?" |
44777 | You''ll think by and by that I am a pretty good customer; ha, Daniel? |
44777 | [ 7] What could be done? |
44777 | _ Both were hung._"Do you see this short gun, gentlemen? |
44777 | _ Chee- au- mung- ta- wangish- kee, Bobasheela._"My friends, will you allow me to move along towards that good old fellow? |
44777 | _ She was hung._"Do you see that club, gentlemen? |
44777 | asked one of them,"if a poor man is hungry and sees a fine fish in the water, is he not allowed to spear it out and eat it?" |
44777 | they put me out at every step; they are so eternally ignorant; did you ever see the like? |
44777 | what a beautiful colour he was, ha? |
44777 | what are you about? |
49412 | ''Did you never see a Hessian?'' 49412 ''Do we look like Hessians?'' |
49412 | ''Well,''said the man,''do you wish to hear from them, or send any thing by way of refreshment to them? 49412 And why is it called the rebel flower?" |
49412 | Are you the captain of''the Revenge''? |
49412 | Have you any? 49412 How dare you disturb a family under the protection of both armies?" |
49412 | Is it possible you are the man represented to be a bloody and ferocious pirate, whose chief delight is in scenes of carnage? |
49412 | Is she killed? 49412 Sir William Howe-- I presume?" |
49412 | What is this, madam? |
49412 | When we got to the front door, we asked,''Who are you?'' 49412 * Ramsay''s History of South Carolina: Moultrie''s Memoirs? 49412 Allen? |
49412 | One day the physician of the hospital, inquiring--"How is Robert?" |
49412 | One of them insultingly said to her:"Are you not the daughter of that old rebel, Pierre Van Cortlandt?" |
49412 | You inquire, what does Mr. Adams think of Napoleon? |
49412 | she exclaimed;"who speaks of the French? |
32354 | A mine; what kind was it, Toby; who lost it; and why have n''t they been able to find it any more? |
32354 | A wolf is layin''behind them vines; did n''t you hear her give tongue like sixty? 32354 After snatching all you did too, when you went off?" |
32354 | Ai n''t it possible to creep up closer, Toby? 32354 Allan, is n''t he the young brave we saw hovering around our camp before, and who would n''t stop to be questioned?" |
32354 | And do n''t be long about passin''that same around, will ye? 32354 And how about your game limb, Giraffe-- was it the right, or the left you bruised so badly on the stones when you fell?" |
32354 | And just to think of his name being John Kracker; now, what boy could ever keep from twisting that around, and calling him a cracker- jack? |
32354 | And nobody has ever managed to locate it again, since that day so many years ago; is that what you mean, Toby? |
32354 | And so you boys have come away out here just to see what we''ve got in these Rockies, eh? |
32354 | And so, after you learned where he was, and how he came to be thar, I reckon now you boys started to climb up and rescue the other-- how? |
32354 | And that''s what brings you up here right now, I reckon; you mean to find that hidden mine, and claim it for your mother, and the girls? |
32354 | And that''s what you call finding the long lost silver mine, do you? |
32354 | And the chances are, they''ll want to drop in here, now that they know he''s taken up with us? |
32354 | And the hunting? |
32354 | And they left him there, did they? |
32354 | And what do I not owe to you, and the chums of the Silver Fox Patrol? 32354 And when we want to, we can crawl out ourselves, ca n''t we?" |
32354 | Are you satisfied, Fox, now that you''ve recovered your property-- if that is all he took from your home? |
32354 | As how? 32354 Boy Scouts, eh?" |
32354 | Bumpus, what in the wide world are you chuckling at, back there? |
32354 | But I can begin to see the figure of the wolf now; can you? |
32354 | But be_ aw_ful careful of that rope, wo n''t you, Thad? |
32354 | But how about our hunting? |
32354 | But if he is, how in the dickens could he get the fire to signal with; that''s what bothers me? |
32354 | But if that was so, how did it come that he never once asked us if we knew a boy by the name of Aleck Rawson? |
32354 | But the hunting ought to be fine, do n''t you think, Toby? |
32354 | But think what it''s been for me? |
32354 | But think what we''ve done since, will you? |
32354 | But we''re going in, Thad; ai n''t we; you wo n''t let that stand us off, after coming so far, will you? 32354 But what are you waiting for, Thad?" |
32354 | But what was Aleck doing up there; and where was he at the time? |
32354 | But what would he be praying for, tell me? |
32354 | But where''s the rattler? |
32354 | But why do n''t I see it, then? |
32354 | But you wo n''t let him get away, will you, Thad? |
32354 | Can this be him, then; has he been a prisoner all these years? |
32354 | Can we get up to where you are? |
32354 | Can you make them out, and is it a bear? |
32354 | Colonel Knocker did-- will you come and get me? |
32354 | Come at me again, will you? 32354 Course I am; what d''ye take me for, Toby? |
32354 | Did Allan send you in to tell me? |
32354 | Did you ever hear the equal of that? |
32354 | Did you get him, Thad? |
32354 | Did you think you heard a voice again? |
32354 | Do n''t you think we ort to let the rest know what we''re expectin''to do? |
32354 | Do you expect that this was the only whelp? |
32354 | Do you feel able to walk with us down into the valley to our camp? |
32354 | Do you mean Kracker? |
32354 | Do you mean the fire, Toby? |
32354 | Do you really think they have gone for good, Toby? |
32354 | Do you see that, Mr. Rawson, sir? 32354 Do you think we''re close enough, Thad?" |
32354 | Found what you were looking for? |
32354 | Get anything? |
32354 | Go on, then; what is it? |
32354 | Has he taken to growing a pair? |
32354 | Have you a bead on her head, Aleck? |
32354 | Having a hunt up here in the mountains, are you, boys? |
32354 | He''s just talking for the fun of hearin''himself, that''s what? |
32354 | How about it, Toby? |
32354 | How about some of those moonshiners down in North Carolina? 32354 How about that, Toby?" |
32354 | How about these wolves; shall we drag them out, and throw the carcases away in some hole? |
32354 | How d''ye expect they ever found that Aleck was no longer on the ledge? |
32354 | How d''ye suppose he did do it? |
32354 | How did you get there? |
32354 | How is that? |
32354 | How is the cripple crowd coming on these days? 32354 How long would it take us to get up there?" |
32354 | How much further do we have to climb, Toby? |
32354 | How much longer do we have to wait for grub? |
32354 | I do n''t see hide or hair of it, though, Toby? |
32354 | I was ready to back you up; but then what could you expect from a greenhorn? 32354 If that boy does know the secret, he''s going to open up while he''s got them scouts to back him, ai n''t he? |
32354 | If we only could warn them? |
32354 | Is that Sheriff Bob McNulty? |
32354 | Is that a fact? |
32354 | Just like I said, ai n''t it, Thad? |
32354 | Just the four of you? |
32354 | Kracker and his two men had caught Aleck; and unable to make him tell what they wanted, what do you think the cowards did? 32354 Kracker around here, is he? |
32354 | Look at Giraffe, would you? |
32354 | No danger of those fellows coming back to investigate, do you think? |
32354 | Now I wonder what next? |
32354 | Now what d''ye think of that? 32354 Now what sort of people could ever be guilty of such a horrible thing as that, I''d like to know?" |
32354 | Now what? |
32354 | Now, how''d he know that, Allan? 32354 Now, what d''ye say that for?" |
32354 | Other older man,--name Artemus Rawson.--Get that? |
32354 | P''raps, suh, he had a son? |
32354 | Perhaps it was the other cub, Thad? |
32354 | Praying? |
32354 | Rawson-- why, that was the name of the man who found the silver mine up in this country, was n''t it, Toby? |
32354 | Say looking for Aleck-- that he has robbed uncle-- headed down valley when left here-- Understand that? |
32354 | Say, Thad, is that agoin''to interfere with our startin''out on our little excursion? |
32354 | Say, you do n''t mean to tell me they shot a sheep? |
32354 | Seems to me we ought to see him, if he''s still there? |
32354 | Shall we go on, now? |
32354 | Show the old fraud to us, will you? 32354 Sounds to me like that Waffles?" |
32354 | That all? |
32354 | That must be the cubs; yes, listen to them growl, would you? 32354 The clue to the lost mine?" |
32354 | The original discoverer of the wonderful silver mine that has never been located since that time, so long ago? |
32354 | Then he must have guessed that we knew something about Aleck? |
32354 | Then it looks like he might a come out of them vines? |
32354 | Then it''s a she wolf? |
32354 | Then why''d you turn back, when we was all started for a place where we could git all the eats we wanted, with money to pay for''em? |
32354 | Then you think the old chap is in there now, do you? |
32354 | Then you''re of a mind that they have suspicions? |
32354 | Then you_ do_ know about that? |
32354 | Think what a guy I''ll be if so be ye do hit, and cut my pore ears off, jest in spite work? |
32354 | This was when? |
32354 | Up a place like this? |
32354 | We ai n''t, hey? |
32354 | Well, I got him, all right, did n''t I, tell me that? |
32354 | Well, if that does n''t beat anything? |
32354 | Well, just to think of it, here''s another Fox, all right? |
32354 | Well, listen to him, would you; he seems to be begging somebody not to hurt him? 32354 Well, was n''t I wise, then, in sayin''we had ought to snatch up some grub, to bite at on the way?" |
32354 | Well, why not? |
32354 | Whar d''ye reckon the critter kim from now? |
32354 | What are you goin''to do, Thad? |
32354 | What had we better do, stay around here, or try and work a little closer back to camp, to see what has happened there? |
32354 | What is it? |
32354 | What is it? |
32354 | What is that coming this way? |
32354 | What is the matter? |
32354 | What makes you say that last, Thad? |
32354 | What might that be, suh? |
32354 | What sort of a land- mark was it you saw? |
32354 | What sort of chance would we have, a lot of greenhorns who never yet saw a silver mine; against an old- timer like him? 32354 What under the sun does he mean by that talk, Thad? |
32354 | What was it? |
32354 | What was that last he said? |
32354 | What''s he doing now? |
32354 | What''s that to you? |
32354 | What''s that you say? |
32354 | What''s that? |
32354 | What''s this? 32354 When they took you a prisoner, they searched you, of course, hoping to find the valuable paper?" |
32354 | Where are you? |
32354 | Where is it right now, Giraffe? |
32354 | Who are you? |
32354 | Who asked you to put your finger in my business? |
32354 | Who is he; perhaps I might happen to know him? |
32354 | Who put you there? |
32354 | Why, what''s this mean, Toby; you a forest ranger camping with a parcel of kids? |
32354 | Why, you little imp, d''ye know what I''ve a good notion to do with you for this insulting talk? |
32354 | Why? 32354 Will you have Aleck hide himself?" |
32354 | Wonder if we''ll see anything more of''em again? |
32354 | Wonder what he thinks? |
32354 | You mean Aleck, I guess, do n''t you, Toby? |
32354 | You mean we''ll just have to work around, and get up there above the place where_ my_ big- horn lies, as dead as a door nail; is that it, Toby? |
32354 | You''re going to be some keerful, I take it? |
32354 | You''ve been sizing up the region all day in camp, and laying your plans, if the chance ever came to try them out; is n''t that so, Aleck? |
32354 | Your father, then, was Jerry Rawson, I take it? |
32354 | Aleck, are you here?" |
32354 | Allan hardly knew what to say; but boldly taking up the cudgels he presently remarked:"Well, Mr. Sheriff, what else could we do? |
32354 | And how under the sun could Thad be warned of the impending trouble? |
32354 | And now, do we start back to the fissure in the cliff, Thad?" |
32354 | Anymore?" |
32354 | Anything new at the camp?" |
32354 | But never mind about that, Toby; shall I shove this thing over now?" |
32354 | But seems to me we''ve gone about as close as we ought to, Aleck?" |
32354 | But what was there to be feared from a mere parcel of half- grown boys? |
32354 | D''ye reckon he tells the same way you would?" |
32354 | Do n''t you think so, Toby Smathers?" |
32354 | Do you expect this can be the silver lode, Thad?" |
32354 | Do you suppose they''ve gone, and had a falling- out among themselves, and the colonel is threatening to finish his man for running away?" |
32354 | Easy now with that rope back there; Step Hen, hold to the mule, and keep him quiet, will you?" |
32354 | First thing Smithy and me want to know is, what under the sun was it all about?" |
32354 | Fox, you sure must remember me, Aleck; and the good times we used to have, when I lived close to the Reservation?" |
32354 | Get that, Kracker?" |
32354 | Give me a hand, wo n''t you, please; I''m ashamed to say my legs seem so silly stiff at the knees I just ca n''t straighten''em out? |
32354 | Glad to meet up with you; and by the way are you Silver Fox, Red Fox, or Black Fox; though to be sure they all belong to one family?" |
32354 | Have you got a rope along with you?" |
32354 | Have you got your gun all ready to shoot, Aleck?" |
32354 | Have you loaded up again?" |
32354 | Here''s our camp, ai n''t it? |
32354 | Hope you''re not limping with that other leg, now?" |
32354 | How about it, boys?" |
32354 | How do? |
32354 | How''s that for a crowd, tell me; and did n''t we come out on top every time?" |
32354 | I b''lieve they''re weakenin''some, sure I do; but what about me? |
32354 | I suppose you are Colonel Kracker?" |
32354 | I wonder, now, has he seen me at work; does he think I''m a traveling photograph man, and wants me to strike him off, in his warpaint and feathers?" |
32354 | If these here mountings began to roll over on us, we''d be in a nice pickle, now, eh? |
32354 | Let me have the pleasure of knocking him over, and putting him out of pain?" |
32354 | Let''s clear out of here?" |
32354 | Meanwhile, how fared the ambitious big- horn hunters? |
32354 | Mebbe you would n''t mind tellin''me, to ease up the pain in my legs; while Waffles, he''s astartin''that ere fire?" |
32354 | Now what d''ye reckon that ere rumbling noise was, we all heard a while ago? |
32354 | Now where''s the warrant for arresting Aleck, your nephew? |
32354 | Now, I reckon more''n a few of you saw my service hat on my head just a little while ago; but tell me where it is now, will you? |
32354 | P''raps you''ve got a guide along with you, too?" |
32354 | Ready all the while, are you?" |
32354 | Say, this is what we''ve been lookin''forward to a long time, ai n''t it, fellers?" |
32354 | Scout Master, please?" |
32354 | See anything yet, Aleck?" |
32354 | So Aleck, he was to make himself scarce, was he? |
32354 | Somebody blow the fire, and make it cook faster, wo n''t you?" |
32354 | Step Hen asked, eagerly;"or might they just make believe, and hang around here to see if we had Aleck Rawson hidden away somewhere?" |
32354 | Step Hen, any more snake bites? |
32354 | Tell me how it can be done, wo n''t you?" |
32354 | Tell us why you do this? |
32354 | Thad, can_ you_ tell me where my hat is?" |
32354 | That old bear trap sure took a nasty grip on your leg, did n''t it, though?" |
32354 | Then what? |
32354 | Then, remember Si Kedge and Ed Harkness the game poachers we met later on; and how they were sorry they''d ever bothered with the Silver Foxes? |
32354 | There he goes now, and see him limp, will you, fellows? |
32354 | They brought their nerve along with''em I reckon, Toby?" |
32354 | Think I want to go to my own funeral in a hurry? |
32354 | Understand all that, Aleck?" |
32354 | Understand that, sir?" |
32354 | Was it a voice you heard, Thad?" |
32354 | We gave''em what they needed, did n''t we? |
32354 | We''ll keep his friends quiet meanwhile, eh, boys?" |
32354 | Well, it takes a lot of different people to make a world, do n''t it, fellers?" |
32354 | What d''ye suppose he did it for? |
32354 | What do you think, Thad?" |
32354 | What if these men stayed there until morning, how were the boys to leave? |
32354 | What might that be?" |
32354 | What''s this?" |
32354 | Whatever is that man doing?" |
32354 | When he had spelled a sentence he would almost invariably add the query,"understand?" |
32354 | Where come by? |
32354 | Who sneaked it off me, tell me that? |
32354 | Why, what was the world coming to, when mere boys began to hold the whip hand, and shape things as they pleased? |
32354 | With that he turned to the prisoner, and went on to say:"Can you understand; do you know what I am saying?" |
32354 | Would they mind what he said; or, thinking that orders from a mere boy were not to be taken seriously, would they insist on advancing further? |
32354 | You do n''t mean to carry the lantern lighted, do you, Thad?" |
32354 | You said Step Hen was wild to get a big horn, did n''t you, Allan?" |
32354 | You say the boy had fallen into their hands, and that you rescued him?" |
32354 | You say you saw me put it there? |
32354 | You tell the boys what I did, wo n''t you Toby; I''m feelin''kinder tired like? |
32354 | You understand what I''m saying, I guess, do n''t you?" |
32354 | asked Davy Jones;"will wolves be apt to rob Smithy of his hard- earned laurels?" |
32354 | demanded the other, quickly;"do you get a scent of it, too?" |
32354 | did you hear anything? |
32354 | do we abandon my big- horn, then?" |
32354 | do you mean men may be near us?" |
32354 | do you really mean it, Step Hen?" |
32354 | how can I ever thank you for getting me out of that scrape?" |
32354 | is that it sticking up there in the tree, Giraffe? |
32354 | once more you''ll have it, will you? |
32354 | please fix it for us, wo n''t you?" |
32354 | say you so, boy?" |
32354 | shrilled Smithy, wonderfully excited again;"It must be the sheep I struck with my bullet; see how the poor thing drags that leg after him? |
32354 | so_ you_ had a touch of the lost mine fever, too, did you?" |
32354 | that''s it, eh? |
32354 | was n''t that too cruel of him now, to just bound off on his horns like they were skies, and get on his feet again? |
32354 | what d''ye suppose ails him?" |
32354 | what white boy say?" |
32354 | who goes there?" |
32354 | you do n''t say?" |
32354 | you do, eh? |
32354 | you must mean that big cannon Kracker, and his two friends?" |
42122 | ''Let''s see?'' 42122 Ah, indeed, then how do you account for it blowing from the north just now?" |
42122 | All right,says Mike,"thin, be jabers, phwat''s the matter wid me takin''two and savin''the whole av it?" |
42122 | And then, what happens? |
42122 | And what are they? |
42122 | And what did you do? |
42122 | And what did you mix lather for? |
42122 | But have I got to pay it, judge? |
42122 | Do n''t you believe then that there''s good luck in finding a horseshoe? |
42122 | Do you mean to tell me that you actually believe Christian Science cured you? |
42122 | Does it resemble your handwriting? |
42122 | Has Zeke been arrested? |
42122 | Has your friend consumption, too? |
42122 | How did you come to contract a matrimonial alliance with such a man? |
42122 | How do I know? 42122 How do you know he is?" |
42122 | How do you mean? |
42122 | How is you? |
42122 | How is you? |
42122 | How was that? |
42122 | How was that? |
42122 | I came to tell you, sir, that our cellar--"Well, what about the cellar? |
42122 | I say, Mr. Niblo, did you hear about my luck? |
42122 | I say, my good fellow, am I on the right road to Jericho? |
42122 | I? 42122 Indeed, What are you now?" |
42122 | Inquest? 42122 Is he at home?" |
42122 | Is n''t it a duck of a hat? |
42122 | Is that all? 42122 Is there any message from my dear husband?" |
42122 | Is this where Skeezer, Nathan Skeezer, lives? |
42122 | Madam, you are the wife of this man? |
42122 | Of appendicitis? |
42122 | Officer,said the police- court judge,"what made you think the prisoner was drunk?" |
42122 | Oh, sir, it is impossible, is it? 42122 Oh, what shall I do?" |
42122 | Pay you? 42122 Pretty good crops this year?" |
42122 | Sir,said the lawyer, fiercely,"do you, on your oath, swear that this is not your handwriting?" |
42122 | The coroner? |
42122 | Well,I answered,"there was some one came, and asked,''Do you want to be shaved?'' |
42122 | What about those fellows downstairs? |
42122 | What are you looking for? |
42122 | What caused the fight? |
42122 | What do you charge? |
42122 | What do you do? |
42122 | What does he do? |
42122 | What good will that do? |
42122 | What is it, miss? |
42122 | What is love, anyway? |
42122 | What is the matter? |
42122 | What is your name? |
42122 | What were your duties there? |
42122 | What''s become of her? |
42122 | What''s the matter, Zack? |
42122 | What''s the matter? 42122 Who''ll prevent?" |
42122 | Why did n''t you dictate them? |
42122 | Why not? |
42122 | Why so? |
42122 | Why, no, what''s happened now? |
42122 | Will you swear that it does not resemble your handwriting? |
42122 | You knew he was a burglar when you married him? |
42122 | You never saw a butcher with slim, white hands, like his? |
42122 | You will positively take your oath that this writing does not resemble yours? |
42122 | A friend of Isaacstein''s met another acquaintance of his in Hester Street and asked:"Haf you heard aboudt Isaacstein?" |
42122 | Advancing a step into the room, I waved my razor, and said, in a hoarse voice:"Do you want to be shaved?" |
42122 | And may I ask why?" |
42122 | And what do you think? |
42122 | Been trying to dodge your own reflection?" |
42122 | Before the other prospective operator could reply the patient turned his head, and remarked feebly:"What do you take me for-- a cheese?" |
42122 | By the way, what do you-- aw-- think I will be distinguished for?" |
42122 | Can you prove that to be your real name? |
42122 | Could you let me have a pass?" |
42122 | Did you ever run across a ghost, any of you? |
42122 | Does it blow much here?" |
42122 | Every night at a certain hour a sepulchral voice was heard outside the casement, saying:"Do you want to be shaved?" |
42122 | For instance now, at school, in the course of his astronomy lesson, the teacher happened to ask:"What supports the sun in the heavens?" |
42122 | His subject was"Why should the Jew have to work?" |
42122 | How on earth do you manage to do it?" |
42122 | I asked;"play bad?" |
42122 | I exclaimed, excitedly,"you have n''t got a duplicate copy of that paper, have you?" |
42122 | I suppose you know I was on a tour in Florida and other parts of the Sunny South last winter? |
42122 | I''ve got a cold that makes me mad-- What kind of a cold have you? |
42122 | I''ve got the kind that makes me sin By craving fizzes made of gin And other stuff with bad booze in-- What kind of a cold have you? |
42122 | I''ve got the kind that makes one hoarse; What kind of a cold have you? |
42122 | Is n''t midnight late enough for you?" |
42122 | Is there anybody in the courtroom who can swear that you have n''t assumed it for purposes of fraud and deceit?" |
42122 | May I use your telephone?" |
42122 | One day a neighbor met him, and asked:"How are you, Pat?" |
42122 | Perhaps she thought a touch of the romantic might get him out of his mood, so she tried this:[ Illustration]"The moon is up, is n''t it, darling?" |
42122 | Say, have you ever been in the land of Daniel Boone and Davy Crockett, the original Tennessee Congressmen? |
42122 | Say, have you ever tried the Christian Science cure? |
42122 | See?" |
42122 | Sorter?" |
42122 | That makes me reticent and sad, That puts me plainly to the bad, The worstest cold I ever had-- What kind of a cold have you? |
42122 | The man took the card, looked at it, coughed even more distressfully than before, and asked:"Could n''t you make it two? |
42122 | They take him by der hospital, and vat you tink they do to him?" |
42122 | They''ll ruin the play!--ruin it!--do you hear me? |
42122 | This is the sneeze, sung in a sad, sobbing minor:[ Illustration] I''ve got a cold with snuffles in; What kind of a cold have you? |
42122 | To my half- awakened senses the sound seemed to take form in the words:"Do you want to be shaved?" |
42122 | To speak requires my utmost force; My voice is rough, and harsh, and coarse, And strains its laryngital source-- What kind of a cold have you? |
42122 | Vat a pity, ai n''t it, he did n''t have it in his wife''s name?" |
42122 | Vat iss it?" |
42122 | Vat iss it?" |
42122 | Was it an accident?" |
42122 | What do you or I know about it?" |
42122 | What for?" |
42122 | What you mean by tryin''to vote?'' |
42122 | What''s the use? |
42122 | Where did I ever see you before, sir?" |
42122 | You understand?" |
42122 | [ Illustration: NO TALKING ALLOWED]"You see that man sitting opposite us? |
42122 | [ Illustration] The preacher called to the sexton in the attic:"Whar''s de dove?" |
42122 | [ Illustration] While I was talking with Mike who should drop in but the archbishop? |
42122 | [ Illustration]"And you say that wid wan av these patent dampers in me sthovepipe I''d save half me coal?" |
42122 | [ Illustration]"As I was saying, I played poker and won enough to buy you a set of furs"----"You did? |
42122 | [ Illustration]"Come now,"said the dear little peacemaker,"why do n''t you and Miss Antique become friends again?" |
42122 | [ Illustration]"Say, pa,"was what he exploded,"is it true that cats have nine lives?" |
42122 | [ Illustration]"What occupation?" |
42122 | [ Illustration]"What''s the matter with your feet?" |
42122 | [ Illustration]"When and how?" |
42122 | said the judge;"are n''t you going to pay me?" |
42122 | you want to get rid of the flute, do you?" |
39406 | And a clear mark, Tom?--no mistake in it? |
39406 | And his mark, that you were talking of in such mysterious terms,--what is that? |
39406 | And the next thing I remember, you were sitting_ there_, and I-- Doctor-- did you hear a footstep? 39406 And who, if you please, is Nick of the Woods?" |
39406 | Any kin to the governor what was? |
39406 | Are we going? |
39406 | Can you tell us where Charles Wolfe is buried? |
39406 | Doctor Austin!--what_ day_ is this? |
39406 | Doctor, have I been away? |
39406 | Doctor, what has been the matter? |
39406 | IS NOT THIS THE CARPENTER''S SON? |
39406 | Is it clear? |
39406 | Is it possible,said Roland,"that any one can believe such an absurd story?" |
39406 | Sir, what would you do if you were one? |
39406 | Whar? |
39406 | What were you looking at so intently the whole time? |
39406 | What would you do, madam, if you were a gentleman? |
39406 | What, dear-- what, dear? |
39406 | What,she asked,"if I walk forward and backward and turn and bow_ without_ music, is that dancing? |
39406 | Who is the Jibbenainosay? |
39406 | Who? |
39406 | Why not? |
39406 | Will you accept the proposition? |
39406 | Would you,said he,"if you were very hungry, and had killed a deer, send your squaw to town to tell the news, and wait her return before you eat?" |
39406 | Yes; but you certainly can repeat some portion of it to me? |
39406 | You are from Rockford,''Lena tells me? |
39406 | ''But the great Tower?'' |
39406 | ''Sides, dem names''s got er cur''us soun''-- You says I''s hard to please? |
39406 | (_ Knocks again and looks round._)_ Alonzo._ Who can this be-- so late at night? |
39406 | Ah, what avails the vain expense of tears? |
39406 | Ai n''t thet what you preached?" |
39406 | And Von Kluyden? |
39406 | And can he now, to manhood grown, Tell why those notes, simple and lone, As on the ravished ear they fell, Bind every sense in magic spell? |
39406 | And how was this to be enumerated among the high crimes which caused the colonies to sever their connection with the mother country? |
39406 | And if I do the same when there_ is_ music, does that make it dancing?" |
39406 | And now, how is the knowledge of this vast surrounding universe revealed to the mind of man? |
39406 | And thar''s his marks, captain,--what do you make of_ that_? |
39406 | And why, if he was a peace- messenger, he had not sent a runner? |
39406 | Are the stars brighter than they are? |
39406 | Are they indeed to us no more than the dull clods we tread upon? |
39406 | Are you lonesome, my own sweetheart? |
39406 | But does anybody pretend to tell me that man is always the lucky recipient of this devotion? |
39406 | But is this really so? |
39406 | But tears? |
39406 | But where was Duluth? |
39406 | But with such an admission, what is the cloud of reflections, which throng and startle the mind? |
39406 | But, sir, permit me to inquire from whom these charges of bribery, of corruption, and of robbery, come? |
39406 | By promise Vain of Universal Sway Lur''d you from Greece the beauteous Queen away? |
39406 | By what race of beings was the vast undertaking accomplished? |
39406 | By whiskey grog he lost his breath-- Who would not die so sweet a death? |
39406 | Call me''Cousin Camilla''or''Aunt Camilla,''whichever you prefer; which shall it be, Quintil?" |
39406 | Conrad kill''d Alonzo? |
39406 | Could they be agreed, and could they walk together? |
39406 | Did n''t you say thet God''retaineth not His anger forever, because He delighteth in mercy?'' |
39406 | Did they remain untouched and incapable of harm? |
39406 | Did those first drops of sorrow fall To move God''s pity for us all? |
39406 | Did you see How brief your beauty, and how brief, Therefore, the love of it must be, In that first garden, that first grief? |
39406 | Do n''t you think it would sound better if you were to add a handle to my name, as common folks say? |
39406 | Do you feel no fear When day is gone and the night is here? |
39406 | Do you hear? |
39406 | Editors, to publish a note in your valuable paper, offering the"Poets''Corner,"and save what you can of the fragments of"Olden Times?"... |
39406 | For what have I to do with you? |
39406 | Had the Declaration announced that the negroes were free and equal, how was the Prince to be arraigned for raising up insurrection among them? |
39406 | Have you friends there?" |
39406 | He called, endeavoring to throw his voice through the key- hole,"Aloysius, ai n''t you up yit? |
39406 | He was immediately asked what news? |
39406 | Her lord was lord of all the earth, Wherein no child had wailed its birth), Tears to a bride? |
39406 | How can I discriminate? |
39406 | How long ago? |
39406 | I merely shouted to him across the stream--"the angle- worm once more, Piscator?" |
39406 | In Eden? |
39406 | In water or wine, In blood or in brine, What matter the sign? |
39406 | Is it not white as pearl-- as snow? |
39406 | Is there no hallowing interest associated with these aged relics-- these tombs, and temples, and towers''of another race, to elicit emotion? |
39406 | Is there no place at all, where a knock from the poor, Will bring a kind angel to open the door? |
39406 | Is this brat a humorist? |
39406 | It is shocking to think of such competition, but how can we help it if young ladies give themselves up to dog worship? |
39406 | It says,"Does the day seem long-- The scented and sunny day Because you must sit apart? |
39406 | LOVE AMONG THE ROSES[19][ From_ Verses and Sonnets_( New York, 1910)]"What, dear-- what dear?" |
39406 | Lacrymas at fundere inanes Quid juvat? |
39406 | NICK OF THE WOODS[ From_ Nick of the Woods_( New York, 1853, revised edition)]"What''s the matter, Tom Bruce?" |
39406 | No braver dames had Sparta-- No nobler matrons Rome-- Yet who or lauds or honors them, Ev''n in their own green home? |
39406 | Or does the slayer of oxen yet sleep, supinely stertorous, heavy with the lingering fumes of the mighty Bourbon? |
39406 | Our efficiency? |
39406 | Remorseless Time!-- Fierce spirit of the glass and scythe!--what power Can stay him in his silent course, or melt His iron heart to pity? |
39406 | Shall I to the_ abattoir_ and ask the slayer of oxen for a steak? |
39406 | Such were their daily deeds: Their monument-- where does it stand? |
39406 | That legion hath marched past the setting of sun: Beaten? |
39406 | The bluegrass waves the bluest In Kentucky; Yet, bluebloods are the fewest(?) |
39406 | The watchmen and citizens take her into an adjoining room, bearing her husband with her-- asking,"Who could have kill''d him? |
39406 | Their epitaph-- who reads? |
39406 | Then do you think that I will kneel Where such as you have trod? |
39406 | Then why not have a heaven below, And let fair Hymen hence be sent? |
39406 | Though much of sorrow mark its strain, Yet are its notes to sorrow dear; What though they wake fond memory''s tear? |
39406 | Was ever such a pair? |
39406 | Was he from the Long Knife? |
39406 | Was not my love- seal on your brow For death, and not for days to break? |
39406 | We hunted for them until ten o''clock, when two Spaniards came, and asked us what we would give them if they would find our mules? |
39406 | Were they really any better than these? |
39406 | What is the use of wasting so much sweetness when there are thousands of good, honest fellows actually pining away from unrequited affection? |
39406 | What matter if you bid me now To go my way for others''sake? |
39406 | What then ought we to think of them, when all this glorious intelligence is merely tributary to our salvation? |
39406 | What was to be done? |
39406 | What will become of me? |
39406 | What_ time_ is it, Doctor Austin?" |
39406 | When were these enormous earth heaps reared up from the plain? |
39406 | Where are the doctrines of the Union and the Constitution so incessantly inculcated as here? |
39406 | Where are those doctrines so enthusiastically adopted as here? |
39406 | Where bosoms in mercy and kindness will heave, When the poor and the wretched shall ask and receive? |
39406 | While every amorous rival billow Strives her buoyant breast to pillow? |
39406 | Who can describe the surprises, the quaintness of song, the drolleries of action of the Offenbach school? |
39406 | Who knows but one of them contains the lovely Caroline? |
39406 | Who, in phrenzy''s flight of mind Such touch and tinctures bright may find To match her form and golden hair And naked paint the heavenly fair? |
39406 | Why linger fondly around them, and meditate upon the power which reared them, and is departed? |
39406 | Why should one wish to have known Goldsmith, or grudge him his place by the side of the great old Doctor, and Burke, and Reynolds, and Garrick? |
39406 | Why then does the wanderer from the far land gaze upon them with wonder and veneration? |
39406 | Wilt then make merry-- as of old? |
39406 | Would you bless your fellow- men? |
39406 | Would you crush the tyrant wrong, In the world''s free fight? |
39406 | Would you wrest the wreath of fame From the hand of fate? |
39406 | Would you write a deathless name With the good and great? |
39406 | _ Alonzo._ What does he say? |
39406 | _ Alonzo._ Who''s there? |
39406 | _ Citizens._ Who, under God''s heaven, could have done this deed? |
39406 | _ Conrad._ Where is my wife? |
39406 | _ Doctor._ Did you see his face? |
39406 | _ Lover._ But come, you saucy, pert romancer, Who is as fair as Phoebe? |
39406 | _ Lover._ Has Phoebe not a heavenly brow? |
39406 | _ Massachusetts!_ Which of her multitude of virtues shall I commend? |
39406 | _ Watchmen._ Who did it? |
39406 | cried the senior, eagerly,--"not in our limits?" |
39406 | how did you know that?" |
39406 | or a chop from the loin of sheep, a bell- wether of Kentucky''s finest flock-- Kentucky, state renowned for dainty mutton? |
39406 | or was Secession a Constitutional Right Previous to the War of 1861?_( Baltimore, 1866). |
39406 | so charming, uncontrolled, Guest and companion of my clay, Into what places wilt thou stray, When thou art naked, pale, and cold? |
39406 | what a scene!_"But the majesty of the sight, and the interest of the moment, how depict them? |
39406 | what_ do_ she''spec''dese chillum gwine o''be? |
51414 | Getting you down, too, Mac? |
51414 | How do you figure that? |
51414 | May I acknowledge their message now, skipper? |
51414 | Skipper tell you about the time- error? |
51414 | Testing the Drive, you mean? |
51414 | We''ll arrive sooner than planned? |
51414 | What kind of devilish intelligence have we run into? 51414 What wo n''t?" |
51414 | All I wanted to know was how they expected me to live long enough to complete the journey? |
51414 | Are n''t you glad?" |
51414 | Could we have somehow doubled back-- completing a mystic circle? |
51414 | I asked,"What do you mean about things checking''roughly''? |
51414 | I said,"Yes, but what''s there to be sad about? |
51414 | Is there some error?" |
51414 | So-- what had I really to look forward to? |
51414 | Was that old Sol up there burning through our green shield? |
51414 | What would it be like when we got back? |
51414 | Who knows, maybe there''s a war going on back there?" |
51414 | You do n''t mind that part, do you?" |
47201 | Do n''t you want to see a man killed? |
47201 | I heard he had made that charge against me to you and threatened my life-- is this true? |
47201 | I may then presume by your_ silence_ that it is true what I have asked you about? |
47201 | Tell me truly, did he make that charge against me? |
47201 | That man a murderer? |
47201 | --=Nassau Literary Magazine, Princeton.== Cloth, Price, Postpaid,$ 1.00.= PRAY YOU, SIR, WHOSE DAUGHTER? |
47201 | About an hour later he drank a bottle of Brown''s Bitters, and said to a bystander:''Did you hear about the old man mashing my mouth?'' |
47201 | And now, perhaps, you are ready to ask what it was all about? |
47201 | Can you make the public believe that you were acting in good faith? |
47201 | Exaggeration? |
47201 | Had Judge Lilly been correctly informed? |
47201 | Have we exaggerated in the telling of this story? |
47201 | How we jostle each other so as not to lose a glimpse of misery or death? |
47201 | IS THIS YOUR SON, MY LORD? |
47201 | If the authorities did not dare molest them, who should? |
47201 | Is it a wonder that Attorney- General Hardin stigmatized the whole machinery of justice in the county as"rotten"? |
47201 | Is it a wonder that crime was rampant and of daily occurrence? |
47201 | Is it a wonder that outraged manhood at last took the law in its own hand and annihilated the outlaws? |
47201 | Is it any wonder, then, that in such times and under such conditions preaching respect for law is breath wasted? |
47201 | Is it not strange how morbidly curious most of us are? |
47201 | Is it that the savage of the stone age is not yet dead? |
47201 | Life''s cheap, is n''t it? |
47201 | Of what use is any history but to record past events that future generations might take lessons therefrom and be guided thereby? |
47201 | On arriving at the jail at Winchester, Bowling presented his order, which was signed(?) |
47201 | On the second night of the Court, the acting judge was shot but not wounded(?) |
47201 | Reverting again to the murder lust: What is it''s origin? |
47201 | Reverting to the circumstance which completed the breach between French and Eversole: A certain friend(?) |
47201 | That the veneer of civilization has in all those thousands of years not become thick enough to prevent its wearing off so readily? |
47201 | The clans, disbanded(?) |
47201 | The question was asked in whispers--"Where will it all end?" |
47201 | They realized their power to destroy each other in the courts, but would not the destroyer himself be destroyed? |
47201 | This view has been adopted by other writers and sociologists as furnishing the solution of the riddle: What is the cause of these feuds? |
47201 | Was it possible that in this land of the free and the brave the proportion of brave men stood fifteen to one thousand cowards? |
47201 | What did they fear? |
47201 | What had the authorities been doing during this period of quasi warfare? |
47201 | What inspires it? |
47201 | What is an oath to such depraved creatures? |
47201 | What is loyalty? |
47201 | What is true Americanism? |
47201 | What keeps it aflame? |
47201 | When is a citizen loyal to his country? |
47201 | When we finish we may say, not,''Is This Your Son, My Lord?'' |
47201 | Where a people supinely lay upon their backs and permit anarchy, are they longer entitled to the citizenship of a great state and of a greater nation? |
47201 | Where was the prisoner? |
47201 | Why did you make such a proposition to me at the time you did? |
47201 | Why do they stand idly by instead of rising in their might and punish? |
47201 | Why is it that one courageous blue- coat policeman can scatter a crowd? |
47201 | Why is it, then, that since the good citizens are in the majority, they are willing to submit to terrorization by a few? |
47201 | Why not? |
47201 | Why should they? |
47201 | Why were they absent? |
47201 | Will she dare to go to them? |
47201 | Will they spare him? |
47201 | You ask why I throw"the whole responsibility"of making an application for troops upon you? |
47201 | but''Is it I?''" |
47201 | did n''t he bellow like a bull when that shot hit him?" |
18984 | A picture of me? 18984 A tale? |
18984 | About here, Jedge? |
18984 | Ah, hah, an''in the hope that I do I reckon you''ve got a nigger astradle of him stirrin''the spavin outen his j''int, hain''t you? |
18984 | Ah, mammy,said the old man,"you never forgit the Lawd, do you?" |
18984 | Ai n''t as h-- h-- hot as it was when it was h-- h-- h-- hotter, is it? |
18984 | Ai n''t it funny suh, dat I''s yered dat befo''? 18984 Ai n''t true? |
18984 | Air you about through? |
18984 | Air you shore? |
18984 | Already hearn? 18984 Am I to be locked up?" |
18984 | An''ai n''t you got fifty cents you could give me fur all dis inflamation? 18984 An''look yere, Mr. Starbuck, while I''se gone to the pos''office do n''t you reckon you kin think up suthin''fur me ter do?" |
18984 | An''what''s the matter with you, Miz Barker? 18984 And did n''t yo''friends try to kill him?" |
18984 | And have n''t you seen him boil the corn after it was ground into meal? |
18984 | And now what can I do for you-- put another chicken in yo''way? |
18984 | And what do you want with me-- to set down an''help you cry? 18984 And what if I do n''t pay no attention to the gospel?" |
18984 | And you saw the sun rise? |
18984 | Any discussion a goin''on down at town? |
18984 | Any news over yo''way, Laz? |
18984 | Any news over yo''way? |
18984 | Are we going to have rain, Foster? |
18984 | Beggin''yo''pardon, ma''m, for what I''ve said an''what I am about to say, will you let me talk business to you for about a minit? |
18984 | Brash, my dear? 18984 But did n''t you say suthin''about that you might have to kill him? |
18984 | But do n''t we-- don''t your uncle need you? |
18984 | But have n''t the briars torn your flesh? |
18984 | But how could he tell you he loved you if he did n''t? |
18984 | But they will take him to jail, wo n''t they? |
18984 | But w''y doan you go on, man? 18984 But was it true?" |
18984 | But what sort of medicine did they send you after? |
18984 | But you know somethin''about love, do n''t you? 18984 But you never killed anybody, did you-- still being a Starbuck?" |
18984 | But you wo n''t do nuthun''outen the way, will you Jasper? |
18984 | But you wo n''t have no trouble, will you, Jasper? |
18984 | By the way, Judge, have you decided to take up the case of that old man Starbuck to- day? 18984 Could n''t lub you? |
18984 | Cup o''v-- v-- v-- v-- v--"Ca n''t you write it down? |
18984 | Den why do n''t you? |
18984 | Did anybody ever hear the like? 18984 Did anybody knock him down for you?" |
18984 | Did he tell you just now when you must have met him in the road? |
18984 | Did it ever hit you, Margaret, that a woman ought to put herself in a condition to be loved? 18984 Did n''t I tole you you could n''t lub me?" |
18984 | Did n''t expect me at all, did you? |
18984 | Did n''t he say that you made a good deal o''licker when the sun wan''t shinin''? 18984 Did n''t you see me there? |
18984 | Did n''t you? 18984 Did they git him out?" |
18984 | Did yon eat him? |
18984 | Did you ever see Mr. Starbuck make whiskey? |
18984 | Did you ever? |
18984 | Did you forget something, Kintchin? |
18984 | Did you''husband tell you a lie? |
18984 | Do I bother you, Jasper, an''trouble a comin''too? 18984 Do I? |
18984 | Do it sound like I''m a beggin''? |
18984 | Do n''t I? 18984 Do n''t see nuthin''else you want to borry, do you, Laz?" |
18984 | Do n''t want to borry nothin'', do you, Laz? |
18984 | Do n''t you think you mout go off somewhar an''l''arn? |
18984 | Do what, mother? |
18984 | Do you know what that means, Starbuck? |
18984 | Do you know why you are here? |
18984 | Do you like Sam Bracken? |
18984 | Do you mean to say she wo n''t marry me if you tell her to? |
18984 | Do you think her mother will object, sir? |
18984 | Do you think so? |
18984 | Do you think they will send him there? 18984 Do you want him knocked down?" |
18984 | Do you want me to mash your head? |
18984 | Do you want to hear yo''daughter cryin''down thar in the valley? |
18984 | Do you want to see yo''wife with her head bowed down on the table? |
18984 | Doan blebe much in pra''r, does you? 18984 Doan you reccernize me?" |
18984 | Does the Book say anything about shooting craps? |
18984 | Embarrass you? 18984 Folks all as well as usual?" |
18984 | For you? |
18984 | From yo''husband? 18984 Got any corn to feed him on?" |
18984 | Had to break out, did n''t you? 18984 Hah? |
18984 | Have a drink of water, Laz? |
18984 | Have this cheer, Miz Mayfield? |
18984 | Have you ever seen Mr. Starbuck make whisky? |
18984 | Have you got that sorrel yet, Brother Starbuck? |
18984 | Have you hearn anybody hint that you ca n''t talk? 18984 Have you looked at yo''swop to- day?" |
18984 | He insulted you? |
18984 | Helloa, that you, Gabe? |
18984 | How air you gittin''along, Laz? |
18984 | How am I actin''it? |
18984 | How are you going to manage to say it? |
18984 | How big? |
18984 | How could he? |
18984 | How do you know? |
18984 | How what? 18984 Howdy do, ma''m? |
18984 | Huh, give that up, too? 18984 I beg yo''pardon, ma''m, but have n''t you got a picture of yo''se''f you would give me?" |
18984 | I make fun of you, Mr. Reverend? 18984 In earnest? |
18984 | In lub? 18984 Insulted you? |
18984 | Is he game? |
18984 | Is he livin''? |
18984 | Is it too warm in here? |
18984 | Is mammy done ironin''? |
18984 | Is that so? 18984 Is that so?" |
18984 | Is that the law? |
18984 | Is there? |
18984 | Is yo''mother livin''? |
18984 | It did n''t seem to have any influence on the old man, did it? |
18984 | It sounds like things you find in a book, but this is in writin'', is n''t it? 18984 Jasper, do you think he''ll git that app''intment as deputy marshal?" |
18984 | Jasper, what makes you wanter talk thatter way? |
18984 | Jest in time to save his life? |
18984 | Kind old soul, was n''t she? |
18984 | Light of it? 18984 Lived a lie? |
18984 | Lives here, do n''t he? |
18984 | Look here: you know she ca n''t love you, an''do n''t you want her because you think I''ve got a little money? 18984 Lost anythin'', Jim?" |
18984 | Margaret, how did you get away down here? |
18984 | Margaret, is it possible that you''ve been listenin''to two men talkin''business? 18984 May I go with you?" |
18984 | Me? 18984 Miss Lou,"he said, slowly approaching,"what made you run away from me? |
18984 | Mother sent me atter-- atter a c-- c-- c-- cup o''v-- v-- v--"How''s all the folks, Mose? |
18984 | Mr. Reverend, a true woman would take most of the wounds if--"If she were-- loved? |
18984 | Mr. Starbuck, whut you all de time come er talkin''datter way fur? 18984 Mr. Starbuck,"Mrs. Mayfield inquired,"was that you shooting so early this morning?" |
18984 | Mrs. Starbuck,the Judge kindly spoke,"will you please retire until we have concluded this examination?" |
18984 | My father fret anybody? |
18984 | No? |
18984 | Nobody shot or cut? |
18984 | Now Jasper Starbuck, is it possible that you put off that spavined hoss on Brother Fetterson? 18984 Now did he?" |
18984 | Now what do you want to pester a body thatter way for? |
18984 | Now what on the yeth do you want to talk that way fur? |
18984 | Now why do n''t you tell me all about it? |
18984 | Now, Jasper, what on top of yeth has tickled you so? 18984 Now, Jasper,"his wife spoke up,"why do you allus want to talk about fightin'', an''among preachers at that?" |
18984 | Now, Miss Mar''get, whut you all time come er flatter me datter way fur? 18984 Now, Mr. Tom, whut put dat inter yo''head? |
18984 | Oh, I understand him, Mrs. Starbuck,and then of Jasper she inquired:"How far is it to the post office?" |
18984 | Oh, can it be true? |
18984 | Oh, do n''t stop her, please,Mrs. Mayfield replied, and then to Jim she added:"Did you ever have a fawn touch you with its velvety lip? |
18984 | Oh, got you to thinkin'', have I? |
18984 | Oh, how could anybody knock you down? |
18984 | Oh, is that the one they had the talk about consarnin''of the preacher? |
18984 | Oh, may I? |
18984 | Oh, what do I care for yo''nonsense? |
18984 | Oh, you love me? 18984 Oh, you think you kin make me stay at home all day by myse''f, do you? |
18984 | Oh, you want to git back to whar you was tryin''to pick a quarrel with me, do you? |
18984 | Oh, you''ve found out all about him, have you? 18984 Outen the way of what?" |
18984 | Safe ernuff? 18984 Say, is that young feller and that woman here yit?" |
18984 | Shall I mash his head with it, sir? |
18984 | Singular, is n''t it? |
18984 | Starbuck, ai n''t yo''eyes wide enough open to see that I kin ruin you? |
18984 | Starbuck, do you want to be ruined? |
18984 | Starbuck, is that young feller Elliott any kin to Jedge Elliott in Nashville? |
18984 | Talkin''ter me, suh? |
18984 | Talkin''to one now, ai n''t I? |
18984 | Talkin''to you now, ai n''t I? |
18984 | That so? 18984 That so? |
18984 | That so? |
18984 | The bay with white fetlocks? |
18984 | The girl goin''to the theatre? 18984 The pickels, and the chickens? |
18984 | Then why did n''t you answer me? |
18984 | Then why did you tell me you did n''t fetch it? 18984 Then you are in earnest?" |
18984 | Then you have been married several times, have you, Kintchin? |
18984 | Through to where-- to where? |
18984 | Tuck him away for what? |
18984 | Wall, but thar ai n''t no objection to that, is there? |
18984 | Wall, how did it happen, any way? |
18984 | Wall, would you mind goin''over it an''fixin''it up for me? |
18984 | Want to know whar we was when he broke in? |
18984 | Was anybody ever polite to you? |
18984 | Was it Peters you saw goin''into the yard? |
18984 | Was it because you did n''t want to know? |
18984 | Well, how did you happen to fetch it back so soon? |
18984 | Well, what do you want me to do? 18984 Well, what is it?" |
18984 | Well, where air you goin''? |
18984 | Well, where you came from how long does it take anybody to-- to fall-- in love? |
18984 | Well? |
18984 | Wha''fo''? |
18984 | Whar do we sleep to- night, with some of the neighbors? |
18984 | Whar''s S-- S-- S-- S-- Star--"Talkin''ter me? |
18984 | Whar''s that luther string? |
18984 | What Andy? |
18984 | What ailed him? |
18984 | What air you loaded with? |
18984 | What are we all a comin''to? |
18984 | What became of her? |
18984 | What did they do with him? |
18984 | What did they do? |
18984 | What did they take you there for? |
18984 | What did yo''mother send you after, Mose? |
18984 | What did you say, ma''m? |
18984 | What diffunce do that make? |
18984 | What does it mean? |
18984 | What have they got thar, a mortgage? |
18984 | What have you been doin''? |
18984 | What is this line? |
18984 | What luther string? |
18984 | What sort of a mare? |
18984 | What sort of a newspaper did you fetch, Gabe? |
18984 | What sorter one? |
18984 | What was that yell? |
18984 | What!--as if he belonged to you? 18984 What''s that?" |
18984 | What''s the matter here? |
18984 | What''s the matter with her? |
18984 | What''s troublin''you, Margaret? |
18984 | What''s your name? |
18984 | What, Margaret, ai n''t news when a man shoots fo''an''stobs three? 18984 What, all soldiers? |
18984 | What, on an accusation? |
18984 | What, that old dominecker? |
18984 | What, you do n''t mean it? |
18984 | What, you do n''t tell me so? |
18984 | When did all this occur? |
18984 | When we''ve got such guns? |
18984 | When you git right down to it, Lije, ai n''t that the reason-- money? |
18984 | When you go into the court- room, do you think you can understand the nature of an oath? |
18984 | Where is the Jedge? |
18984 | Who talked about it? |
18984 | Who, Jim? 18984 Who, Lije? |
18984 | Who, Tildy? 18984 Who, me?" |
18984 | Who, me? |
18984 | Who, the sheep? 18984 Whut come of it?" |
18984 | Whut de matter wid you, man? 18984 Whut, dis one right yere? |
18984 | Whut, er man bodder er lady dat he lubs? |
18984 | Why ai n''t you folks been over? |
18984 | Why did they come here? 18984 Why do n''t you say I could n''t fret anybody,"Tom broke in, and looking sweetly at him she innocently inquired,"Could you?" |
18984 | Why do n''t you send for a physician? |
18984 | Why do you want to quit? 18984 Why it is n''t loaded, is it?" |
18984 | Why wo n''t you be more considerate? 18984 Why, Jasper Starbuck,"Margaret spoke up,"ai n''t you ashamed of yo''se''f to talk about the Lord thatter way?" |
18984 | Why, Lou,Margaret spoke up,"is that the way to talk?" |
18984 | Why, could n''t they ketch''em? |
18984 | Why, did n''t you just tell me that mammy left you twenty dollars? |
18984 | Why, have things come to such a pass as this? 18984 Why, how did she treat you?" |
18984 | Why, leave that coffee out? |
18984 | Why, that''s what they call blackmail, ai n''t it? |
18984 | Why, what''s the matter with Patterson? |
18984 | Why, where air you goin''? |
18984 | Why, you are n''t going, are you? |
18984 | Why, you do n''t say so? |
18984 | Why-- why do n''t you like to hear me talk? |
18984 | Will you please keep quiet? 18984 Wo n''t you come too?" |
18984 | Wo n''t you light an''look at yo''saddle? |
18984 | Wo n''t you sit down, mammy? 18984 Would n''t let it bother you when you been a stuffin''yo''se''f with a lie? |
18984 | Would you live a lie, like the man that married your aunt? 18984 Yas, suh, an''ai n''t all dat sense wuth er quarter?" |
18984 | Yes, but what about it? |
18984 | Yes, you may, but--"But what? |
18984 | Yo''brother Bill a gittin''better? |
18984 | Yo''mother still a eatin''of spoon vidults, Laz? |
18984 | You ai n''t very good at shoutin'', air you? |
18984 | You do n''t borrow, do you? |
18984 | You do n''t see nuthin''red on my hands, do you? 18984 You do n''t? |
18984 | You mean Barker, Sister? |
18984 | You mean that journeyman hatter that you''ve talked about so much? 18984 You mean the jail?" |
18984 | You were very fond of her, were n''t you? |
18984 | You wo n''t love me any the less because I could n''t hide that I loved you, will you? |
18984 | You wolf, would you shoot a brave old man? 18984 Your faith is simple and beautiful now, Jim, but may there not come a time when it will begin to inquire-- when perhaps I might fret you? |
18984 | ''Bout ready to give her another trial, Mose?" |
18984 | Ah, do n''t I ricolleck once when we went to a political speakin''? |
18984 | Ai n''t a cryin'', air you''ma''m?" |
18984 | Ai n''t a runnin''away from yo''old man, air you?" |
18984 | Ai n''t dar nuthin''in dis life ter talk erbout''cept politics? |
18984 | Ai n''t habin''spells, is you?" |
18984 | Ai n''t it wuth er quarter ter be skeered like I is? |
18984 | Ai n''t lost a cow, have you? |
18984 | Ai n''t you been er savin''yo''money all deze years, an''ef er man kain''t lub er lady dat''s been er savin''her money, who kin he lub?" |
18984 | Ai n''t you got no respect at all for the gospel?" |
18984 | Air you goin''to let me ride?" |
18984 | Air you so blind that you ca n''t see that? |
18984 | Am I a makin''it too long?" |
18984 | Am I right, Jim?" |
18984 | An''I says''salt or sugar, I''m here, an''what air you goin''to do about it?'' |
18984 | An''come round talkin''''bout peculiar folks, too? |
18984 | An''ef he do, thar''s-- whut did I tell you?" |
18984 | An''my daddy clim''up on the fence an''says,''Whut''s the matter now?'' |
18984 | An''p-- p-- p-- pound cake?" |
18984 | An''what did they try to do with me? |
18984 | An''whut you gwine gimme caze I skeered? |
18984 | An''you ai n''t disapp''inted at yo''nephew''s choice?" |
18984 | And I''ll sw''ar, ai n''t this little Jimmie Starbuck?" |
18984 | And ai n''t this Jasper Starbuck''s daughter? |
18984 | And besides, when I speak of him, how do you know that I tell the truth?" |
18984 | And did you ever have a fight, being a Starbuck?" |
18984 | And how are the people over in your highland district?" |
18984 | And how old air you to- day, mammy?" |
18984 | And looking down she replied:"You told me not to ask and I have n''t?" |
18984 | And what were the antecedents of this crankish old woman? |
18984 | And what were your thoughts, Miss Lou?" |
18984 | And whut''s that nigger always hangin''round fur when I want to talk to you?" |
18984 | Anybody dead over yo''way, Miz Barker-- I mean anybody that ought to be?" |
18984 | Anythin''goin''on round here?" |
18984 | As he entered the room he looked about and seeing no one else, spoke to Kintchin:"Whar''s Jasper Starbuck?" |
18984 | As he was cutting the string from the other shoe his wife, peeping round at him, inquired:"Whut you do that fur?" |
18984 | At the word liquor Jasper''s jaw dropped with a"hah?" |
18984 | Blake?" |
18984 | But Mr. Reverend, do n''t you think it is awfully wrong to fight?" |
18984 | But come, shall we not go into the house?" |
18984 | But do you know whether or not he has got a app''intment from off yander at Nashville? |
18984 | But do you think if I was to read books I could be smart?" |
18984 | But has he told you?" |
18984 | But if Jim wants to marry her, why do n''t he say so? |
18984 | But suppose he do git the app''intment-- won''t it mean trouble?" |
18984 | But what am I talking about? |
18984 | But what are you trying to get at?" |
18984 | But whut''s de use in stoppin''dar? |
18984 | But why do we turn up here?" |
18984 | But why do you ask?" |
18984 | But you spoke a resurrecting word and--""But would my dreaming again and again that I had heard you call me Jim-- would that kill it again? |
18984 | But you want to borry a hoss for a week or two? |
18984 | Ca n''t you fix it at the stable?" |
18984 | Ca n''t you help me?" |
18984 | Ca n''t you see nothin''at all? |
18984 | Come along thar one time when the white suckers war a runnin''an''I had a pair of grab hooks, an''--""Well, what about Baker''s ford?" |
18984 | Could n''t make it five months, could you, Jim?" |
18984 | Dar wuz my fust wife an''my fust step- wife, an''--""Your first step- wife?" |
18984 | Did n''t he love you?" |
18984 | Did n''t he?" |
18984 | Did n''t you go to the barbecue over at the cross- roads last year?" |
18984 | Did n''t you see me out there in the rain yesterday?" |
18984 | Did n''t you?" |
18984 | Did the folks tell you that I was over here earlier in the day?" |
18984 | Did you ever have a feller catch a spear out of the sun with a lookin''glass and shoot it through yo''eyes? |
18984 | Did you ever hear him say anythin''about Jeff Waters? |
18984 | Did you ever know a woman to look fur a cause an''not find one? |
18984 | Did you ever notice that when a man begins to talk about a woman, makes no diffunce who, his wife puts it up that he''s a talkin''about her? |
18984 | Did you hear?" |
18984 | Did you?" |
18984 | Did you?" |
18984 | Do n''t I give you plenty to do?" |
18984 | Do n''t you know it is true?" |
18984 | Do n''t you know it say,''Thou sha n''t kill?'' |
18984 | Do n''t you ricolleck?" |
18984 | Do n''t you think you mout keep him a leetle longer?" |
18984 | Do n''t you want a few lessons? |
18984 | Do n''t you?" |
18984 | Do n''t you?" |
18984 | Do the folks know anything about it yet?" |
18984 | Do you hear me over thar?" |
18984 | Do you hear me? |
18984 | Do you know a good brother named Adsit, big double log house on the left bank of the creek?" |
18984 | Do you know what that means-- if I git it?" |
18984 | Do you know what that means?" |
18984 | Do you know why I let that scoundrel Peters insult me?" |
18984 | Do you mean that it did n''t happen?" |
18984 | Do you see whut I am a drivin''at?" |
18984 | Do you think you kin fix it so they kin have it over with my case as soon as possible?" |
18984 | Do you want someone appointed?" |
18984 | Do you want to look a lie at me?" |
18984 | Do you-- do you?" |
18984 | Do you?" |
18984 | Doan you know dat de Lawd frown on slander? |
18984 | Doan you know you got er soul ter save? |
18984 | Does you hyarken ter me?" |
18984 | Ever see the sun rise?" |
18984 | Feller over near Smithfield had a sheep once that--""Did n''t he say he was a goin''to be app''inted deputy marshal?" |
18984 | Findin''new picturs on the moon, Jim? |
18984 | Funny how sich er''po''tent p''int will come ter er man w''en he neber did think o''it befo'', ai n''t it?" |
18984 | Go on an''it will be all right an''--""You''ll come too, wo n''t you?" |
18984 | Got a good artickle of pie thar in the kitchin?" |
18984 | Got the same names here that you had down whar you come from?" |
18984 | Great goodness alive, is it all to his credit that he is a jedge''s son? |
18984 | Hah, ai n''t that it?" |
18984 | Hah? |
18984 | Have I said you wan''t good?" |
18984 | Have I, Jim?" |
18984 | Have you fixed everythin''at the mill?" |
18984 | Have you got any postal- kyard or tillygram to that effeck? |
18984 | Have you got any right young pigs? |
18984 | Have you had any news from over my way?" |
18984 | Have you seed Lije Peters sense he was here the other day?" |
18984 | He looked at Jasper, expecting something, and it came:"Was that the time they found the ham under yo''bed?" |
18984 | He spoke to Mose:"How far do you live from Mr. Starbuck''s place?" |
18984 | He--""And is he a liar, too?" |
18984 | Helloa, who''s this a comin''?" |
18984 | Here, you,"he added, speaking to Mose,"what is your name?" |
18984 | How air you an''Lou a gittin''along?" |
18984 | How air you goin''to understand a critter that do n''t understand herse''f? |
18984 | How did I know you did n''t love him? |
18984 | How''s all with you?" |
18984 | Huh?" |
18984 | I ai n''t a prisoner-- don''t you see I ai n''t got no hand- cuffs on? |
18984 | I am so anxious, an''''specially at this time when--""When what?" |
18984 | I seed a old feller a runnin''once, an''I says--""But here,"Jasper broke in,"ai n''t she old enough to know better''n to run fitten to kill herse''f?" |
18984 | I seed him put it under one-- seed him jest as cl''ar as I see you, an''I would have bet him five dollars, but--""But what?" |
18984 | I wanted to tell you--"She sprang to her feet and with snapping eyes exclaimed:"What do you want to tell me? |
18984 | I was po''an''I did n''t have no home an''I was almost starvin''an''he married me, an''--you do love me, do n''t you, Jasper?" |
18984 | In lub wid who?" |
18984 | Is Starbuck at home? |
18984 | Is he expectin''some help?" |
18984 | Is it because I told you of the spirits? |
18984 | Is it yours?" |
18984 | Is n''t it nice to be as brave as you are?" |
18984 | Is that it?" |
18984 | It''s a fact, but I said to myself,''Old fellow, what''s the matter with your knees?'' |
18984 | Jasper and his wife exchanged glances, and the old man said:"Husband dead, ma''m?" |
18984 | Jasper studied for a few moments and then inquired:"Wan''t hung, was he?" |
18984 | Jasper, do n''t you see how much Lou is a thinkin''of him? |
18984 | Laws a massy, do n''t I ricolleck it?" |
18984 | Laz, kin you think of any other little thing that''s happened to fret yo''neighborhood?" |
18984 | Like Steve Smith?" |
18984 | Look yere, Mr. Starbuck, ai n''t you got some work fur me ter do while I''s er eatin''?" |
18984 | Look, here, do n''t you know the right to ruin you has come down to me from my folks, like er old spinnin''wheel? |
18984 | Lookin''fur suthin''?" |
18984 | Lou looked at Peters and said:"Then why do n''t you go?" |
18984 | Lou, air you g-- g-- g-- goin''to church Sunday?" |
18984 | Lou, have n''t you spoke to the folks?" |
18984 | Lou, why do n''t you pass the butter to Mr. Elliott; and the bread? |
18984 | Ma''m, I--""Are you calling me ma''m, again?" |
18984 | Ma''m,"he added, looking at Margaret without turning his head,"I reckon you hearn about old Aunt Sis Garrett?" |
18984 | Many professions resultant from the revivals last fall, Brother Jim Starbuck?" |
18984 | Margaret, do n''t you see whut a fix I''m in? |
18984 | Margaret, will you please go in thar?" |
18984 | Mayfield? |
18984 | Miz Mayfield, did you ever see sich carryin''s- on?" |
18984 | Mr. Starbuck, why did n''t you tell me?" |
18984 | Mrs. Mayfield had turned to listen, and Jasper inquired of her:"Will that do, ma''m?" |
18984 | Mrs. Mayfield looked away, and the girl stricken with remorse, hastened to her and said:"There, I have been too brash, have n''t I? |
18984 | Never plowed a day in your life, did you?" |
18984 | Never wuz kicked by er steer, wuz you?" |
18984 | Now that do sound like music, do n''t it? |
18984 | Now what prompted you to do that?" |
18984 | Now, Jasper, whut air you a settin''up here fur, a shakin''like a lump o''calf- foot jelly? |
18984 | Oh, did you see that bird almost light on me?" |
18984 | Or should I call it thermometer?" |
18984 | Peters stood for a moment, looking at her and then inquired:"Did yo''father tell you suthin''I said to him?" |
18984 | Peters?" |
18984 | Puffeckly nat''ral to grunt under sich circumstances, ai n''t it?" |
18984 | Reverend?" |
18984 | Reverend?" |
18984 | Reverend?" |
18984 | Ricolleck the hoss the preacher swopped to Dave Somers?" |
18984 | Say, Jasper, they calls the sakermint the blood o''the lamb, do n''t they? |
18984 | Say,"he added, as he put the jug in its accustomed place,"have you hearn the new preacher over at Ebenezer?" |
18984 | See, through de winder?" |
18984 | Shall we go down there?" |
18984 | She flouted at him and said to Tom:"Goin''to git married?" |
18984 | She halted, looked at him and said,"Well?" |
18984 | She resumed her work, and after a time left off to inquire:"May I ask you somethin''?" |
18984 | So you like it, ma''m?" |
18984 | Stand like that young feller Elliott and read stuff writ in short lines?" |
18984 | Starbuck''s voice was never softer than when he said:"Wo n''t you sit down, Lije?" |
18984 | Suddenly she looked up and then came the question:"And did they put yo''husband in jail?" |
18984 | Swoppin''any hosses lately, Brother Fetterson?" |
18984 | Taking up the jug and the cup Starbuck, approaching his visitor, inquired:"Have a sneeze, Laz?" |
18984 | That whar they uster burn witches?" |
18984 | That woman and young chap here yet?" |
18984 | The affairs of the human fam''ly ai n''t nonsense, is they? |
18984 | The boys looked with big eyes an''the old man clim''up on the fence and shouted,''whut''s the matter here?'' |
18984 | The fact is-- what shall I call you?" |
18984 | The old man was silent for a few moments and then he asked:"Do he have the app''intment of the deputy marshals?" |
18984 | The old negro halted to wipe his brow and Jim whispered to Jasper:"Is that learning or ignorance inspired? |
18984 | The wagon stopped and Jasper shouted:"Whut''s the matter here?" |
18984 | Then she added, speaking to Peters,"Is there anythin''else you wanted?" |
18984 | Then why did n''t you kill him?" |
18984 | Tom asked, and he answered:"Who, me? |
18984 | Was he very mean to you, ma''am?" |
18984 | Was n''t she mean? |
18984 | We clim''up on the fence, jest like my granddaddy an''my daddy had done, an''I cried out,''Whut''s the trouble now?'' |
18984 | Well, do you want to buy anythin''?" |
18984 | Went along by the sto''one day an''he war a settin''on a box with this here gourd riddle, an--""Well, but what about him?" |
18984 | Whar is it?" |
18984 | What about him?" |
18984 | What about him?" |
18984 | What air they goin''to do about it?" |
18984 | What are they doin''?" |
18984 | What are you trying to do? |
18984 | What did I know how to do when I got back to work? |
18984 | What did you bring that gear in here for? |
18984 | What do he want allus to be a steppin''round her skirts like a frost- bit chicken?" |
18984 | What do you mean by a tale? |
18984 | What do you mean by that?" |
18984 | What do you think of all this, Jasper?" |
18984 | What do you think of them folks in thar, Jim?" |
18984 | What do you want to torment a body fur? |
18984 | What had my grandaddy an''my daddy done? |
18984 | What is your name?" |
18984 | What makes you allus want to fetch in the good Book? |
18984 | What makes you talk about yourself that way? |
18984 | What makes you wanter talk that way for? |
18984 | What object would we have in changing them?" |
18984 | What sort of a chicken?" |
18984 | What was it?" |
18984 | What''s that feller doin''over thar with that crowd about him?" |
18984 | What''s that? |
18984 | What''s the matter with yo''coat- tail?" |
18984 | What, Margaret, ai n''t a cryin''?" |
18984 | When Mose was gone Peters inquired of Kintchin:"Whar''s Starbuck?" |
18984 | Where do you live?" |
18984 | Where does he live?" |
18984 | Where is the scoundrel?" |
18984 | Where you frum?" |
18984 | Whew, what you got sich a hot fire in here for?" |
18984 | Which one o''the gospels air you preachin'', Luke or John? |
18984 | Who preaches to- day, Margaret?" |
18984 | Whut I tell you?" |
18984 | Why do you act this way? |
18984 | Why do you ask?" |
18984 | Why, do n''t a woman know that everybody is a watchin''of a preacher? |
18984 | Will that do?" |
18984 | Will you let me ride?" |
18984 | Wo n''t that be romantic? |
18984 | Would n''t let it bother you when a man gains yo''confidence an''then deceives you?" |
18984 | Would n''t you, Jim?" |
18984 | Would you?" |
18984 | You ai n''t got no cullud ladies ober at yo''house now, is you?" |
18984 | You ai n''t jealous o''that weak little woman, air you?" |
18984 | You might make a man foolish, but you--""Oh, how could I make anybody foolish?" |
18984 | You understand?" |
18984 | You''se Mr. Starbuck, ai n''t you?" |
18984 | Young feller,"he asked of Tom,"did you like yo''ride?" |
18984 | do n''t I git nothin''back-- no change?'' |
37148 | ''''Taint pizen, is it?'' 37148 ''Den you is de ringleader,''he says,''an''you tempted de other chillen?'' |
37148 | ''How''s that?'' 37148 ''Is you Miss Nannie?'' |
37148 | ''Oh, dat''s you, is it, Nannie?'' 37148 ''What did he say to ye, honey?'' |
37148 | ''What you mean by makin''eyes at Dr. Boling? 37148 ''Where''s she gwine to sleep?'' |
37148 | ''Yes,''she says,''dat''s me, an''ai n''t you Aunt Chloe what I heared so much about?'' 37148 Ah, you vind day oud, do you? |
37148 | An accident? |
37148 | An hour more? 37148 And if the Judge granted it, what good would it do?" |
37148 | And now how much? |
37148 | And that''s why you worked so hard to hang him, was it? |
37148 | And you swallowed it? |
37148 | Any celery? |
37148 | Anything else? |
37148 | Appeal? 37148 Are you Dick Sands?" |
37148 | Are you an orphan? |
37148 | Been coming years, ai n''t you? |
37148 | Been long without sleep? |
37148 | But do n''t they lock him up, meanwhile? |
37148 | But he ai n''t sick dat he did n''t come? 37148 But ye see him, did n''t ye?" |
37148 | But you''ve enjoyed life? |
37148 | Cabby, how far is it to the asylum? |
37148 | Can I get something to eat? |
37148 | Can I_ blay_? |
37148 | Can you get me something to eat? 37148 Convict?" |
37148 | Could_ you_ write one? |
37148 | Did the warden mail it? |
37148 | Did they send her to school? |
37148 | Did you ever know anybody like her? |
37148 | Did you sleep? |
37148 | Did your own mother find it out? |
37148 | Do not the palaces interest you? |
37148 | Do you believe he stole the three dollars when he handed the wallet back? |
37148 | Do you live here, madam? |
37148 | Do you want to go to the asylum? |
37148 | Does it look like anybody you ever saw, Aunt Chloe? |
37148 | Got no father nor mother? |
37148 | Have n''t forgotten me, have you? 37148 Have you been in court all day?" |
37148 | Have you got any brothers and sisters, my boy? |
37148 | How did he lose his arm? |
37148 | How did you get here, my boy? |
37148 | How do you account for it, madam? |
37148 | How old are you? |
37148 | Hungry, be ye? 37148 I live in---- Do you mean now?" |
37148 | I s''pose you never done no time? |
37148 | I suppose you know who the old man is, do n''t you? |
37148 | In the war? |
37148 | In what way? |
37148 | Is it a goot von? 37148 Is it yours?" |
37148 | Is that all? |
37148 | Is there a restaurant near by? |
37148 | Is there another hotel here? |
37148 | Kinder ca''m, ai n''t it? |
37148 | Kinder ca''m, ai n''t it? |
37148 | Morgan House, did you say, boss? |
37148 | Ned what? |
37148 | Neighbor, ai n''t you from the U.S.A.? |
37148 | Nex''time Dr. Tom Boling come he say to de mist''ess,''Who''s dat young lady,''he says,''dat opened de door for me las''time I was here? 37148 Not the five- meals- for- a- dollar place?" |
37148 | Not_ Dick Sands_? |
37148 | Off? |
37148 | One of them bo- kets? |
37148 | Raspberry jam, or apricots? |
37148 | Sleep? 37148 Some trouble?" |
37148 | Stealing chickens? |
37148 | Stole''em? 37148 Ten you do n''t buy him?" |
37148 | That''s why he could n''t walk to- night,I asked,"and why the driver took him over in the stage?" |
37148 | The lady with you-- your wife? |
37148 | Then why did n''t he play for you? |
37148 | Tid you oxamine te neck? 37148 To the orphan asylum? |
37148 | Vere is your violin? |
37148 | Want me to tell you about the pocketbook or that ham scrape? |
37148 | Want to go where? |
37148 | Was Miss Nannie her child? |
37148 | We''re tired and sick of it, are n''t we, girls? 37148 Well, now, I want it straight,"--and he lowered his voice,--"what does a sensible man find in an old waterlogged town like this?" |
37148 | Well, now, why ca n''t you take this man along? 37148 Well, when''s he comin''? |
37148 | Well, you saw Chris Rankin, did n''t you,--that fellow that talked about jail- birds? 37148 Well, you saw him; clean and pert- lookin'', ai n''t he? |
37148 | What clerk? |
37148 | What did I tell you Todd? 37148 What did the priest do?" |
37148 | What did they arrest you for, Peter? |
37148 | What did you leave him for? |
37148 | What did you want to catch him for? |
37148 | What difference does it make, your Excellency,I asked,"whether I sit in my boat and paint or sit here where there is less motion?" |
37148 | What do you think yourself about that money of the farmer''s? |
37148 | What for? |
37148 | What in the world kept you? |
37148 | What preserves have you? |
37148 | What time was you goin''to take Dick? |
37148 | What was his crime, Judge? |
37148 | What was his name? |
37148 | What was this man''s crime? |
37148 | What''s been the matter? 37148 What''s been the trouble?" |
37148 | What''s her name? |
37148 | What''s that? |
37148 | What''s your name? |
37148 | What, Dick Sands? |
37148 | What, the child he had with him tonight? |
37148 | When? |
37148 | When? |
37148 | Where are they? |
37148 | Where did she live? |
37148 | Where do you live? |
37148 | Where would he run to, and for what? 37148 Where''s Peter?" |
37148 | Where''s your father? |
37148 | Which way? |
37148 | Who gave you this note? |
37148 | Who was Miss Nannie? |
37148 | Who''s been taking care of you ever since your father left you? |
37148 | Who? |
37148 | Why do you want to sell it? |
37148 | Why? |
37148 | Would you take thirty dollars and my old violin? |
37148 | Ye did? 37148 Yes; how far is it from here?" |
37148 | You do n''t think,I continued,"he''s such a fool as to go to your house for your violin? |
37148 | You heard that fellow, did n''t you? |
37148 | You mean on account of your health? |
37148 | You say he went to Congress? |
37148 | You seem rather fond of that little girl; is she any relation? |
37148 | You''re comin''to supper, ai n''t ye? 37148 You''re the painter feller that helped me out of a hole yesterday? |
37148 | _ Can_ you play? |
37148 | ''''Fo''God,''I says to ole Sam, who was settin''de table for dinner,''who''s dis yere comin''in?'' |
37148 | ''Is she in now?'' |
37148 | ''Oh, Aunt Chloe, what did you let me go for?'' |
37148 | ''Sarcy,''sez I,''ca n''t ye wholesale this, er sell it by the quart? |
37148 | ''What''s dis,''says Marse Henry--''chillen stealin''cake? |
37148 | Ai n''t you read the bills? |
37148 | An''I ai n''t a wreck yet, am I? |
37148 | An''he ai n''t come wid ye?" |
37148 | An''he look up an''say,''Who''s dat?'' |
37148 | An''he say,''What you want?'' |
37148 | An''ye see him, did ye?" |
37148 | An''ye_ see_ him, did ye? |
37148 | Been here all summer, ai n''t you?" |
37148 | But where are they in Holland? |
37148 | Could n''t you hear? |
37148 | Could this lithe, well- knit, brown- eyed young Robin Hood be a convict? |
37148 | Could you"--and I lowered my voice--"could you get me a bottle of beer?" |
37148 | Curious, was n''t it? |
37148 | Did n''t I tell you? |
37148 | Did n''t you see through the whole game? |
37148 | Do n''t look much like a habitual criminal, as Polk called him, does he?" |
37148 | Do n''t you know he''s good as''gaged to my daughter?'' |
37148 | Do n''t you know what''s goin''on? |
37148 | Do n''t you think so, Judge?" |
37148 | Do n''t you think they''re nice? |
37148 | Do you know where I can get anything to eat?" |
37148 | Do you want to see it?" |
37148 | Do you want to see the letter?" |
37148 | Do you?" |
37148 | Fine old fellow, is n''t he? |
37148 | For had he not provided for every emergency? |
37148 | Got my stummic out o''gear, throat kinder weak, and what with the seventies"----"Seventies?" |
37148 | Has he been arrested?" |
37148 | He said,"Want supper?" |
37148 | How is it yo''looks so comf''ble like?'' |
37148 | How long do you think he has lived with us?" |
37148 | How much yer got?" |
37148 | I asked;"he never robbed you?" |
37148 | I began again:--"Did the priest send you here?" |
37148 | I began again:--"The driver tells me your mother''s sick?" |
37148 | I says, callin''after her;''upstairs long wid Miss Rachel?'' |
37148 | I says,''How do you know?'' |
37148 | I sez,''thet''s got ter be fixed so all- fired kerful?'' |
37148 | I think this is the Amazon sherry, is it not, my dear madam?" |
37148 | In the Crouch case? |
37148 | Is she in?'' |
37148 | Kinder peaked, ai n''t I? |
37148 | Never had one-- she''s my sister-- only one I got; and this summer she took it into her head-- you do n''t mind my setting here, do you? |
37148 | So I said, aimlessly:--"Is that your little sister?" |
37148 | Steak, fried potatoes-- what have you got?" |
37148 | Steak, ham and eggs-- anything?" |
37148 | Stummic gone, throat busted, mouth caved in; but I''m seventy- five, ai n''t I? |
37148 | Then an idea struck me:"Could she poach me some eggs?" |
37148 | Then, after a pause, his wavering eye seeking Bob''s,"Blease you buy him?" |
37148 | There''s one of your ex_traw_d''nary clay- soiled sons of toil out on an educating tour: are n''t you proud of him? |
37148 | Think o''dat, will ye? |
37148 | This water''s brackish, ai n''t it?" |
37148 | Tid you ever see neck like dat? |
37148 | To save two gulden?" |
37148 | Walk?... |
37148 | Want a room?" |
37148 | Were not His Honor''s viands already at that moment on the kitchen hearth, with special plates over them to keep them hot against his arrival? |
37148 | Were you in time for the sentence?" |
37148 | What do you say, Judge?" |
37148 | What do you think he''d found?" |
37148 | What is there in the make- up of a gentleman that this man has n''t got? |
37148 | What''ll yer hev?" |
37148 | What''s the matter, anyway?" |
37148 | When did he git out?" |
37148 | When he dons his dress suit for dinner, and bending over your shoulder asks, in his best English:"Mynheer, do n''t it now de feesh you haf?" |
37148 | When the stage reached the crossing near the college gate and stopped, he asked quietly:--"You get out here?" |
37148 | When we all come in-- dere was six or eight of us-- he says,''Eve''y one o''ye look me in de eye; now which one tuk it?'' |
37148 | Where was his trunk? |
37148 | Would yo''believe it? |
37148 | Yo''_ sho''_ now, he ai n''t sick?" |
37148 | You received my message, of course?" |
37148 | You''ll want a team, wo n''t you? |
37148 | [ Illustration: DRENCHED LEAVES QUIVERING] But does n''t it rain? |
37148 | _ Cabby_, you did n''t leave the boy''s trunk, too, did you?" |
37148 | ai n''t dat de ve''y image of dat frock? |
37148 | hungry, unwashed, not a clean shirt for weeks? |
37148 | is dat so?'' |
37148 | that so? |
43675 | And did you ever think we would n''t be? |
43675 | And have not_ you_, the best marksman in the company, succeeded in doing as well as he? |
43675 | And how could you know that, little one? |
43675 | And would soon know where it came from? |
43675 | Are you hurt in any way? |
43675 | Are you sure of it, younker? |
43675 | But I ca n''t understand his cause for entering the cabin any way; what good can he do us there? |
43675 | But how can you get out? 43675 But how does he manage to move himself then?" |
43675 | But, Jo, what does it mean? 43675 Can my white brother write on the back of this the words which Colonel Preston can read?" |
43675 | Did it hit the buck? |
43675 | Did n''t I carry the news to Wild Oaks two years ago, when it looked as though all of us was going under sure? |
43675 | Did you find the tomahawk in the door? |
43675 | Did you see it coming? |
43675 | Do you think he did right, Uncle? |
43675 | Had n''t I better lead de way? |
43675 | Have any of my brethren of the Wyandots been harmed by the dogs of the Yenghese? |
43675 | Have the Wyandots learned to run? 43675 Have you any idea of the number in the woods?" |
43675 | Have you any knowledge when the Wyandots will attack Colonel Preston? |
43675 | How are we going to get across? |
43675 | How could you know that,asked the surprised Mrs. Preston,"when we could not be certain, until you were both within the house?" |
43675 | How do you find it? |
43675 | How do you know that? |
43675 | How was it? |
43675 | How was that? |
43675 | How would my brother with the face of the night do? |
43675 | I''m not scared; I only wanted to know who it is; what are you after? |
43675 | If dem Injines do n''t want to come forrard and speak to us, what''s de use ob waiting for''em? |
43675 | If the Colonel sees that, then will he read those words you have spoken to me? |
43675 | If they have fixed upon this plan of assault,said Colonel Preston to Stinger,"why do they wait?" |
43675 | In what way? |
43675 | Is it fully dark on the outside? |
43675 | Is it the only one that endangers the roof? |
43675 | Is there no way of stopping him? |
43675 | Ned, what am de use ob loafin''round here? |
43675 | Suppose it is a success? |
43675 | Suppose you can not extinguish it? |
43675 | Sure of it? 43675 That arrow which came through the window was a surprise, was it not?" |
43675 | That is n''t what I mean; how was it he brought you here and helped you to enter the block- house? |
43675 | That is well for the Wyandots,said the Colonel,"but have you done anything to teach them that the skill is not all on their side?" |
43675 | The pale- faces will come to the help of Deerfoot, for who has been a better friend to them than he? |
43675 | War dat you dat fired dat arrer at us? |
43675 | Well, younker, what is it? |
43675 | Whar am de Injines? |
43675 | What do you think about it, Jo? |
43675 | What harm can two of them do, if they_ are_ there? |
43675 | What has put that idea in your head? |
43675 | What is it, Jo? |
43675 | What will they do with it, after they steal it? |
43675 | What would I want to turn back for? |
43675 | When shall I look for your return? |
43675 | Where is Deerfoot? |
43675 | Where were they? |
43675 | Who is it? |
43675 | Who''s there? |
43675 | Who''s there? |
43675 | Whose boat is that? |
43675 | Why are they not closer to the station? |
43675 | Why ca n''t we dig the well inside the block- house, as you intended? |
43675 | Why did n''t you took him by de collar,asked Blossom Brown,"and slam him down on de floor? |
43675 | Why did we not know the dog spoke with two tongues? 43675 Why not try another shot?" |
43675 | Why should we feel alarmed, Maria,he asked,"when, as I told you a short time ago, we have plenty of ammunition and the means to defend ourselves? |
43675 | Why? |
43675 | Will my brother teach Deerfoot how to send his thoughts to the Great Spirit? |
43675 | Will my brother with the face of the night, walk a long ways in the wood and let Deerfoot send a single arrow toward him? |
43675 | Will my white brother tell Deerfoot of the Great Spirit of the pale faces, that the missionary talks about? |
43675 | Would my brother like to use his gun? |
43675 | You did-- that''s a fact; but was the risk as great as now? |
43675 | You do, eh? |
43675 | You have a barrel of water in the house? |
43675 | Are the Wyandots tired that they must sit down and rest? |
43675 | But where was the arrow? |
43675 | But, Deerfoot, is there not danger that some of the Wyandots saw the arrow in its flight?" |
43675 | How was it he befriended you as he did?" |
43675 | I wonder whether----""Hello, Colonel, what''s going on?" |
43675 | If they should find he was dogging them, what other proof could they ask that he was playing the part of spy and enemy? |
43675 | Looking at Ned, he asked--"Will my brother let Deerfoot see one of his letters?" |
43675 | Ned Preston caught the arm of the man in the darkness and asked--"Ca n''t you put it out with a wet blanket?" |
43675 | Several minutes passed, and then the guide asked--"Do my brothers hear anything?" |
43675 | Shall Deerfoot come back to them and show them what to do, when their enemies are around them?" |
43675 | She listened in amazement, and then said:"Why, do you think you could write a book like that?" |
43675 | Was ever such reckless daring known? |
43675 | Was it not there that he should seek the key to the problem which had baffled him thus far? |
43675 | Was it work? |
43675 | Was there not a chance of getting away by a sudden dash? |
43675 | What secret might not the old cabin give up to him? |
43675 | Who is Waughtauk, that a youth of the Shawanoes should teach him to walk? |
43675 | Why did he come out there where he could be seen, and go into the building?" |
43675 | Why did not some of our warriors lie in the woods at the end of the Long Clearing to catch him, if he should escape us?" |
43675 | Why did we not make sure he could not run? |
43675 | he repeated, as he placed his arm affectionately on her shoulder;"do you regard it possible, when I have_ you_ and the little ones depending on us?" |
43675 | is that you?" |
43675 | remarked the Colonel, looking toward him in the darkness;"what is it?" |
42526 | ''Did Lincoln give you an order of that kind?'' 42526 ''Did Stanton say I was a d-- d fool?'' |
42526 | ''Do you mean to say the President is a d-- d fool?'' 42526 ''That is too true,''he replied,''but how can we prevent it?'' |
42526 | ''Well, what is it?'' 42526 Do you remember, Mr. President, a request from a stranger a few days since for your autograph? |
42526 | Do you see those papers stuffed into those pigeonholes? |
42526 | Have you any orders? |
42526 | Now, gentlemen,he said,"if I can not enforce the Constitution down South, how can I enforce a mere Presidential proclamation? |
42526 | Oh, that''s the trick, is it? |
42526 | So you think I better put those two little fellows end to end, do you? |
42526 | What do you mean by leg cases, sir? |
42526 | What do you mean, madam? |
42526 | What does this mean? |
42526 | What is it about? |
42526 | What is your height? |
42526 | What shall be done with him? |
42526 | Who is Captain McClellan and why is he not here? |
42526 | Who is Henry Knox? |
42526 | Why is not the company ready to go to trial? |
42526 | Will you keep it entirely secret? |
42526 | ''Halloo, Dana,''said he, as I opened the door,''what is it now?'' |
42526 | ''How is that?'' |
42526 | ''Well,''said Mr. Lincoln,''don''t you think this is an almighty small crop of fight to gather from such a big piece of ground?'' |
42526 | ''What does Stanton say?'' |
42526 | ''Why did n''t you follow them up and kill the rest?'' |
42526 | ''Will you,''said one of them,''take us and our trunks out to the steamer?'' |
42526 | A Senator who noticed an expression of anxiety and dejection upon his face, inquired,--"Has anything gone wrong, Mr. President? |
42526 | A few months later Lincoln wrote Johnston again in regard to his contemplated move to Missouri:"What can you do in Missouri better than here? |
42526 | After a few moments''thought he said,''Well, gentlemen, do n''t you think I have honestly earned twenty- five dollars?'' |
42526 | After the trial one of his friends came to him and said,--"Why did n''t you get that feller to swar on your side?" |
42526 | And what do you think his ideas of a good education were? |
42526 | As he was about to sign the pardon, he turned to Lamon, saying,--"Lamon, do you know how the Patagonians eat oysters?" |
42526 | As soon as I arrived Baker hurried to me, saying,''How is it? |
42526 | As soon as he had uttered the last word, Mr. Lincoln asked eagerly,--"Mr. Blank, how tall are you?" |
42526 | But how? |
42526 | But these college- trained men, who have devoted their whole lives to study, are coming West, do n''t you see? |
42526 | But what next? |
42526 | But who is so perfect or so wise as to judge Abraham Lincoln? |
42526 | Can you there, any more than here, raise corn and wheat and oats without work? |
42526 | Could you not break him?" |
42526 | Did anybody here witness that warlike proceeding? |
42526 | Did anybody in this audience hear him use such language? |
42526 | Do n''t you see it?" |
42526 | Do you believe you could bear that patiently? |
42526 | During his interview with the President he complained of this, and Lincoln remarked,--"You have had hard luck in Baltimore, have n''t you, Garrison? |
42526 | Has a man what''s been elected justice of the peace a right to issue a marriage license?'' |
42526 | Have you heard bad news from Fort Sumter?" |
42526 | He recognized her, and, with a pleasant smile, said,--"''Well, my dear, have you seen the Secretary?'' |
42526 | I have never had much to do with bishops where I live, but, do you know? |
42526 | I said to him,--"''Is it known that you ride thus alone at night out to the Soldiers''Home?'' |
42526 | I said,''Do you mean to say that you never tasted it?'' |
42526 | I wonder who he is?" |
42526 | If Almighty God gives a man a cowardly pair of legs, how can he help their running away with him?" |
42526 | In the midst of a bombardment at Fort Donelson, why could not a gunboat run up and destroy the bridge at Clarksville? |
42526 | Is he an abolitionist or a Whig?" |
42526 | Is the land any richer? |
42526 | It was too big to haul out, too knotty to split, and too wet and soggy to burn; what did you do?" |
42526 | Lincoln, I come to you to know whether the public interest will permit you to explain to me what this Southern commission means? |
42526 | Lincoln, wo n''t you help us? |
42526 | Lincoln?" |
42526 | Lincoln?" |
42526 | Looking gravely at his visitor, whose head was very bald, he remarked,--"Did you ever try this stuff for your hair?" |
42526 | Mr. Chase, wo n''t you make a draft of what you think ought to be inserted?" |
42526 | Mr. Lincoln had observed this, and as soon as he was seated he said to Major Eckert,''What is the woman crying about just outside your door? |
42526 | Mr. Lincoln said,--"''What shall I do? |
42526 | Mr. Stanton stated the reasons why it should be retained, and before deciding the question Mr. Lincoln turned to me, saying,--"''Well, Dana?'' |
42526 | Nasby?'' |
42526 | Now, do n''t you see what kind of a fix I will be in if I interfere? |
42526 | Now, have any of you heard of any machine or invention for preventing the escape of gas from newspaper establishments?" |
42526 | Now, my friends, can this country be saved on that basis? |
42526 | Now, what I want to know is, how are you going to pay my bill?" |
42526 | One man whispered to the boy as he went by,''Look here, boy, hain''t that horse got splints?'' |
42526 | President?'' |
42526 | The President appeared to be attracted to the lad, and asked,''And who is the little boy?'' |
42526 | The proposition irritated Judge Douglas, who, with his usual arrogance, inquired,--"What does Lincoln represent in this campaign? |
42526 | The question is, Will it be wiser to take it as it is, and help to improve it, or to reject and disperse it? |
42526 | The worthy farmer, greatly astonished, exclaimed,"Is that Old Abe? |
42526 | These were often disconcerted by the President''s loud and hearty,''Well, friend, what can I do for you?'' |
42526 | This being explained to the President, he said, in his frank, off- hand way,''Come, now, let''s send her down: what do you say?'' |
42526 | Was it possible to lose the nation and yet preserve the Constitution? |
42526 | What are you talking about?'' |
42526 | What do you think of it?'' |
42526 | What ought to be done? |
42526 | When I delivered the letter, Mr. Lincoln read it carefully and handed it back to me, saying,--"''What is the matter between Blair and Stanton?'' |
42526 | When asked''How?'' |
42526 | Who can say, after looking at it, that New Hampshire''s only product is granite?''" |
42526 | Who would have thought when we were married that I should so soon be called upon to save my country?" |
42526 | Why not send them all down there to dig the canal? |
42526 | Will anybody there, any more than here, do your work for you? |
42526 | Will you make that promise and try to keep it?''" |
42526 | Will you not for me take that place? |
42526 | Wo n''t you speak to him for me?'' |
42526 | Would it not be possible to export them to some place, say Liberia or South America, and organize them into communities to support themselves?'' |
42526 | You know how that Illinois farmer managed the big log that lay in the middle of his field? |
42526 | how can I have a butcher''s day every Friday in the Army of the Potomac?''" |
42526 | said they,"how did you do it? |
42526 | shall there any man be put to death this day in Israel?" |
47351 | ''Do you think so, sir?'' 47351 And what books have you read?" |
47351 | And what use will you make of their language? |
47351 | How long have you read law? |
47351 | Whither is the white man going? |
47351 | Why do you go among the Indians? |
47351 | Why does the paleface travel such unknown roads? 47351 Will you not take the oath?" |
47351 | And what more, pray, could be done than this to advance the interests of the United States hereabouts? |
47351 | And where were the millions of money, the men, and the arms to come from that should prevent final annihilation? |
47351 | But that was not the vital question; the vital question was, Could it grow? |
47351 | But there was a very important question to be settled immediately; did Kentucky belong to Virginia or was it independent? |
47351 | Could it mock the European doctrine that, in time, mountains inevitably become boundaries of empires? |
47351 | Could the New Englanders do equally well? |
47351 | Could the new master, this infant Republic,"one nation to- day, thirteen to- morrow,"do better? |
47351 | Did they know too well the herculean toils that such work demanded? |
47351 | How free now would they be? |
47351 | If a short road was practicable, why not a long one? |
47351 | In the many expeditions to the westward of the Alleghanies in America what commanders turned their attention later to the regions subdued? |
47351 | Is it not of interest that the famed Cumberland Road was not built to connect two large Eastern cities, or a seaport or river with a city? |
47351 | Maryland hesitated; could Baltimore be connected by canal with the Potomac Valley? |
47351 | Shall not a more appropriate token of our esteem replace the little slab that now marks that hallowed grave? |
47351 | The question was raised,"Shall we take our prisoners to Pittsburg, or kill them?" |
47351 | Was it to hinder or help the occupation of the land on the part of rival spirits? |
47351 | Was it to strengthen or weaken America''s claim to the empire of Oregon? |
47351 | Were those dreams true? |
47351 | What if other national roads proposed-- through the South and northward from Washington to Buffalo-- should demand equally large sums? |
47351 | What if the fund produced from the sales of land was not sufficient to build the road? |
47351 | What was its political status? |
47351 | Which party would Congress listen to if the public treasury was not in a position to satisfy both applicants? |
47351 | Who before him ever had the temerity to suggest that ships would descend the Ohio River and sail for foreign ports? |
47351 | Would he like the country? |
47351 | Would he want the other members of the family to emigrate there too? |
47351 | Would he wish to stay in the West? |
47351 | Yet against what human motive may not the accusation of self- interest be cast? |
58833 | What does that mean? |
58833 | Who is John Cooper, and where does he live? |
58833 | He asked Emory"What is the matter?" |
58833 | Monroe delay too long, and shall we be obliged to leave our guns as we have seen two batteries do just a few moments before? |
58833 | What has happened? |
58833 | Whence came this abhorrence of slavery, and this love of liberty? |
58833 | William Mills, the number four, turned to his sergeant and asked,"Charlie, shall I let him have it?" |
43590 | ''General, your men do n''t appear to work well to- day?'' 43590 Do you know of any instance where volunteer troops have successfully stormed works as strong as those which defend the approach to Secessionville?" |
43590 | Do you mean Governor Stevens? |
43590 | Have you a thousand men at your disposal, and suffer yourself to be set at defiance by a wagon- master? 43590 Have you any reason to believe that the result in the present case will be different in its character from what it has invariably been heretofore?" |
43590 | Is Governor Stevens your father? 43590 Now, how are we here as at a post? |
43590 | Should I speak to you of things that happened long ago, as you have done? 43590 What effect would it have on the Sound should nothing be done until May or June? |
43590 | A principal chief of the lower Spokanes said:"Why is the country in difficulty again? |
43590 | After a pause of some minutes Governor Stevens said:--"I will ask Ambrose where is Victor?" |
43590 | Again, what is the interest of the Hudson Bay Company? |
43590 | And is not something due the_ morale_ of his troops, which was almost systematically broken by the blunders and disasters of this unhappy campaign? |
43590 | And what was the duty of those having forces at their command? |
43590 | And why should I hide anything? |
43590 | Are their wishes to be disregarded? |
43590 | Ask yourself this question to- night:''Will not God be angry with me if I neglect this opportunity to do them good?'' |
43590 | Can more be said for the gallantry and devotion of the soldiers, or the hold upon them of their heroic leader? |
43590 | Can you presume, sir, to be able to correct your opinions by a hasty visit to the Sound for a few days? |
43590 | Could the country expect it? |
43590 | Did I write you that his conduct on the battlefield was witnessed by the rebels with great admiration? |
43590 | Did we propose to hold a council with them, or ask them for advice? |
43590 | Do Alexander and Michelle speak in the same way? |
43590 | Do you agree to this treaty?--the treaty placing the Pend Oreilles and Koo- te- nays on this reservation? |
43590 | Do you think, because your mother was white and theirs black, that you are higher or better? |
43590 | Do you want peace or war?" |
43590 | Does Victor mean to say that he will neither let Alexander come to his place nor go to Alexander''s?" |
43590 | Does he not know that Mr. Burr and another man went to Fort Benton the other day?" |
43590 | Does he prefer the Yakima reservation to that of the Nez Perces? |
43590 | Dumb as a dog? |
43590 | Ever since I have been thinking, How will the governor speak to us? |
43590 | Foiled in their plot, why did they then so quickly agree to the treaties, which up to that time they had so bitterly spurned? |
43590 | From what you have said, I think that you intend to win our country, or how is it to be? |
43590 | Governor Stevens:"Alexander, did you agree yesterday to give up your country and join Victor?" |
43590 | Governor Stevens:"Does Victor want to treat? |
43590 | Governor Stevens:"How can Moses say I am not going to the Blackfoot country? |
43590 | Governor Stevens:"I will ask you, my children, if you fully understand all that was said yesterday? |
43590 | Have all of you talked straight? |
43590 | Have we not told your messenger yesterday that our hearts are not Cuyuse hearts? |
43590 | Have you not always done well? |
43590 | He had labored only for their good as their friend, and could they wonder that he was grieved at this state of affairs? |
43590 | How long could his scanty force of nine regiments, outflanked and overborne, have resisted the avalanche? |
43590 | I ask Alexander, are you willing to go on the same reservation with the Flatheads and Koo- te- nays? |
43590 | I ask Michelle, are you willing to go on the same reservation with the Flatheads and Pend Oreilles? |
43590 | I ask Victor if he declines to treat?" |
43590 | I ask Victor, are you willing to go on the same reservation with the Pend Oreilles and Koo- te- nays? |
43590 | I ask again, what is the interest of the Hudson Bay Company? |
43590 | I ask them, Why are you in such a hurry to have writings for your lands now? |
43590 | I ask you now, can you all agree to live on one reservation? |
43590 | I said to the Sun chief,''What is the reason you are getting into trouble? |
43590 | In the late sad, glorious fight where were you? |
43590 | Is he, as one of his people has called him, an old woman? |
43590 | Speaking Owl, a Nez Perce chief and the mouthpiece of Looking Glass, now spoke up and said,"Will you give us back our lands? |
43590 | Suppose you show me goods, shall I run up and take them? |
43590 | That not an Indian in the whole course of the war has been killed by the whites except in battle? |
43590 | The question was, What should be our route home? |
43590 | Three Feathers:"Why do n''t you get up and say you are all going with Governor Stevens? |
43590 | Was he to remain idle and let the storm come? |
43590 | Was not his life wonderfully preserved? |
43590 | What are their hearts to us? |
43590 | What do you, Victor, Alexander, and Michelle, think? |
43590 | What is it that he wants? |
43590 | What is the reason we are talking about treaties? |
43590 | What is the reason? |
43590 | What is the remedy for this state of things? |
43590 | What means of defense had the enemy at this juncture? |
43590 | What more can I do? |
43590 | What should he do? |
43590 | What was your reply? |
43590 | When Looking Glass asked you,''How long will the agent live with us?'' |
43590 | When did you kill me? |
43590 | When we were enemies I always crossed over there, and why should I not now when we are friends? |
43590 | Where are they? |
43590 | Where are they? |
43590 | Where is his heart? |
43590 | Where is the heart of Young Chief? |
43590 | Which is the one?" |
43590 | Which of these chiefs[ pointing to the Blackfeet] says we are not to go there? |
43590 | While the Nez Perces are going straight, why should they turn aside to follow others? |
43590 | Who ever finds the Highlanders behind? |
43590 | Who that knows Jackson''s career can doubt his will and power to seize the golden opportunity? |
43590 | Why are they not hanged? |
43590 | Why are those Americans alive now? |
43590 | Why ca n''t Mansfield be sent here, and both Hunter and Benham relieved? |
43590 | Why can not you manage to keep peace? |
43590 | Why did he not say to Alexander yesterday,''Come to my place''? |
43590 | Why did he promise to come here, then, to hear our talk? |
43590 | Why did you not answer and say''Come''?" |
43590 | Why did you not inform me of your presence in the Sound on your arrival at Steilacoom? |
43590 | Why did you not say,''Yes, come to my place''?" |
43590 | Why do n''t you wait until a treaty is made? |
43590 | Why do you come here and ask three chiefs to come to a council, while to the head chief and the rest you say nothing? |
43590 | Will they go to the valley with Victor, or to the mission with Alexander and Michelle? |
43590 | Will you accept my offer?" |
43590 | Would you have expected it? |
43590 | Your old men have spoken, and where is the man will turn his back on it?" |
43590 | or is not Victor a chief? |
43590 | you might have replied by asking the question,''How long have you been head chief of the Nez Perces?'' |
54289 | Who will show us any good? |
54289 | And how is it with the mind that shines out in these varied faces? |
54289 | And who will be the happy ones, and who the unhappy? |
54289 | And would not travelers shun the boat in time to come? |
54289 | But how were they to be got on board? |
54289 | But our trunks-- where were they? |
54289 | He has made us free to choose about other matters-- why not about this? |
54289 | I am not quite certain it is so; but did not the great Creator intend it should be? |
54289 | Is that as distinguishable on a close acquaintance as the exterior-- the features? |
54289 | Is there any reason why it should not be? |
54289 | Shall you, reader, or I, be of the former number; or shall it be our lot to be of the latter? |
54289 | There was, however, an interval of two or three hours between"tea"and bedtime; and the question was, how this time should be employed? |
54289 | This is right, is it not? |
54289 | Were you ever on board a Western river steamboat? |
54289 | Will it be pleasant to all, or only to a part? |
54289 | Will our meeting be a pleasant one? |
54289 | Would it not be reported, by the passengers, that we suffered from this annoyance? |
53375 | And now how do you like this? |
53375 | Does he linger in the mountains, Far up toward the radiant sky? 53375 How does it sound with me?" |
53375 | Tell me, vale or rippling water, Tell me if ye can or will, If you''ve seen my long- lost lover Known as wandering Whippoorwill? |
53375 | Why and where now does he linger? 53375 Will he come back with the morning, Borne upon its wings of light, From the shade that long has lingered, From the darkness of the night? |
53375 | And when Whippoorwill had left them, Good old Junaluska said To his daughter Occoneechee,"Would you like this brave to we d?" |
53375 | Ani`-sgayaiyi--"Men town"(? |
53375 | Bitterly she wailed in sorrow, Saying"Tell me, tell me why I am left out here so lonely, And my tears are never dry? |
53375 | Ge`yagu`ga( for Age`hya`-guga?) |
53375 | Gulsadihi( or Gultsadihi`?) |
53375 | Has some evil spirit seized him, Hid or carried him away Far beyond the gleaming sunset, Far out toward the close of day? |
53375 | He saw the queer black thing by the well and said,"Who''s there?" |
53375 | How? |
53375 | Is there none to bring me answer? |
53375 | Shall we go home now like cowards, or shall we raise the warwhoop and let the Seneca know that we are men?" |
53375 | So he gathered up his chattels, Springing spryly on his steed, Made inquiry of the warrior,"Which of us shall take the lead?" |
53375 | Tali`wa-- the site of a traditional battle between the Cherokee and Creeks about 1755, on Mountain(?) |
53375 | Tell me, silver, crescent moon, Shall our parting be forever-- Shall our hopes all blast at noon? |
53375 | Ukte`na--"Keen- eyed(?)" |
53375 | When love''s bright star shines the brightest Shall it be the sooner set? |
53375 | Why he comes not at my calling, Why he roams some lonely way, Why does he not come back to me-- Why does he not come and stay? |
53375 | dasun`tali-- ant; dasun`tali,"stinging ant,"the large red cowant( Myrmica? |
53375 | ha`tlu-- dialectic form, ga`tsu,"where?" |
53375 | hila`gu?--how many? |
53375 | how much? |
53375 | nakwisi` usdi`--"little star"; the puffball fungus( Lycoperdon?). |
53375 | uda`i-- the baneberry or cohosh vine( Actaea?). |
50818 | And I could buy anything that I wanted with it? |
50818 | Another checkers, Billy Boy? |
50818 | Are n''t you going to denounce me for a fiend? |
50818 | Do you find it good whiskey? |
50818 | Do you know what I''m going to do with you? |
50818 | Excellent? |
50818 | Had enough? |
50818 | Hear that? |
50818 | I know? 50818 I suppose,"he said heavily,"that you would like me to take you back to Earth and introduce you to Daniel Boone?" |
50818 | If it were over, I''d know about it, would n''t I? |
50818 | Need a fresher? |
50818 | No? |
50818 | Now you will have but to lean back, as it were, so to speak, and see me suffer? |
50818 | Now? |
50818 | Pardon me, but could you tell me just what place this is? |
50818 | Suppose I''m the first? |
50818 | Trader Tom? 50818 Well, is it guaranteed?" |
50818 | What do you have to offer? |
50818 | What possible profit could your principals turn from running a trading ship among scattered exploration posts on the planets? 50818 What''s so bad about that?" |
50818 | What''s the cost? |
50818 | What? 50818 Whatever you want?" |
50818 | When do you start? |
50818 | Who else would stop those vile North Koreans and Red China''volunteers''? |
50818 | And if there was anything, how could we pay for it? |
50818 | But he had paid a price for the kit, had n''t he? |
50818 | But if he were so much more stupid than he, Manet, why was it that their checker games always ended in a tie? |
50818 | Comprehend,< i> mon ami? |
50818 | Do n''t you see? |
50818 | Do you have to keep taking that? |
50818 | Do you suggest that I take you back after you''ve been behind a locked door with my best friend?" |
50818 | How''s that for boredom, for passiveness?" |
50818 | Irritably,"How do I know what I want until I know what you have?" |
50818 | Is n''t there any fight in you at all?" |
50818 | Must you be so cloyingly sweet? |
50818 | Now what do you think about that?" |
50818 | Service?" |
50818 | Tell me, you feel that now you are through? |
50818 | What could you give us that a benevolent government does n''t already supply us with? |
50818 | What was that? |
50818 | Who knew what price, when it came to that? |
50818 | Why had n''t he thought of that before? |
50818 | With the whole universe to explore in thought and concept, why did he have to be trapped with such an unoriginal human being? |
50818 | You have fulfilled your function?" |
35206 | And do you see that? |
35206 | And that? |
35206 | Are the people of this vicinity so disloyal as that? |
35206 | Are them niggers with guns strapped on their backs your friends? |
35206 | Are these the arms you captured in the cavern? |
35206 | Are they all fit for service? |
35206 | Are we white men to stand up and fight niggers in this war, as you call it? 35206 Are you a Union man, sir?" |
35206 | Are you a Union man? |
35206 | Are you a Union man? |
35206 | Are you a Union man? |
35206 | Are you a good shot? |
35206 | Are you go''n''to take me down to Lyon''s place? |
35206 | Are you going to fight with that? |
35206 | Are you not going in, Levi? |
35206 | Are you sorry for that one? |
35206 | Are you willing to fight for your master? |
35206 | But can you tell me the nature of the land on the right hand side of the road? |
35206 | But can you tell me what is going on upon the hill yonder? |
35206 | But the arms? |
35206 | But what can we do? |
35206 | But what did he expect to do? |
35206 | But what has he done now? 35206 But what is your idea, Deck?" |
35206 | But what were they doing? |
35206 | But where are the ruffians that retreated from the new road? |
35206 | But where have you been all the afternoon, boys? |
35206 | But where is our army? |
35206 | But which was the fellow you call Buck Lagger? |
35206 | But why is the fort lighted up so late in the evening, Levi? |
35206 | Ca n''t we make terms? |
35206 | Ca n''t you go with me? 35206 Ca n''t you hear me, you black rascals?" |
35206 | Can horses travel on it? |
35206 | Can the negroes be trusted? 35206 Can you see anything of our people over there, Deck?" |
35206 | Can you tell me where my father and the rest of them are? |
35206 | Captain Gadbury, will you ride around through the fields to Captain Deck, and ask him to let the mob move down the road toward the bridge? 35206 Certainly; what else can I do at a time like this?" |
35206 | Could you see what sort of guns they had? |
35206 | Did he have any reason for treating me any wus than he did you? |
35206 | Did he say anything about that story your mother told at dinner? |
35206 | Did it hit anything, boys? |
35206 | Did n''t he give five thousand dollars to that cuss that just rid over the bridge? |
35206 | Did n''t you hear us say we would protect him to the last drop of our blood? |
35206 | Did n''t you see anything of them before you turned into the cut- off? |
35206 | Did you believe it? |
35206 | Did you catch any fish? |
35206 | Did you ever fire a rifle? |
35206 | Did you go near them, Mose? |
35206 | Do n''t you own''em? |
35206 | Do n''t you see that the colonel has halted his force? 35206 Do n''t you think we had better put out the lights in the fort, Colonel Belthorpe?" |
35206 | Do you believe they have discovered the loss so soon? |
35206 | Do you believe what I say, Noah? |
35206 | Do you call stealing my property the same thing as a nation taking possession of forts and such things within its own territory, Noah Lyon? |
35206 | Do you expect to get into any trouble, my boy? |
35206 | Do you know how to use this piece? |
35206 | Do you know that man with the flag, Squire Truman? |
35206 | Do you know what this flag means, you nigger? |
35206 | Do you mean to accuse me of bein''drunk, Noah Lyon? |
35206 | Do you mean to murder us? |
35206 | Do you mean to say that you shall join the army, father? |
35206 | Do you remember that time about a fortnight ago when father spoke to me about being out so late one night, Deck? |
35206 | Do you see that? |
35206 | Do you suppose the boxes contained bodies, Artie? |
35206 | Do you think I am in any danger from such an outrage as you suggest? |
35206 | Do you think of hanging him, Levi? |
35206 | Do you think they will make another attack upon Riverlawn, Levi? |
35206 | Does my brother Titus live near Riverlawn? |
35206 | Does she know where? |
35206 | Had n''t we better fire at them? |
35206 | Has it come to this in the State of Kentucky, the second to be admitted into the Union? 35206 Has the time come when free speech in behalf of this glorious Union is to be put down?" |
35206 | Have n''t you got your eyes open yet? 35206 Have you an American flag, Major Lyon?" |
35206 | Have you been to breakfast, Lieutenant? |
35206 | Have you brought your jackets or coats with you, boys? |
35206 | Have you come over here under a flag of truce to say that? |
35206 | He struck you for telling me, did he? |
35206 | Help you take your things off, missus? |
35206 | How are we going to get up a company of cavalry without horses? |
35206 | How do you do, Titus? |
35206 | How far is it from this town to Barcreek? |
35206 | How far off are they? |
35206 | How far off is this party at the fire? |
35206 | How is that? |
35206 | How long do you think it will take me with the force at hand to move the boathouse out of the way, Major Lyon? |
35206 | How many do you want, Major Lyon? |
35206 | How many have you? |
35206 | How many horses are there on the place now, Frank? |
35206 | How many men do you need? |
35206 | How many men will it take to manage one of the guns in the fort? |
35206 | I suppose these recruits will assist us in the defence of the place? |
35206 | I suppose you are acquainted with the country about here, Lieutenant? |
35206 | I suppose you have relatives in Tennessee? |
35206 | I wonder where they are? |
35206 | If a man has two brothers, and one of them goes back on him, is that any reason why the other should go back on him? |
35206 | If the time is so short, why did n''t you start out this morning? 35206 If you think it was not right, why do n''t you contest the will, and have it set aside?" |
35206 | Is it a Yankee or a Kentucky notion, Artie? |
35206 | Is n''t Sandy trying to rope Artie into the Home Guards, Dexter? |
35206 | Is n''t it strange that he never says anything to you about politics, especially such as we are having now? |
35206 | Is n''t this a free building? |
35206 | Is that talking plainly enough? |
35206 | Is that you, Mars''r Cunnel? |
35206 | Is there any other way they can get to your house than over that bridge? |
35206 | Major Lyon, do those rascals know that you took possession of the military stores, or do they only guess at it? |
35206 | Shall you remain here, Colonel? |
35206 | Suppose he gets himself into trouble? |
35206 | Surrender? 35206 That is the idea, is it?" |
35206 | The boys? |
35206 | Then he will be our fourth recruit? |
35206 | Then why do n''t you join your friends? |
35206 | Then you are satisfied that Uncle Titus has a lot of arms hid away somewhere in this region? |
35206 | Then you have had trouble over there? |
35206 | This is not exactly a fraternal meeting, and there is only one question which is in order: Do you surrender? |
35206 | Very well, I give you the order to that effect; but do n''t you think some older person than Dexter had better be in command? |
35206 | W''at we gwine to do, Mars''r Bedford? |
35206 | We can look through the port- holes, ca n''t we? |
35206 | Well, Bitts, what''s the matter now? |
35206 | Well, what do you guess was in those boxes? |
35206 | Well, what is it, I should like to know? 35206 Were the boxes all of the same kind?" |
35206 | Whar all de boxes come from? |
35206 | Whar we gwine, mars''r? |
35206 | What are they about now? |
35206 | What are those niggers doing over on the other side of the creek? |
35206 | What are we stopping here for, father? 35206 What are we to do with all these arms and ammunition when we get them down to Riverlawn?" |
35206 | What are you doing here, Artie Lyon? |
35206 | What are you doing here, Tilford? |
35206 | What are you doing over here, Uncle? |
35206 | What are you doing up the creek, then? 35206 What are you doing with the wagon over here?" |
35206 | What are you go''n''to do about it? |
35206 | What are you go''n''to do with me, Bedford? |
35206 | What are you going to do with all these horses? |
35206 | What are you laughing at, boys? |
35206 | What are you up to, Deck? |
35206 | What company? 35206 What did he say, then?" |
35206 | What did they want to do with the boxes? 35206 What do you mean by Abolitionists, Buck?" |
35206 | What do you mean by that? |
35206 | What do you mean, you scoundrel, by stickin''your nose in where you''re not wanted? |
35206 | What do you suppose that means? |
35206 | What do you suppose these stone walls are for, Artie? |
35206 | What do you suppose they were putting them in the boat for? |
35206 | What do you want here? |
35206 | What do you want now, Sam? |
35206 | What do you want of me? |
35206 | What do you want, then? |
35206 | What do you want? |
35206 | What does that mean? |
35206 | What does the surrender amount to, Colonel? |
35206 | What have they stopped there for, Colonel Belthorpe? |
35206 | What in the world are you doing now, Levi? |
35206 | What in the world is going on here to- night, Noah? |
35206 | What interest has Sandy in that meeting? 35206 What is it, Levi?" |
35206 | What is it? 35206 What is the matter, General?" |
35206 | What is to be the end of all these disturbances, Noah? |
35206 | What is your business here at this time of night? |
35206 | What is your business here? |
35206 | What is your business here? |
35206 | What is your name, my boy? |
35206 | What is your name? |
35206 | What is yours? |
35206 | What kind of ground is it over on the left of this road, Tom? |
35206 | What news? 35206 What shall be done, father?" |
35206 | What skirmish? |
35206 | What sort of bosh is that? |
35206 | What was your plan, Buck? |
35206 | What will you charge for printing two hundred copies of that bill, and doing it while I wait? |
35206 | What''s that, father? |
35206 | What''s this? 35206 Where are you going now, Clinker?" |
35206 | Where are you going now, papa? |
35206 | Where are you going to find your soldiers when you want them, Major Lyon? |
35206 | Where are you going, father? |
35206 | Where are you going? 35206 Where are you going?" |
35206 | Where did you get the name of this fort, Major Lyon? |
35206 | Where does this Buck live? |
35206 | Where have you had any such experience, Dexter? |
35206 | Where in the world have you been, boys? |
35206 | Where is Colonel Belthorpe, General? |
35206 | Where is Major Lyon? |
35206 | Where is Major Lyon? |
35206 | Where is Mose? |
35206 | Where is he going? |
35206 | Where is he? |
35206 | Where is my father, Frank? |
35206 | Which one, Major? |
35206 | Who are these men coming into the road just ahead of us? |
35206 | Who are you, boy? |
35206 | Who can that be? |
35206 | Who goes there? |
35206 | Who is driving that team? |
35206 | Who is sick at Lyndhall, Sam? |
35206 | Who says I ca n''t? |
35206 | Who was it? |
35206 | Who''s me? |
35206 | Why did n''t you try it on Major Lyon''s girls first, for that would have brought the matter nearer home? |
35206 | Why do n''t we fire at them, Captain? |
35206 | Why do n''t you fire at the moon? 35206 Why do n''t you talk to him, father?" |
35206 | Why, what has been the trouble, Kate? |
35206 | You are a big fellow; did you ever fire a gun? |
35206 | You are a lawyer, Colonel; ca n''t Captain Titus recover these arms by process of law? |
35206 | You did not find out anything for certain? |
35206 | You done see''em on de road, mars''r Deck? |
35206 | You have been shopping this forenoon, have n''t you, Ruth? |
35206 | You remember that story about the arms and equipments I told you this morning? 35206 You think the ruffians are coming over here to- night, do you, Colonel Cosgrove?" |
35206 | You wo n''t give em''up, wo n''t yer? |
35206 | Are we men to be badgered and silenced by half a score of blackguards and ruffians? |
35206 | Bedford?" |
35206 | Bedford?" |
35206 | Belthorpe?" |
35206 | But what was it for?" |
35206 | Ca n''t you see that you have got home?" |
35206 | Did n''t Aunt Amelia say that the arms were concealed near the river?" |
35206 | Did you light one of them?" |
35206 | Did you see anything of them, Levi?" |
35206 | Do you cal''late on fighting the whole county?" |
35206 | Do you know what became of the flatboat with which the conspirators moved the cases up to the cavern?" |
35206 | Do you mean the ruffians you have led over here? |
35206 | Do you suppose Uncle Titus has really bought the arms and things as mother says?" |
35206 | Falkirk?" |
35206 | Has anything broken?" |
35206 | Has he enlisted in the Confederate army?" |
35206 | Have you any further communication to make to this meeting, Captain Lyon?" |
35206 | Have you any gunners?" |
35206 | How were you going up to Big Bend, Major?" |
35206 | I suppose you know the place, Major?" |
35206 | I suppose you know what a flank movement is, fellow- soldier?" |
35206 | Is there any boat on that side of the river?" |
35206 | Is there any way by which the ruffians can get over at your boat- pier?" |
35206 | Must I pay you twenty- five hundred dollars on this account?" |
35206 | Now things have come to such a pass that I must put a direct question to you: Are you a Union man or a Secessionist?" |
35206 | Now, do you surrender, or shall I order my men to fire?" |
35206 | Now, what force can we take into the field?" |
35206 | So you are recruiting at Riverlawn for the Abolition army?" |
35206 | Some one said you had served in an artillery company in Tennessee, Mr. Bedford; is that so?" |
35206 | To what am I indebted for this unexpected visit to Riverlawn?" |
35206 | Was n''t that cheating me out of my share of the thirty thousand they would bring even in these shaky times?" |
35206 | Wat''s dat?" |
35206 | What are you about? |
35206 | What are you going to do next, Major Lyon?" |
35206 | What can you expect? |
35206 | What has she done? |
35206 | What is the first thing to be done?" |
35206 | What is your counsel, Major?" |
35206 | Who is the other gentleman?" |
35206 | Why do n''t you come to the point without going around all the buildings on the plantation?" |
35206 | Why do n''t you enlist in the Confederate army, and carry out your principles? |
35206 | Why does Sandy wish to prevent Artie from attending the Union meeting to- morrow night?" |
35206 | Why not establish the office here, where we shall be able to protect you?" |
35206 | You mean that they were going to put them in the cavern by the sink?" |
35206 | and why did n''t you let me know sooner that you were going to set the creek on fire? |
36672 | And did you go to Wellington? |
36672 | And how much are you to get? |
36672 | And what is that? 36672 And why did n''t you?" |
36672 | And you? |
36672 | Are you Molly Brown of Kentucky? |
36672 | Are you aware of the fact, girls, that there is no gas in these rooms? 36672 Are you to be in Charleston long?" |
36672 | Are you, really? 36672 But what will my father say?" |
36672 | But what will your father say? |
36672 | But will they let girls run one? |
36672 | But you-- how do you know all this? |
36672 | But, Dum, what on earth are household novelties? |
36672 | But, papa, what is he to do? 36672 But, papa, what pulpit? |
36672 | Can you smell it, too? 36672 Claire,"said his Eminence of the Tum Tum,"have you extended an invitation to tea in the garden of our home to the Misses Laurens and their guests?" |
36672 | Dee sick? |
36672 | Did it hurt very badly? |
36672 | Did you tell Cousin Park I was in town? |
36672 | Do you feel that way? |
36672 | Do you know you have not stopped once for half- an- hour? |
36672 | Do you think it is a girl''s fault always if a man kisses her? |
36672 | Do you think it would be wise to go without knowing? 36672 Do you think we can ever know the one who sang, well enough to ask her to sing to us?" |
36672 | Do you young ladies know where the Misses Laurens live? |
36672 | Do''white fo''ks wan''we- all sin''li''l''song? |
36672 | Do? 36672 Does n''t it seem ridiculous that we have known her only since this afternoon? |
36672 | Does n''t that sound romantic? 36672 Dressed already, Page?" |
36672 | Foolish of me, was n''t it? 36672 Good? |
36672 | Had n''t I better get a doctor for Dee? |
36672 | Have you collected your money yet? |
36672 | Have you talked business yet with either of the ladies, Professor Green? 36672 How are they going to help it? |
36672 | How are we going to sleep? 36672 How do I know? |
36672 | How do you know it''s from her? |
36672 | How long does your job last? |
36672 | How old do you reckon Mrs. Green is? 36672 I wonder if he wrote his''Reveries of a Bachelor''before or after the ceremony?" |
36672 | I wonder if you would like my old college, Exmoor? 36672 I wonder why it is that no one ever seems to feel very sad or quiet in old, old graveyards?" |
36672 | Is n''t it awful to let a place like this go to pieces so? 36672 Is n''t it funny that we should have peeped into the very garden belonging to the pretty rumpled girl in the bus? |
36672 | Is n''t our young father a wonder? |
36672 | Is n''t she a great girl, though? |
36672 | Is n''t this a jolly place? |
36672 | Is she pretty? |
36672 | Is that all you can say when I chased back from the meeting in Norfolk expecting to find three lone ladies so glad to see me? 36672 Is that where the azaleas are so beautiful?" |
36672 | It was a very risky thing for both of my girls-- they might have got in no end of scrapes-- but what am I to do? 36672 Know it? |
36672 | Molly, do you hear that? 36672 Now do n''t you wish we had a guide book and map? |
36672 | Oh, Edwin, do you hear that? 36672 Oh, Edwin, do you think we will really get into that house? |
36672 | Oh, have you got a baby? 36672 Oh, is your name Gaillard?" |
36672 | Oh, sing us a little song? |
36672 | Oh, you? |
36672 | Red? |
36672 | See them without Zebedee? 36672 That is to say, Tweedles will not be?" |
36672 | This Gaillard is our great, great grandfather, is n''t he, Louis? |
36672 | Was anyone in all the world ever so wonderful as our Zebedee? |
36672 | We have come to you, hoping you will take us to--Mrs. Green, who was spokesman for us, faltered; could she say"board"to those two? |
36672 | Well den, Missy lak nig sing fer heh? |
36672 | Well, girls, are n''t you going to take your poor old father in out of the cold? |
36672 | Well, how about the Magnolia Gardens this afternoon? 36672 Well, is that any reason why you should n''t be glad to see me now?" |
36672 | Well, now, how do you know that? |
36672 | Well, on the other hand, little girl, how about my feelings? 36672 Well, then, Sullivan''s Island, where Poe''s''Gold Bug''was written?" |
36672 | Well, what was my fault, then? |
36672 | Well, why do n''t you go to college now? 36672 What are you going to do with it?" |
36672 | What are you going to write? |
36672 | What difference does that make? 36672 What do you fancy this thing is for?" |
36672 | What do you reckon he wants to say to Zebedee? |
36672 | What is he to do? 36672 What is it?" |
36672 | What made you girls so late? |
36672 | What on earth are you selling? |
36672 | What''s the matter with you, honey? 36672 What''s the matter?" |
36672 | What''s this? |
36672 | What? |
36672 | When may we come? |
36672 | Where are you, Dee? |
36672 | Where does that door go? 36672 Where have you and she just been?" |
36672 | Who is Mabel Binks? |
36672 | Who''s a''fraid cat now? |
36672 | Who''s the old cove over there with the Venus de Milo effect of arms? |
36672 | Why did you only come near doing it? |
36672 | Why do n''t you earn it? |
36672 | Why do n''t you tell them how you got Miss Plympton out of the window in her pink pajamas? |
36672 | Why do n''t you tell your father? |
36672 | Why should he not put on smoked glasses or look the other way? 36672 Will it be Miss Judith?" |
36672 | Wo n''t you have some butter on your rice? 36672 You did n''t really keep it?" |
36672 | You hear that, Page? |
36672 | You mean as a warning to all young authors? |
36672 | You must know Charleston pretty well, Mr. Gaillard, do you not? |
36672 | You suggested it? |
36672 | You will have room, then, for all of us? |
36672 | You would like to go to college, would you not? |
36672 | You would like to stay there, would n''t you, girls? |
36672 | ''Berry well,''yer say? |
36672 | A favor for you?" |
36672 | Ai n''t I see my gal dere waitin''Stannin''by de gate? |
36672 | And now I want you to do us a big favor----""Me? |
36672 | And you, Miss Gaillard? |
36672 | And you-- do you write poetry, too?" |
36672 | Are n''t you sorry for Claire? |
36672 | Are we not Huguenots? |
36672 | Are you counting upon going to college?" |
36672 | But do n''t these palmetto trees have a strange swishy sound? |
36672 | But do n''t you reckon I saw him holding on to it for dear life? |
36672 | But how? |
36672 | But is n''t it fascinating? |
36672 | But must I tell him everything? |
36672 | CHAPTER XV WHO WON THE BET? |
36672 | Ca n''t you ever say I? |
36672 | Ca n''t you hear their hymn of thanksgiving?" |
36672 | Ca n''t you make up some plan? |
36672 | Claire? |
36672 | Could n''t we sneak off and go down there? |
36672 | Did you cut it down?" |
36672 | Did you ever in all your life see anything quite so lovely? |
36672 | Did you notice they had an ugly, new, unpainted, board gate? |
36672 | Do n''t you know that there are only two ways for a Charleston lady to make a living? |
36672 | Do n''t you write, Mrs. Green? |
36672 | Do you have to lump yourself with Dum and Dee about everything?" |
36672 | Do you know she saved up two weeks so as to get her money''s worth? |
36672 | Do you really think that is the truth about them? |
36672 | Do you reckon it means lovers meet here?" |
36672 | Do you suppose those two little old ladies live there all by themselves?" |
36672 | Do you think Professor Green is as old as I am?" |
36672 | Do you usually arise so early?" |
36672 | Does the idiot think I could keep it up all night? |
36672 | Does the maiden still swing in thy giant clasp?" |
36672 | Edwin, you remember Mattie Ball, do you not?" |
36672 | Green?" |
36672 | Green?" |
36672 | Had she caught the young man''s malady and gone a little off her hooks? |
36672 | Has not Louis been brought up in that faith and how could he preach any other? |
36672 | Have I done something? |
36672 | Have you counted up my pledges yet?" |
36672 | He knew that rice and sugar and cream were mixed up in it, but how? |
36672 | Here I had come tearing home from Norfolk expecting to find three charming girls, all of them overjoyed to see me, and what do I find? |
36672 | How about the bedrooms? |
36672 | How account for this young man? |
36672 | How could anybody grow with that-- that ponderous weight on him?" |
36672 | How does a ghost smell? |
36672 | I was nearly scared to death when I saw him there, were n''t you?" |
36672 | If you write that splendid a letter to a mere afterthought, what would you do for a beforethought? |
36672 | Is anybody dead? |
36672 | Is n''t their name romantic? |
36672 | Kindred souls must manage to get together or''What''s a heaven for?''" |
36672 | Me? |
36672 | Now ai n''t I glad?" |
36672 | Now you are high- minded, too; fancy yourself in Louis''place-- what would you do?" |
36672 | Of course you want to go? |
36672 | Oh, my love, doth thou love me?''" |
36672 | Parvenues!_ What business have they to ask a Gaillard to dig in their dirt? |
36672 | She is the one Miss Ball told us about who got in such funny scrapes at college-- you remember, Judy Kean, who dyed her hair black?" |
36672 | Surely you are not going to wear pants?" |
36672 | They call their father Zebedee, because of the old joke about"Who''s the father of Zebedee''s children?" |
36672 | They seem to take for granted that anyone they are on speaking terms with must be well born or how did they get to be on speaking terms? |
36672 | WHO WON THE BET? |
36672 | Was he trying to fit that awful noose around his neck again? |
36672 | Was there ever a moment when we could broach the subject, girls?" |
36672 | We ca n''t let you give us the money, and how will we ever pay it back?" |
36672 | Were they attractive, too?" |
36672 | Were you going to be all twenty right from the first?" |
36672 | What are they going to do now?" |
36672 | What business did he have coming home before he was expected? |
36672 | What business was it of guests to dictate to the hostess what their sleeping arrangements should be? |
36672 | What color are you going to get, Dum?" |
36672 | What could it have been?" |
36672 | What did you make, Dee? |
36672 | What did you want there, please?" |
36672 | What do you mean, Dee, by having on my coat and cap? |
36672 | What do you mean, Dum, by fifteen orders? |
36672 | What do you reckon the lazy thing would be doing while I was doing all that for her? |
36672 | What do you think of these? |
36672 | What father would simply accept a situation as Zebedee did this one? |
36672 | What had our masculine contingent done? |
36672 | What hurts you?" |
36672 | What if I did burst in the effort? |
36672 | What is the matter? |
36672 | What is the matter?" |
36672 | What is the matter?" |
36672 | What next? |
36672 | What on earth was I to say to him? |
36672 | What was Dee driving at? |
36672 | What was Dee to say to her father? |
36672 | Where are those girls? |
36672 | Where do you feel sick? |
36672 | Where is Dee? |
36672 | Where was Dee? |
36672 | Where will we go first?" |
36672 | Where''s Dum? |
36672 | Where''s the morning paper?" |
36672 | Who wants Shrimp ter- day? |
36672 | Who''s here?" |
36672 | Whose appearance is not? |
36672 | Why did n''t they come on in? |
36672 | Why did n''t you ask me to attend to it?" |
36672 | Why did n''t you call me?" |
36672 | Why do it? |
36672 | Why, oh, why did n''t they come on? |
36672 | Would you be afraid?" |
36672 | You do n''t mean that both of them have had the heartlessness to go out at one time and leave you all by yourself? |
36672 | You have heard of persons like that, have n''t you? |
36672 | You hear me, sir?" |
36672 | You mean money terms? |
46400 | ''Where?'' 46400 But why did n''t you say''Give me liberty or give me death,''Uncle John?" |
46400 | Did you say one of these Hobson sisters was my ancestor, and did she do anything heroic? |
46400 | Do you not see that these are no questions for you? 46400 For such a thing as this?" |
46400 | I stand before you to know; have you chosen the part of men or traitors? |
46400 | Is Charlie Mackey at home? |
46400 | Is she Agnes Hobson? |
46400 | Make way there, ye spalpeens,he shouted,"sure do n''t ye see the great Ginral Burgyne a comin''along? |
46400 | The General wishes it was in his power to conduct the troops into the best winter quarters; but where are those to be found? 46400 Thinkest thou existence doth depend on time? |
46400 | Tut, tut, my good woman,said he, boiling with rage,"do you know what you are doing? |
46400 | Well, what did Agnes Hobson do? |
46400 | What greater cause could there be? |
46400 | Why are the dead not dead? 46400 Why, Mary,"he exclaimed,"what are you doing there, hugging Frank Cogdell, the greatest reprobate in the army?" |
46400 | Why, Steptoe, is that all? |
46400 | Young maidsaid the gallant Chief Hiawatha,"Is this where the Indians Land?" |
46400 | ''Do you know where he is?'' |
46400 | ''What have you for dinner, Boys?'' |
46400 | ''What is your supper, lads?'' |
46400 | A discussion arose:"What about the girls? |
46400 | Alarmed by the expression of their grief- stricken faces he exclaimed:"Where is Yaho Hadjo? |
46400 | And can you not almost hear Thankful telling her father about the wonderful journey around Cape Horn? |
46400 | Beckon lost music from a broken lute? |
46400 | Brocade, woven with silver thread? |
46400 | Brothers, are you tame? |
46400 | But from which side did they come? |
46400 | But how to land the prize? |
46400 | But pray, how came you here?" |
46400 | But were they not subjects of the British king? |
46400 | But what woman would? |
46400 | By whom could it be authorized? |
46400 | Did he not deserve the name of seer? |
46400 | Did those shouts mean the defeat of her husband; or did they mean his triumph? |
46400 | Had not the troops come out in obedience to acknowledged authorities? |
46400 | Has God led us so far to desert now? |
46400 | Have you been squattin''in the thicket yonder?" |
46400 | He said:"You have something for sale, I presume?" |
46400 | He wuz er standing on dis very spot, and he lif''up his voice like a lion and he sez, sez he--""What did he say?" |
46400 | How could there be anything of humor connected with the struggle? |
46400 | How many times during the war did he clothe his soldiers and supply their wants when the country could n''t? |
46400 | Is it any wonder that in such environment the boy''s dreamy aspirations crystallized into the high resolve of becoming a patriot and statesman? |
46400 | Is not that a pleasing portrait? |
46400 | Mrs. Arnett, in dignified silence, listened until they had finished, and then she asked:"But what if we should live after all?" |
46400 | Of course, was not his motto"cur non?" |
46400 | Of what? |
46400 | Or dig the sunken sun- set from the deep?" |
46400 | Ought it to be so? |
46400 | Renew the redness of a last year''s rose? |
46400 | This is very different from the wills of today, is n''t it? |
46400 | This was the very first voyage ever made around the Cape, and can you not imagine how proud young William Cleghorn was? |
46400 | Toward the loom in the kitchen she drew, She had finished that day, A beautiful blanket of brown and blue,"Was it plaided this way?" |
46400 | Was it justifiable? |
46400 | Was not this unselfish love of liberty of the plainest type? |
46400 | Was resistance practicable? |
46400 | What I have said applies to men, but what about the young women of the same period? |
46400 | What could this crazy skipper mean by attacking a fleet with one dinky little schooner? |
46400 | What was it if not generosity, when at his own expense, he fitted out the ship that brought him and the other officers to this country? |
46400 | What was it? |
46400 | What was this she saw? |
46400 | What? |
46400 | When this story was read to the ladies present, one of the men asked:"Where lives there such a woman now?" |
46400 | Where are her high- heeled silken shoon That stepped in time to the wedding tune? |
46400 | Where are her ruffles of fine point lace? |
46400 | Where are the pearls that graced her head? |
46400 | Where breathes a foe but falls before us, With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us? |
46400 | Where is the gown in which she was we d? |
46400 | Who can undo What time has done? |
46400 | Who can win back the wind? |
46400 | Whose gold is in his pouch? |
46400 | Why did Washington elect to put his army in winter- quarters? |
46400 | Why do n''t you lay down your arms and disperse?" |
46400 | Why does the Morning Star linger in the forest?" |
46400 | Will He who led our fathers across the stormy, wintry sea forsake their children, who have put their trust in Him? |
46400 | Will you submit? |
46400 | Wud yees be standin''in the way of the conquerer? |
46400 | You got upset in a rail car-- and where are you?" |
46400 | my more than brother, have we met at last, after so many long and weary years of separation, each of which has seemed an eternity?" |
46400 | whar did you cum from? |
46400 | what breaks upon the autumn stillness and the quiet of the colonial household on the Mataponi,----? |
46400 | woman in this world of ours, What boon can be compared to thee? |
60145 | Who Were the Romans? |
60145 | One would ask, on hearing such a person mentioned,"Does he belong to the sects or to the church people?" |
60145 | Speranza, Gino,_ Race or Nation?_ Stanard, Mary Newton,_ The Story of Virginia''s First Century_. |
60145 | When General Braddock, whose army was nearly wiped out by the French and Indians in 1755, sighed,"Who would have thought it?" |
60145 | Why should outsiders be allowed to come in and take the jobs and lower the living standards of American labor? |
46413 | But when won the coming battle, What of profit springs therefrom? 46413 Gentlemen,"said he,"what is easier than to do this which you said was impossible? |
46413 | Great heart,I said,"why grieve alway? |
46413 | Have the past struggles succeeded? 46413 I beg your pardon, Old Glory,"I said,"are n''t you mistaken? |
46413 | Let me of my heart take counsel: War is not of life the sum; Who shall stay and reap the harvest When the autumn days shall come? |
46413 | What has succeeded? 46413 What if,''mid the cannon''s thunder, Whistling shot and bursting bomb, When my brothers fall around me, Should my heart grow cold and numb?" |
46413 | What shall I say, brave Admiral, say, If we sight naught but seas at dawn? |
46413 | Who made gentlemen out of fellows like you? |
46413 | You have discovered strange lands beyond the seas,they said,"but what of that? |
46413 | (_ Goes out again._)_ Little Girl._ How did you get here? |
46413 | (_ Goes out._)_ Little Girl._ Do you know about cotton? |
46413 | (_ Leaves the fox and hunts for a cow._)_ The Fox returns to the house and enters__ Cat._ Did you bring me something to eat? |
46413 | = Suggestive topics for morning exercises= How can we attract the birds? |
46413 | Brave Admiral, say but one good word; What shall we do when hope is gone?" |
46413 | Brave Admiral, speak; what shall I say?" |
46413 | Can you see the flashing emblem Of our Country''s high ideal? |
46413 | Did America do anything wonderful with cotton? |
46413 | Did you ever see cotton grow? |
46413 | For such mercies what soul will not raise its thanksgiving to God? |
46413 | Games=( a)"Soldier Boy, where are you going?" |
46413 | Hello, Mr. Rabbit; will you knock at the Cat''s door for us? |
46413 | How I Built A Bird House Does it Pay the Farmer to Protect the Birds? |
46413 | How does England, the heart and brain of England, regard us? |
46413 | In such a republic, who will exclude them from the rights of citizens and the fruits of their labor? |
46413 | Is this your country? |
46413 | Nature? |
46413 | Oh, say, does that star- spangled banner yet wave O''er the land of the free and the home of the brave? |
46413 | Religion and morality enjoin this conduct; and can it be that good policy does not equally enjoin it? |
46413 | Shall one doubt that the Pilgrim gravity was for a moment dispelled, when the Indians approached with their delicious contribution to the feast? |
46413 | The battle''s ended, and the shout Shall ring forever and a day-- Why sorrow yet, or darkly doubt?" |
46413 | Then, turning to the officer, he inquired why he, too, had not helped, and received the indignant reply:"Do n''t you know I''m the corporal?" |
46413 | Was that"somebody"you? |
46413 | We wo n''t let India and Egypt get ahead of us, will we? |
46413 | What did America have to do with cotton? |
46413 | What if conquest, subjugation, Even greater ills become?" |
46413 | What is then left for us to do? |
46413 | What is this spirit? |
46413 | What is your mission now, Old Flag? |
46413 | What of the men who lifted you, Old Flag, Upon the top of Bunker Hill? |
46413 | What''s to be tried and won? |
46413 | Where are you going? |
46413 | Where are you living now? |
46413 | Where are you living? |
46413 | Where is the Maiden from India? |
46413 | Where is the Spirit of Eli Whitney? |
46413 | Where is the spirit of Cotton? |
46413 | Who are you? |
46413 | Why ca n''t we be like that old bird? |
46413 | Why? |
46413 | Wo n''t you please to tell?" |
46413 | _ 4th_--In the Nina I would go; But what if stormy winds should blow? |
46413 | _ Bear._ May I go with you and see him? |
46413 | _ Bear._ Who is Ivan? |
46413 | _ Florence L. Dresser_ OLD FLAG What shall I say to you, Old Flag? |
46413 | _ Fox._ May I be your servant? |
46413 | _ Henry van Dyke_"How did George Washington look?" |
46413 | _ Little Girl._ A hundred years ago? |
46413 | _ Little Girl._ Did you know how to weave well? |
46413 | _ Little Girl._ Did your people like cotton dresses? |
46413 | _ Little Girl._ How do you look? |
46413 | _ Little Girl._ Is that all? |
46413 | _ Little Girl._ Is this your country(_ pointing to a map_)? |
46413 | _ Little Girl._ That was in 1492, was n''t it? |
46413 | _ Little Girl._ What happened then? |
46413 | _ Little Girl._ What happens then? |
46413 | _ Little Girl._ Why did you put all this cotton here(_ points to cotton pasted on different states_)? |
46413 | _ Spirit of Cotton._ How do you know whether it is interesting or not? |
46413 | _ Washington Irving_ ON A PORTRAIT OF COLUMBUS Was this his face, and these the finding eyes That plucked a new world from the rolling seas? |
46413 | _ Wolf._ May I come with you and see Ivan? |
46413 | _ Wolf._ So am I. Shall we ask Mr. Rabbit to do it? |
46413 | _ Wolf._ Who is Ivan? |
46413 | asked Nell;"What was he like? |
46413 | your nation? |
46413 | yourself? |
31699 | ''Bout a dozen or fifteen: why? |
31699 | ''Tain''t none o''that thar Taos lightnin''? |
31699 | Ah? |
31699 | Ai n''t that a sensible answer? 31699 Ai n''t that ol''feller St Louis Joe?" |
31699 | Ai n''t that so, Buck? |
31699 | Ai n''t ye got no sense, ye Root Digger? 31699 Ai n''t you going to alarm the camp?" |
31699 | Alone, Joe? |
31699 | An''that? 31699 An''what about th''fight we saw signs of, a couple o''days back?" |
31699 | An''what could we say when we got inter Santer Fe, if we dared go thar? |
31699 | And how did he offend you, Mr. Boyd, if I may inquire? |
31699 | And what about the Texans, and this fight here? |
31699 | Answer- me- I- say- what- in- hell''s- th''-matter- down- here? |
31699 | Any danger from th''Injuns, leavin''that way? |
31699 | Are you going far, Miss Cooper? |
31699 | Arrer pizened? |
31699 | Bet it''s eighty mile to that place, ai n''t it? |
31699 | But s''posin''they foller us along this trail? |
31699 | But w''at weel_ I_ say to_ le Gobernador_? 31699 But w''y we stan''here, lak theese? |
31699 | But where ar- re thee_ cargas_, thee packs? 31699 But who war th''other three?" |
31699 | But who''s goin''ter watch th''goods while we''re gone? 31699 But why do they call them bullboats?" |
31699 | Calls? |
31699 | Caravan have airy trouble arter we left it? |
31699 | Come, up with it, were you? |
31699 | Comin'', Boyd? |
31699 | Did I hear ye say Jim Ogden had some good likker? |
31699 | Did n''t I say I could fix us up so our own mothers would n''t know us? |
31699 | Did n''t the boat stop? |
31699 | Did they leave the cabin before you saw me come in? |
31699 | Did we strike anything? |
31699 | Did ye see his mean ol''eyes near pop out when she fizzed? 31699 Did you hear any shooting, then?" |
31699 | Do n''t they know th''dance is over till mornin''? |
31699 | Do n''t you know an owl or a wolf when you hear one? |
31699 | Do you think they will? |
31699 | Does not thee señor know? |
31699 | Eet ees then you weesh to pay thee char- rges? |
31699 | Eh-- would you mind telling me_ why_? |
31699 | Er-- slapped_ Governor_ Armijo''s face? |
31699 | Feel it? |
31699 | For why he do eet? |
31699 | Git his ears? |
31699 | Glass? |
31699 | Go on: what was th''mistake? |
31699 | Goin''out this spring? |
31699 | Great Eagle wants to know if his white friends have seen them? |
31699 | Hain''t ye got no sense? |
31699 | Has Señor Boyd ever been een our Santa Fe? |
31699 | Have you fellers looked in a glass yit? |
31699 | Have you seen Patience? |
31699 | He does, hey? 31699 He reached for his saber-- and then?" |
31699 | Hear that? |
31699 | Hear those calls? |
31699 | High an''mighty with yer mouth, ai n''t ye? 31699 How could it be, him jest a- comin''from Missouri?" |
31699 | How fur away from hyar does it begin? |
31699 | How in tarnation kin a man keep th''trail o''a slippery critter like him in these yere crowds? 31699 How long war you two holdin''off th''six o''''em?" |
31699 | How long will it take us to reach Independence Landing? |
31699 | How long will this high water last, anyhow? |
31699 | How many are there of you? |
31699 | How was it that the fur company''s boat was tied at the levee at St. Louis, after we left? |
31699 | How ye makin''out with yer friend, Abe? |
31699 | How''bout our rifles then? |
31699 | How''d it happen? |
31699 | How''d ye get so wet? 31699 How''s that?" |
31699 | Huh? |
31699 | I thought ye said you''d never tell nobody about that country ag''in? |
31699 | I wonder where that little keelboat is by now? |
31699 | Injuns an''greasers? |
31699 | Is it true that liquor is smuggled up the river? |
31699 | Is n''t every man expected to do his share in the general duties? |
31699 | Is thar another passel o''Texans loose''round hyar, or has our friends hit th''trail already? |
31699 | J''get her? |
31699 | Kin ye beat that? |
31699 | Looking for me? |
31699 | Meanin''we wo n''t be chased? |
31699 | No; you? |
31699 | Not even atween us two? |
31699 | Not worryin''about your merchandise, are you? |
31699 | Notice th''glow of th''water, several shades lighter than th''darkness on th''bank? 31699 Notice that it faces the west? |
31699 | Of what? |
31699 | Ol''man a friend o''yourn? |
31699 | On watch ter night? |
31699 | Rather late for her, is n''t it? |
31699 | Reckon if ye got them mules ter Bent''s ye could sell''em, or trade''em fer a couple o''hosses? |
31699 | Reckon we better tell Woodson that thar wo n''t be no greaser troops waitin''fer us this trip? |
31699 | Reg''lar pit- cock, ai n''t ye? |
31699 | Remember th''prisoners? 31699 S''posin''th''wind blows th''primin''out o''yer pan?" |
31699 | S''posin''ye lose your flint? 31699 Sam, reckon we kin part with pore Williams''rifle?" |
31699 | Say, Tom,he said, reminiscently;"who air th''three other best men yer gal was thinkin''of, back thar in that little clearin''?" |
31699 | See it? |
31699 | See that greaser? 31699 Shall we go an''drag him out?" |
31699 | Sleep well on the soft side of the deck? |
31699 | Somebody ask ye fer a left- hand wipin''stick, Hank? |
31699 | Tell me what you think of this? |
31699 | Tell me, Salezar,_ where is she_? |
31699 | Tellin''''em about that thar river ye saw that could n''t find no way outer th''valley, an''finally had ter flow up over a mounting? |
31699 | That accounts fer two o''''em,said Hank, nodding heavily;"but who in tarnation is th''third?" |
31699 | That so? |
31699 | That''s where we bust up? |
31699 | Then who''s is she? |
31699 | Then ye come over th''wagon trail, an''up th''Arkansas? |
31699 | They jest ca n''t git it_ all_ in, kin they? |
31699 | They''ve sorta put yer nose outer j''int, ai n''t they? |
31699 | Think I''m goin''ter whittle, or chew bullets fer it? 31699 Think we''re goin''pokin''along through this Injun country fer two nights an''a day by ourselves? |
31699 | This is whar Taos Bill war sculped, ai n''t it? |
31699 | Tinkerin''what? |
31699 | To a boat like this? |
31699 | Trouble? |
31699 | Uncle Joe, how long have you known your wagoners? |
31699 | We killed some of th''military aristo- crazy, as Tom calls''em, did n''t we? 31699 We''ll be with ye fur''s th''Crossin''; but ai n''t ye gamblin'', Tom?" |
31699 | We''re a Delaware from Bent''s, a Blackfoot from th''Upper Missoury, an''two ugly''Rapahoes from''tother side o''St. Vrains, ai n''t we? 31699 Were_ you_ fightin'', Flynn?" |
31699 | Whar we goin''ter meet, and what time? |
31699 | Whar ye aimin''ter leave th''caravan, friend? |
31699 | Whar ye git''em? |
31699 | Whar ye goin''? |
31699 | Whar''d ye git yer hosses? |
31699 | Whar''s th''mold; an''some caps? |
31699 | Whar''s that huntin''party ye war nursin''? |
31699 | Whar''s yourn? |
31699 | What are we going to do without you? 31699 What did I say? |
31699 | What did I tell ye? 31699 What does your father say to all this, especially after the news last fall about your narrow escape in Santa Fe?" |
31699 | What explosion? |
31699 | What in tarnation fer? 31699 What is the doctor''s party supposed to do?" |
31699 | What kin he outfit''way up thar? |
31699 | What th''hell ye aimin''ter do? 31699 What was it all about? |
31699 | What will? |
31699 | What ye lookin''fer? 31699 What ye reckon ye heard?" |
31699 | What ye think o''her, Tom? |
31699 | What you an''Pedro been hatchin''out? |
31699 | What you boys goin''ter do now? |
31699 | What you mean? |
31699 | What you suppose I''ve risked wastin''my time talkin''to you for? |
31699 | What''s my pants got to do with this disgraceful riot, or mebby mutiny? |
31699 | What''s th''matter? |
31699 | What''s th''trouble here? |
31699 | What''s th''trouble here? |
31699 | What''s th''trouble? |
31699 | What''s th''trouble? |
31699 | What''s th''use o''that when ye said th''soldiers ai n''t goin''ter meet us this year? |
31699 | What- about? |
31699 | What- in- hell''s- th''-matter? |
31699 | When her safety is at stake? |
31699 | When you go on, Doc? |
31699 | Where do you come from, and where do you go? |
31699 | Where do you expect to run into Indians? |
31699 | Where_ is_ she, Salezar? 31699 Where_ is_ she, you murdering dog?" |
31699 | Where_ is_ she? |
31699 | Where_ is_ she? |
31699 | Which way should they go? 31699 Whiskey, huh? |
31699 | Who air ye? |
31699 | Who fired that shot, an''why? |
31699 | Who''s goin''ter git th''blame fer last night''s fandango? |
31699 | Who''s he? |
31699 | Who''s thar? |
31699 | Who''s thar? |
31699 | Who- was- fightin''? |
31699 | Why do n''t they meet th''trains whar they oughter,''stead o''waitin''till they git past th''Injun dangers? |
31699 | Why, did n''t you say that you were going over the Oregon Trail this year? |
31699 | Wonder what he thought o''our weapons? |
31699 | Wonder what th''_ white_ men o''this wagon train would do if we rode up an''asked fer th''greasers in it ter be turned over ter us? |
31699 | Wonder what them danged fools air firin''at? |
31699 | Ye do n''t call this a hunt? 31699 Ye do n''t reckon I''m makin''ye no present, do ye? |
31699 | Ye mean them up- side- down water falls? |
31699 | Yo''re goin''back purty quick, ai n''t you? |
31699 | You boys run inter some''Rapahoes? 31699 You have decide?" |
31699 | You mean-- do I understand-- eh, you mean-- you slapped_ his_ face? |
31699 | You will, hey? |
31699 | Yourn as heavy as mine, Jim? |
31699 | _ Captain_ Salezar today;_ Colonel_, tomorrow;_ quien sabe_? |
31699 | _ Madre de Dios!_ You teenk I mean near thee Upper Spreeng? 31699 _ That''s_ whar he got it, huh?" |
31699 | Ai n''t that right, Adam?" |
31699 | Ai n''t that so, Jim?" |
31699 | Ai n''t ye got no sense, ye bloodthirsty Injuns?" |
31699 | An''did ye see th''look she gave him? |
31699 | An''suppose ye want ter use a double charge o''powder, whar ye goin''ter put it in them danged little holes? |
31699 | An''th''_ Belle_ ai n''t sailin''till arter ten o''clock, is she? |
31699 | An''whar_ you_ goin''?" |
31699 | And why should the_ Belle_ be carrying it, since her destination and turning point was Bellevue? |
31699 | Any more scared o''th''boilers?" |
31699 | Anybody hyar wantin''ter take advantage o''an old man? |
31699 | Anyone who seemed excited and in a hurry?" |
31699 | Anything serious?" |
31699 | Are his young men blind? |
31699 | Are we slaves that we must serve him? |
31699 | Are ye through with th''hold?" |
31699 | Are you sure you are warm enough?" |
31699 | Are you warm enough? |
31699 | Been thar?" |
31699 | Bet ye stood up when ye heard''em?" |
31699 | Boyd?" |
31699 | Boyd?" |
31699 | Boyd?" |
31699 | Boyd?" |
31699 | Boyd?" |
31699 | Boyd?" |
31699 | But is n''t it a most remarkable coincidence?" |
31699 | But, speaking of bullboats, did you ever see one, Miss Cooper?" |
31699 | Can not White Buffalo read the signs on the earth? |
31699 | Capture th''town?" |
31699 | Changed his mind, has he? |
31699 | Cigar?" |
31699 | Come on, friend: what ye say we jine''em? |
31699 | Cooper?" |
31699 | Dang it, Tom, do n''t put all yer aigs in one basket; ai n''t ye keepin''no weapons ye kin be shore on?" |
31699 | Did ye see th''grin on his leather face, when he savvied that? |
31699 | Did you see the man who left a few moments before you came in?" |
31699 | Do n''t you believe, Mr. Boyd, that knowledge of possible dangers might be a good thing?" |
31699 | Do n''t you think Dr. Whiting has a very distinguished air?" |
31699 | Do ye reckon ye''ll have ter git outer Santer Fe on th''jump? |
31699 | Do ye understand that? |
31699 | Do you care to look at one that will not shoot through the palm of your extended hand after it gets hot from rapid shooting?" |
31699 | Eef he deed, would he not meet them at thee Arkansas? |
31699 | Ees eet not so?" |
31699 | Everybody hyar? |
31699 | Fed yit?" |
31699 | For what does Manuel Armijo care for protec''thee traders? |
31699 | For what he do eet? |
31699 | Forty yards to the right lay a nearly flat bar; but could he make that forty yards? |
31699 | Goin''to Bent''s?" |
31699 | Got one?" |
31699 | Had they heard of the great_ Tejano_ army marching to avenge the terrible defeat inflicted by the brave Armijo on their swaggering vanguard? |
31699 | Happen to know''em?" |
31699 | Has he seen our wagon tracks to the Washita? |
31699 | Have you and your uncle breakfasted?" |
31699 | Have you heard how long we''re going to be tied up?" |
31699 | Have you seen your father since you landed?" |
31699 | He lost his pistol overboard, comin''down th''river, did n''t he? |
31699 | He put his lips close to his companion''s ear:"Mr. Cooper, did you notice anyone hurry into the cabin just before I came in? |
31699 | Hear them trees? |
31699 | How about a little nip, for good luck?" |
31699 | How can thee señores sell their goods onless by ways that ar- re made? |
31699 | How could the spring be found when this was not the Cimarron River at all? |
31699 | How could you have been there at that time, and here, in this part of the country, now? |
31699 | How did you pass the sentry? |
31699 | How fur ye goin''on this packet, Smith?" |
31699 | How much can you carry from here on?" |
31699 | How we goin''ter git th''powder an''lead ter ye?" |
31699 | How we goin''ter git through th''guards around th''camp?" |
31699 | How would you like to change sleeping partners?" |
31699 | How''bout him?" |
31699 | How''s th''gal?" |
31699 | How''s yore gal?" |
31699 | I suppose that''s your destination? |
31699 | I wonder why the boat has stopped?" |
31699 | If you do n''t mind, I''ll join you in your sentry- go, you seem to give me the assurance I lack; but perhaps I''ll interfere with your thoughts?" |
31699 | Is it dinner time already?" |
31699 | Is it true that the seven worshipers wo n''t leave her?" |
31699 | Is that blood?" |
31699 | Is this the way you enter an officer''s house? |
31699 | Is-- is Uncle Joe-- all right?" |
31699 | Jest''cause a couple o''young bucks nigh got yer h''ar? |
31699 | Living in the hold?" |
31699 | Look here; I wonder if you fully realize the certain hardships and probable dangers of the overland journey you are about to make?" |
31699 | Might I offer you a noble escort, six trusty, knightly blades to flash in your defense?" |
31699 | Mules all tied together? |
31699 | Need any mule wranglers ter take some freight inter Santer Fe?" |
31699 | Of thees we weel talk more, eh?" |
31699 | Reckon I want four drunk Injuns''round hyar all night? |
31699 | Reckon ye''d feel airy better then?" |
31699 | S''posin''yer powder ai n''t no good? |
31699 | Salezar stopped his horse:"Where is that Pueblo dog?" |
31699 | See anythin''?" |
31699 | See that?" |
31699 | See ye later, mebby?" |
31699 | Seeing that you are both bunked with strangers, how would it suit you if I put you together in the same room? |
31699 | Shall we go in?" |
31699 | Somebody''s wife?" |
31699 | Something up?" |
31699 | Something wrong?" |
31699 | Sufferin''? |
31699 | Suppose thar warn''t no water a- tall in th''hull caravan, fer men, wimmin, children, or animals? |
31699 | Suppose we all had done like you, back thar on th''Arkansas? |
31699 | Suppose we go around on the other side?" |
31699 | Suppose yer caps hang fire-- what then, I want ter know?" |
31699 | Sure you wo n''t get lost among th''hills?" |
31699 | Surely it_ was_ a shot that awakened me?" |
31699 | Tell ye what; we''ve been purty clost, you an''me-- suppose I slip back from th''Canadian an''git his ears fer ye? |
31699 | That right, Hank?" |
31699 | That un? |
31699 | The Mexicanos would not dare to burn a Comanche village; but with the Tejanos are not the Comanches at war? |
31699 | Them greasers showing their cards?" |
31699 | Then you have not seen this woman?" |
31699 | They''re pointed, are n''t they? |
31699 | Think ye kin hold her a hull week, an''give my pardners a chanct ter beat her ter th''Mandan villages?" |
31699 | To hunt and to tr- rap, was eet not?" |
31699 | Two bars o''lead off''n th''cannon carriages, an''a keg o''powder? |
31699 | W''y you do no''teeng?" |
31699 | Want to meet''em? |
31699 | Was it true that the_ Tejanos_ spit fire on dry nights and could kill a full- grown bull buffalo with their bare hands? |
31699 | We made fools outer th''whole prairie- dog town, did n''t we? |
31699 | We''ll give ye a chanct ter clear out; what ye got in goods, an''what ye want fer''em lock, stock an''bar''l?" |
31699 | We''ve all took his insults, swallered''em whole without no salt; ye would n''t say_ all_ o''us war dogs an''liars, would ye? |
31699 | Whar''s yer meat?" |
31699 | What about grass fer th''mules, an''water?" |
31699 | What all did ye give''em, Hank?" |
31699 | What could the_ soldats_ of Mexico do, attacked in their sleep? |
31699 | What do we do? |
31699 | What do you know about it?" |
31699 | What ees eet you do?" |
31699 | What ees hees revenge like Armijo''s?" |
31699 | What have the white men to say of this?" |
31699 | What we goin''ter do with''em?" |
31699 | What ye doin''hyar?" |
31699 | What ye mean, Ol''Buffaler?" |
31699 | What ye say, Tom?" |
31699 | What ye want ter tell me?" |
31699 | What you boys up thar do with all th''likker ye take off''n th''boats? |
31699 | What''ll ye give me fer it, tradin''in yer old pistol? |
31699 | What''s Bent want o''me?" |
31699 | What''s our reverend friend doing down there? |
31699 | What''s that a- stickin''outer yer pocket?" |
31699 | What''s that? |
31699 | What''s up?" |
31699 | What''s yer hurry, anyhow?" |
31699 | What? |
31699 | Where is Miss Cooper?" |
31699 | Where_ is_ she?" |
31699 | Which size would you recommend for me?" |
31699 | Who air these fellers comin''now?" |
31699 | Who do you know there, in case I want to get word to you?" |
31699 | Who ever heard of a dry river? |
31699 | Who had n''t heard of St. Louis Joe? |
31699 | Who have you in mind to go in charge of your wagons?" |
31699 | Who wants it?" |
31699 | Who was to read the desperation in that furious struggle, where a beast- man fought like a fiend against his closest friends? |
31699 | Who ye courtin'', at yer time o''life? |
31699 | Why is it that American citizens are insulted with impunity by Mexican officials? |
31699 | Wolves do n''t generally answer owls, do they?" |
31699 | Ye know whar th''waggin road crossed McNees Crick? |
31699 | Yer pardner says that''s th''best trail?" |
31699 | You did n''t? |
31699 | You feelin''like some excitement?" |
31699 | You fellers ai n''t turnin''back so soon, air ye?" |
31699 | Young man, which hand did ye hit him with? |
31699 | _ Chase_ us? |
31699 | _ Damn it_, Tom, would you mind shaking hands with me?" |
31699 | cary mucho aguardiente grano!_""Oh, ye do?" |
46110 | ''Do you think''said he,''you are strong enough to keep the child by force?'' |
46110 | ''My boys,''said he,''will you allow these unnatural devils to burn this poor child, or practice extortion upon us, as the price of its ransom?'' |
46110 | ''What marks of our being conspirators did you discover in us,''rejoined I,''which warranted your imprisoning us? |
46110 | After I had given vent to natural feelings on this occasion, the serjeant asked me touching the manner in which we bury our dead in our country? |
46110 | After he had finished the perusal of these papers, he asked me, what I thought my services were worth? |
46110 | After we had fed to our satisfaction, he came to visit us, and interrogated us in what manner, and with what views we had visited the country? |
46110 | An officer was dispatched to the general to inform him of our arrival, and to know whether we could have an immediate audience or not? |
46110 | And whether we were disposed to make the effort, and if we succeeded, to sell them to him? |
46110 | As we advanced together, it occurred to me to ask the price of a passage to Louisville? |
46110 | At length one of them called aloud in Spanish, and asked us who we were? |
46110 | Bradshaw asked him if he might be allowed to converse with me on the subject? |
46110 | But where is the country that is not more or less afflicted in the same way? |
46110 | He asked me again,''if we were the party, whose horses and furs they had taken the year before?'' |
46110 | He asked me if I had been visited by a beautiful young lady? |
46110 | He asked me if I had taken a passage in a steamboat for Louisville? |
46110 | He asked me in a gruff tone why I had not eaten it? |
46110 | He asked me, if I did not know Targuarcha? |
46110 | He asked me, what I meant when I spoke of being justly dealt by? |
46110 | He asked me, where I could get arms, to kill deer with? |
46110 | He asked us in reply, what we had to give him? |
46110 | He did not hesitate to give the pass I desired; but asked me what business led me out of my way to the United States around by the city of Mexico? |
46110 | He enquired why? |
46110 | He immediately came to see us, while we were yet at our pots, and enquired of us, what was our ground of complaint and dissatisfaction? |
46110 | He proceeded to ask us, how we came on the coast, what was our object, and had we a passport? |
46110 | He proceeded to question me upon the ground of my objections to the present form of government? |
46110 | He said that was a sufficient proof of my being an American; and asked if my companions could produce proofs of their belonging to the same country? |
46110 | He then asked how many days it would require to go, and return? |
46110 | He then asked me from what direction I came? |
46110 | He then asked me how many beasts we should want? |
46110 | He then asked me if I had no acquaintance in New Orleans, of whom I could obtain the money as a loan? |
46110 | He then asked me, if the thing had been done to my satisfaction? |
46110 | He then asked us if we came through the Pawnee village? |
46110 | He then demanded of me, how I liked the coast of California? |
46110 | He then looked serious, and demanded of me, if I was not aware that it was wrong to go off, without taking leave of him? |
46110 | He then questioned me, if I had eaten any thing? |
46110 | Here again was anxious ground of debate, what course we should pursue? |
46110 | His next question was, had they plenty of ammunition? |
46110 | His next question was, how I obtained my arms? |
46110 | His next question was, how I would like the idea of living in it? |
46110 | I accosted him in the usual terms, and asked if he had met any Indians on his way? |
46110 | I asked my informant touching these matters, if there was no police in the city? |
46110 | I asked them why they did not bring a horse for me? |
46110 | I first asked him what post he filled in the army? |
46110 | I returned my rifle to my shoulder and asked him who he was? |
46110 | I then asked him about the different nations, through which our route would lead us? |
46110 | I then asked him if all the facts there stated were not true? |
46110 | I then asked him if he had seen my father? |
46110 | I then requested to know, to what part of the country he was travelling? |
46110 | I told him, that we had been out upon a hunting expedition; upon which he wished to know if we had killed any thing? |
46110 | INLAND TRADE WITH NEW MEXICO Into what nook of our globe can we penetrate, and not find our citizens with their''trade and traffic?'' |
46110 | In answer to his inquiry what I wished of him? |
46110 | In reference to the above information, he asked me what had taken place between me and the general which had so exasperated him against me? |
46110 | In return, they asked us, who we were? |
46110 | In this predicament, what were furs to us? |
46110 | My father replied, by asking what authority or right he had, to make such a request, when his cowardice withheld him from aiding in their release? |
46110 | On the 8th, Captain Bradshaw came to my prison, and asked me, why I was in prison, and my companions at liberty? |
46110 | On the evening of the 5th, he called us to his office, and asked us, how many days we thought the expedition would require? |
46110 | One day the soldiers, through mere inquisitiveness, asked the Dutchman if he knew any remedy for the complaint? |
46110 | One of our number who could speak Spanish, asked them to what nation they belonged? |
46110 | She enquired about my age, and all the circumstances that induced me to leave my country? |
46110 | The General appeared much surprised to see us, and asked where we had been? |
46110 | The chief of the party came to me, and asked me,''if I knew this horse?'' |
46110 | The chief seemed bold, and asked who was our captain? |
46110 | The chief then said, in a surly manner,''you do n''t intend then to move to my camp to night?'' |
46110 | The first question was, who we were? |
46110 | The general asked me if I had so far changed my mind, as to be willing to translate and interpret again? |
46110 | The officer who gave me the rifles, came to me, and asked why I had not returned the arms according to promise? |
46110 | The priest asked the one handed chief, why{ 80} he did not offer himself for baptism? |
46110 | The sergeant having observed my grief, asked me, pointing to him, if that was my father? |
46110 | The succeeding demand was, why I did not return them, according to my promise? |
46110 | They halted, and we inquired of them, as one of our number spoke their language, to what nation they belonged? |
46110 | They repeated the name, asking us if we were friendly and Christians? |
46110 | To all this their only reply was, how should they know whether we had come clandestinely, and with improper views, or not? |
46110 | We asked if there were any Christians living on Red river? |
46110 | We asked them their reasons for being unwilling to bring their women and children? |
46110 | We asked them where they obtained the cloth they wore around their loins? |
46110 | We asked them, if they were ready to make a peace with us; and if not what were the objections? |
46110 | We gave them to him, and he, looking first towards us, and then fiercely at them, seemed to ask if these were the scalps of his enemies? |
46110 | We hunted for them until ten o''clock, when two Spaniards came, and asked us, what we would give them, if they would find our mules? |
46110 | We pointed to the pots, and asked him if he thought such food becoming the laws of hospitality to such people? |
46110 | We then asked them to what nation they belonged? |
46110 | We then asked them, if they had ever seen white people before? |
46110 | We understood from this, that he wished to know who was our captain? |
46110 | What were they now? |
46110 | What would a Cincinnatian think of building a house, if the planks were to be hewed from our oaks by a broadaxe? |
46110 | When I entered the office he asked me if I could read writing? |
46110 | When I had finished eating, he enquired how I had passed the preceding night? |
46110 | When I had finished, he asked me if I still had an inclination to go for my furs? |
46110 | When I had finished, he asked me in a surly manner, what my own terms were? |
46110 | When I had told him, he asked{ 220} me what Don Seraldo had paid me? |
46110 | When I spoke to him about our buried furs, he asked me about the chances and the means we had to bring them in? |
46110 | When the smoking was finished, we began to enquire of them by signs, how far we were from the Spanish settlement? |
46110 | When we arrived at the mines, the old chief enquired what had been done to me on the road? |
46110 | When we had done laughing, Mocho asked us, how we baptised among our people? |
46110 | When we had finished, he turned to me, and asked me why I had prayed? |
46110 | While I was eating, he remained with me, and asked me, if I had a mother, and brothers, and sisters in my own country? |
46110 | With a feeble and tremulous voice, he repeats enquiry upon enquiry, touching the fate of my father? |
46110 | or should we rush among them, and buy the delicious element which we had full in view, at the hazard of our lives? |
46110 | should we attempt the long and uncertain course of conciliation, before the accomplishment of which we might perish with thirst? |
46110 | { 251} I naturally enquired in turn, if he was in any way acquainted with them? |
46110 | { 252} Home did I say? |
52072 | ''Brothers, observe well!--What is it we have asked of you? 52072 And all these have come on a friendly visit, too?" |
52072 | Are you thus engaged,inquired the chief,"while all your neighbors are murdered around you?" |
52072 | Do yon know,inquired the younger Wheelock,"what a gentleman is?" |
52072 | ''Is this your minister?'' |
52072 | ( Here turning to Colonel Butler, he said,"That, I think, was the expression they made use of, was it not?" |
52072 | Are you willing to go with them, and suffer them to make horses and oxen of you, to put you to the wheelbarrows, and to bring us all into slavery?" |
52072 | Captain Brant?" |
52072 | Did not they tell you, when they invited you, the road of friendship was clear, and every obstacle removed that was in before? |
52072 | Do you not know me?" |
52072 | Do you think your minister minds your souls? |
52072 | Else why have they not left our Indian brethren in peace, as they first promised and we wished to have done? |
52072 | Having been defeated, as he had anticipated, he demanded of the council,"_ What shall we do now? |
52072 | His salutation was--"So, it is you, is it?" |
52072 | If they burn our houses and ravage our lands, could yours be secure? |
52072 | If they would not spare their own brothers of the same flesh and blood, would they spare you? |
52072 | Is this a clear road of peace and friendship? |
52072 | Is this your minister? |
52072 | That poor General said to the surgeon,"tell me the truth; is there no hope?" |
52072 | The lad gave him the proper direction, and inquired of the Indian whether he knew Mr. Foster? |
52072 | The quick- witted messenger inquired if all those men wished to talk to his chief too? |
52072 | To what quarter, then, are we to look for the magic by which we may make the dry bones live again? |
52072 | We have asked why they treat us thus? |
52072 | What are the people who belong to the other side of the great waters to either of us? |
52072 | What has become of our repeated addresses and supplications to them? |
52072 | What has become of the spirit, the wisdom, and the justice of your nations? |
52072 | What has been gained by this unprovoked treachery? |
52072 | White looked out from the second story window, and probably recognizing the leader of the crowd, inquired--"Is that you, Sammons?" |
52072 | Who hath shut the ears of the King to the cries of his children in America? |
52072 | Who is there to mourn for Logan? |
52072 | Why have you listened to the voice of our enemies? |
52072 | Why have you suffered Sir John Johnson and Butler to mislead you? |
52072 | Why have you suffered so many of your nations to join them in their cruel purpose? |
52072 | Would not you be obliged to wade all the way in the blood of the poor innocent men, women, and children who were murdered after being taken? |
52072 | Would you leave your wives and children in such a situation? |
52072 | he exclaimed--"Colonel Harper!--Why did I not know you yesterday?" |
52072 | says he;''do you think your minister minds your souls? |
52072 | will drop a tear to the memory of Lonan?" |
21416 | A job? |
21416 | About the purser? |
21416 | Ai n''t I fourteen, an''ai n''t I''most six feet high? |
21416 | Ai n''t the Bartletts telling everybody that my father shoved''em out of the iron works and that our money was n''t clean? |
21416 | Ai n''t this a fine horse? |
21416 | Ai n''t you going to get that policeman and lock them up? |
21416 | Ai n''t you had nuthin''to eat to- day? |
21416 | All safe and sound? |
21416 | Am I right? 21416 An''did n''t Dick Slade, who is only thirteen, go down last Fourth an''have a smashin''good time an''not git hurt?" |
21416 | And Jack Bartlett''s father wo n''t like that? |
21416 | And she knows where the papers are? |
21416 | And they were gone? |
21416 | And what else? |
21416 | And what rent do you pay? |
21416 | And what was Doctor Case''s bill? |
21416 | And what would be your advice regarding those papers in Bangs''s private safe at his house? |
21416 | And who is Bill Hosker? |
21416 | And you are sure you never got a cent more out of him than thirty- five dollars? |
21416 | And you gave him that letter? |
21416 | And you think he put the things there himself? |
21416 | And you will stand in with me? |
21416 | And you''ve been getting sixty dollars per week, have n''t you? |
21416 | Anything else? |
21416 | Anything wrong? |
21416 | Are n''t they real beauties? |
21416 | Are n''t you afraid you might get lost? |
21416 | Are those your papers? |
21416 | Are ye done wid de rascal? |
21416 | Are you a clerk for Bann& Shadow, the wholesale grocers? |
21416 | Are you going ashore? |
21416 | Are you going on foot or in your boat? |
21416 | Are you going to Oakdale? |
21416 | Are you going to haul Mr. Bangs into court? |
21416 | Are you going to leave the company''s office, father? |
21416 | Are you my aunt? |
21416 | Are you ready for work? |
21416 | Are you sorry for what you did? |
21416 | Are you talking about me? |
21416 | Are your folks here? |
21416 | Bartlett, eh? |
21416 | Bitter against you? |
21416 | Brute, ai n''t he? |
21416 | But he is doing all right so far? |
21416 | But how are you going to open the safe if it is locked? |
21416 | But how can we prove he is guilty? |
21416 | But it is true, is n''t it? |
21416 | But what brings you out at such an hour as this? |
21416 | But what brings you? |
21416 | But would n''t that be fraud? |
21416 | Ca n''t she get much sewing to do? |
21416 | Ca n''t the boss give you something else to do-- something where it is n''t damp? |
21416 | Ca n''t you get him? |
21416 | Ca n''t you give me a dollar? |
21416 | Ca n''t your father do anything? |
21416 | Came from a farm, did n''t you? |
21416 | Can I have three dollars? 21416 Can I trust myself in the boat?" |
21416 | Can that be Robert? |
21416 | Can these things belong to Polk? |
21416 | Can you change that? |
21416 | Can you do that without making him suspicious of what is going on? |
21416 | Can you get an order from the court to open that safe? |
21416 | Can you open a first- class house safe? |
21416 | Can you open it? |
21416 | Captain, may I speak to you a moment? |
21416 | Could he have been mean enough to come here and take some of our fish? |
21416 | Could n''t you get a clear statement? |
21416 | Dare they do such a thing? |
21416 | Did Captain Hadley say you could go? |
21416 | Did Jack do as well? |
21416 | Did he blame it on me? |
21416 | Did he have any fish? |
21416 | Did n''t you get any more than thirty- five dollars? |
21416 | Did not he have the control? |
21416 | Did she go to Oakdale? |
21416 | Did she say what she was going to do? |
21416 | Did that Bartlett boy get any fish? |
21416 | Did the owner say you could use the place? |
21416 | Did they skin you? |
21416 | Did you find a-- er-- a letter? |
21416 | Did you follow him up? |
21416 | Did you go to Springfield? |
21416 | Did you run him down? |
21416 | Did you see a man run in here? |
21416 | Did you see anything of some papers with a broad rubber band around them? |
21416 | Did you see us? |
21416 | Did you tell him no? |
21416 | Did you throw out that line with the preserver? |
21416 | Do my parents know of this? |
21416 | Do n''t you know him? |
21416 | Do n''t you know the combination? 21416 Do n''t you know you have n''t any right to touch Jack''s boat without his permission?" |
21416 | Do n''t you remember how we were stuck here last year? |
21416 | Do n''t you remember, Bill Hosker struck you down? |
21416 | Do n''t you think he is honest? |
21416 | Do n''t you wish you had him? |
21416 | Do you go to school? |
21416 | Do you hear me? |
21416 | Do you imagine Polk is that sort? |
21416 | Do you know Mr. Polk, the purser? |
21416 | Do you know anything about farming? |
21416 | Do you know anything about horses? |
21416 | Do you like it? |
21416 | Do you like it? |
21416 | Do you like the water, too? |
21416 | Do you mean Jack Bartlett''s father, dad? |
21416 | Do you mean to say Mr. Polk tripped you up? |
21416 | Do you not know that this is my private desk? |
21416 | Do you own the one that got into trouble the other day? |
21416 | Do you see the papers, or rather, do you know them? |
21416 | Do you think it worth while, Randy? |
21416 | Do you think so? |
21416 | Do you want to do me a favor if I pay you for it? |
21416 | Do you want to take this matter to him? |
21416 | Does he act as if he was hurt or suffering? |
21416 | Does he know about the deal with Kastner? |
21416 | Does he run all the money matters? |
21416 | Does she leak? |
21416 | Does that rascal live around here? |
21416 | Excuse me, are you from Catskill? |
21416 | Fifty dollars? |
21416 | For two pins, do you know what I would do, Bob Bangs? |
21416 | Get him? 21416 Going to Albany?" |
21416 | Going to Mr. Shalley, eh? |
21416 | Going, eh? |
21416 | Had your supper? |
21416 | Have any luck? |
21416 | Have you any money saved up? |
21416 | Have you anything definite in view? |
21416 | Have you asked your folks yet? |
21416 | Have you been fishing, too? |
21416 | Have you got the best of him? |
21416 | Have you had a doctor? |
21416 | Have you had trouble with Bob? |
21416 | Have you heard any stories? |
21416 | Have you learned anything more about the Bangses? |
21416 | Have you seen Bob Bangs around here? |
21416 | Have you seen or heard anything of Bob Bangs lately? |
21416 | Have you your lines handy? |
21416 | He does n''t look as if he was sick abed, does he? |
21416 | He got the place for you? |
21416 | He hit me pretty hard, did n''t he? |
21416 | He-- he wo n''t run away, will he? |
21416 | Hexcuse me,he said,"but are those the''Ighlands you brag about in this country?" |
21416 | How are you and how is father? |
21416 | How are you feeling, father? |
21416 | How did it come out? |
21416 | How did it happen? |
21416 | How did it happen? |
21416 | How did the captain''s wife hear of you? |
21416 | How did you happen to know him? |
21416 | How do he and the purser get along together? |
21416 | How do you do, Randy? |
21416 | How do you do, Uncle Peter? |
21416 | How do you do, dad? |
21416 | How do you know it is mine? |
21416 | How do you know that? |
21416 | How do you like being a steamboat deckhand? |
21416 | How does the boy do? |
21416 | How have things gone with you to- day? |
21416 | How have you been since we met last? |
21416 | How is business with you? |
21416 | How is business, Westinghouse? |
21416 | How is fishing? |
21416 | How long have I been here? |
21416 | How long have you been on this boat? |
21416 | How long will it take? |
21416 | How long? |
21416 | How many? |
21416 | How much did that specialist charge? |
21416 | How much did you have? |
21416 | How much is she going to pay you? |
21416 | How much will it cost? |
21416 | How much will that cost me? |
21416 | How much would he pay a week? |
21416 | How much? |
21416 | How? |
21416 | How? |
21416 | Hullo, at it already? |
21416 | Hullo, what does this mean? |
21416 | Hullo, where did you come from? |
21416 | I say, ca n''t you give me a dollar? |
21416 | I say, will he be home to supper? |
21416 | I wonder if it is possible that Bob is really in bed sick? |
21416 | I wonder what it can be? |
21416 | I wonder what it can be? |
21416 | If so, how did they get here? |
21416 | If you did n''t, who did? |
21416 | If you want a boat why do n''t you hire one? |
21416 | If you wanted some fish why did n''t you ask us for them? |
21416 | In this air tumble- down cottage? |
21416 | In what way? |
21416 | Is Mr. Bangs''s son at home? |
21416 | Is Mrs. Bangs at home? |
21416 | Is Mrs. Thompson at home? |
21416 | Is Uncle Peter at home? |
21416 | Is anybody at home? |
21416 | Is he around now? |
21416 | Is he gentle? |
21416 | Is it? 21416 Is something wrong?" |
21416 | Is that all you can say, Viola? |
21416 | Is that boy going to pay for the trunk? |
21416 | Is that so? 21416 Is that so? |
21416 | Is the boy crazy? 21416 Is the cottage usable? |
21416 | Is the old man going to investigate? |
21416 | Is the_ Helen Shalley_ one of the big boats of the river? |
21416 | Is there any use of my reporting this to the police, do you think? |
21416 | Is thet a cannon bustin''? |
21416 | Is this where Randy Thompson lives? |
21416 | Is your father living? |
21416 | Is your father out of it entirely, Jack? |
21416 | Is your husband at home? |
21416 | Is your name Randy Thompson? |
21416 | Know what? |
21416 | Look here, you blockhead, why do n''t you keep this gangway clear? |
21416 | Mamie, who is this? |
21416 | Me? 21416 Mother, what do you think of it?" |
21416 | Mr. Bangs, what are you doing at this desk? |
21416 | Mr. Peter Thompson? |
21416 | My fault? 21416 No stories at all?" |
21416 | Not the captain''s wife? |
21416 | Now tell me what this means? |
21416 | Now what have you to say about that smashed trunk, Thompson? |
21416 | Now, what had I best do about it? |
21416 | Oh, Mamie, will you? 21416 Oh, Mr. Tuller, what shall I do?" |
21416 | Oh, do you want it right away? |
21416 | Oh, he''s a bully, is that it? |
21416 | Oh, how did you get here? |
21416 | Oh, so you''re here, are you? |
21416 | Oh, who broke my trunk? |
21416 | Please, mister, wo n''t you give me some money to buy bread with? |
21416 | Pretty strong, are you? |
21416 | Randy, have you any idea who this person who signs himself G. A. G. can be? |
21416 | Robert, will you be still? 21416 Say, can you tell me where I can find Bob Bangs?" |
21416 | Say, mister, what''s up? |
21416 | Say, you ai n''t been drinking, have you? |
21416 | Say, you''re a- gittin''to be a regular sailor, ai n''t you? |
21416 | See here, Thompson, you are a poor boy, are n''t you? |
21416 | Sick abed? 21416 Sick in bed, eh?" |
21416 | So Bangs has them in his safe at home, eh? |
21416 | So I am a low fellow, am I? |
21416 | So he really told you that? |
21416 | So this is the new deckhand, eh? |
21416 | So you got here ahead of me, eh? |
21416 | Supposing that girl had dragged you down? |
21416 | Talking about you? |
21416 | Tell Jones to keep an eye on Mr. Polk, will you, please? 21416 That I was going to leave the steamboat?" |
21416 | The fellow who could n''t manage his hoss? |
21416 | The islands? |
21416 | The question is, where? |
21416 | Then I can have the three dollars? |
21416 | Then why did you start to run away? |
21416 | Then why did you take ours? |
21416 | Then why do n''t you write to Mr. Robinson and find out? |
21416 | Then you admit that you are guilty? |
21416 | Then you are not going to school again? |
21416 | Then you are not naturally a farmer? |
21416 | Then you have seen Jack Bartlett? |
21416 | Then you want me to call in the officer? |
21416 | Then you will sell it for two hundred dollars? |
21416 | There are no more of the papers? |
21416 | Tired? 21416 To Nyack? |
21416 | To buy bread with? |
21416 | To stay? |
21416 | Tuller, eh? |
21416 | Unless what? |
21416 | Want me to take care of things, eh? |
21416 | Want to see the Fourth o''July in Springfield? |
21416 | Wanted you to get out of my boat, did n''t he? |
21416 | Was he hurt? |
21416 | Was not that the works in which Mr. Bartlett is interested? |
21416 | Was the work extra hard? |
21416 | Well, how was the celebration, Sammy? |
21416 | Well, some extra money will come in handy, wo n''t it? |
21416 | Well, what about this clothing affair? |
21416 | Well, what if it is? 21416 Well, where did he go?" |
21416 | Well, who cares, anyway? 21416 Well, why should n''t I be, Bob Bangs? |
21416 | Well? |
21416 | Well? |
21416 | Well? |
21416 | Were you never a deckhand before? |
21416 | Were you robbed? |
21416 | What about my boat? |
21416 | What about the others? |
21416 | What are they? |
21416 | What are you doing here-- in that outfit? |
21416 | What are you doing here? |
21416 | What are you doing here? |
21416 | What are you doing in Jack Bartlett''s boat? |
21416 | What are you doing, farming? |
21416 | What are you going to do now? |
21416 | What are you going to do with your boat? |
21416 | What are you loafing around here for? |
21416 | What are your charges? |
21416 | What business is that of yours? |
21416 | What can he tell about my doings? |
21416 | What can he want of me? |
21416 | What can it mean? 21416 What can this mean?" |
21416 | What did he say? |
21416 | What did he take? |
21416 | What did he want now? |
21416 | What did you do then? |
21416 | What did you do with the papers you took from Bartlett''s desk? |
21416 | What did you do? |
21416 | What do they mean about robbing somebody of fish? |
21416 | What do you advise me to do next? |
21416 | What do you do here? |
21416 | What do you intend to do with that letter? |
21416 | What do you make that out to be? |
21416 | What do you mean by covering me with dust? |
21416 | What do you mean by making such a disturbance? |
21416 | What do you mean by that, father? |
21416 | What do you say to a swim? |
21416 | What do you say to that? |
21416 | What do you suppose makes''em so valuable? |
21416 | What do you want now? |
21416 | What do you want? |
21416 | What does he say? |
21416 | What does your firm say to this? |
21416 | What for? |
21416 | What for? |
21416 | What for? |
21416 | What has that cub discovered now? |
21416 | What in nater is the boy a- doin''? |
21416 | What is he doing in Springfield? |
21416 | What is it, Randy? |
21416 | What is it, Randy? |
21416 | What is it? |
21416 | What is it? |
21416 | What is it? |
21416 | What is that? |
21416 | What is the game, anyway? |
21416 | What is the market price of the stock? |
21416 | What is the secret of your success? |
21416 | What is the trouble here? |
21416 | What is your father going to do? |
21416 | What kind of a job? |
21416 | What kind of a situation? |
21416 | What kind of stories? |
21416 | What kind of trouble? |
21416 | What next? |
21416 | What of it? |
21416 | What report do you mean, Bob? |
21416 | What right had you to throw that chunk of dirt at me? |
21416 | What shall we do with our fish and the boat? |
21416 | What was the matter? |
21416 | What will your family do, remain here or move to Albany? |
21416 | What would you do if the savages came after you? |
21416 | What''s the matter with him? |
21416 | What''s the matter, Master Robert? |
21416 | What''s the matter? |
21416 | What''s the matter? |
21416 | What''s the matter? |
21416 | What''s the price o''them bananas, mister? |
21416 | What''s the trouble? |
21416 | What''s wanted? |
21416 | What''s wanted? |
21416 | What, is he your cousin? |
21416 | What? |
21416 | When can I go to work? |
21416 | When did you come in? |
21416 | When will Mrs. Bangs be back? |
21416 | When will he be back? |
21416 | When? |
21416 | When? |
21416 | Where am I? |
21416 | Where are the grounds? |
21416 | Where are ye goin''? |
21416 | Where are you going? |
21416 | Where did he go? 21416 Where did he go?" |
21416 | Where did those papers come from? |
21416 | Where did you come from? |
21416 | Where did you find it? |
21416 | Where did you get that? |
21416 | Where does the poor woman live? |
21416 | Where in thunder did all the folks come from, anyway? |
21416 | Where is father? |
21416 | Where is he now? |
21416 | Where is he? |
21416 | Where is the thief? |
21416 | Where''s your mother? |
21416 | Where? 21416 Which way did he go?" |
21416 | Who are you? |
21416 | Who are you? |
21416 | Who are you? |
21416 | Who says I did that? |
21416 | Who says Randy is a thafe? |
21416 | Who threw thet skin at me? |
21416 | Who told you that? |
21416 | Who''s Uncle Peter? |
21416 | Why did n''t I, I''d like to be after knowin''? |
21416 | Why do n''t you destroy them? |
21416 | Why not? |
21416 | Why should n''t I go out with Randy? |
21416 | Why, is n''t your father working? |
21416 | Why-- er-- what do you mean? |
21416 | Why-- er-- who is this? |
21416 | Will he be home to supper? |
21416 | Will she work for you? |
21416 | Will that harm you much? |
21416 | Will yer drop de matter if I cough up de cash? |
21416 | Will you be at liberty to- morrow? |
21416 | Will you come in? |
21416 | Will you give me your name and address? |
21416 | Will you make him give up the control of the iron company? |
21416 | Wo n''t you let it rest for a few days? |
21416 | Work? 21416 Would he really be mean enough to do that?" |
21416 | Would you be willing to testify to that fact, if it came to law? |
21416 | Would you care to leave home? |
21416 | Would you like that? |
21416 | Would you mind giving me a slip of paper so that we can prove we have a right to occupy the place? |
21416 | Yes? |
21416 | You are sure of that? |
21416 | You are sure you do n''t want to use the place, Uncle Peter? |
21416 | You are sure? |
21416 | You are sure? |
21416 | You can be a witness if the matter is brought into court? |
21416 | You do? |
21416 | You have all those bills on your books? |
21416 | You have learned something important? |
21416 | You mean Bob Bangs''mother? |
21416 | You mean Randy Thompson? |
21416 | You mean during the summer? |
21416 | You mean he will bring an officer of the law here? |
21416 | You mean the Clares? |
21416 | You mean----? |
21416 | You open safes? |
21416 | You will not disappoint me? |
21416 | You wo n''t tell him I told you? |
21416 | You wo n''t tell me? |
21416 | You''ll have authority to open it? |
21416 | You''re the new man, eh? |
21416 | Your father and his father have some business dealings, have n''t they? |
21416 | Your fish? 21416 Your own safe?" |
21416 | Ai n''t it the Fourth o''July here as well as there, I''d like to know?" |
21416 | And how have you been?" |
21416 | And what will his salary be?" |
21416 | Bangs?" |
21416 | Bangs?" |
21416 | Bangs?" |
21416 | Bank?" |
21416 | But I say, dad, what about that money?" |
21416 | But what salaries are the new officers to have?" |
21416 | CHAPTER XVI IN NEW YORK CITY"Will he live, mamma?" |
21416 | Ca n''t you understand at all?" |
21416 | Can I do anything for you before I go?" |
21416 | Can I go by a back door?" |
21416 | Can I talk to you in private?" |
21416 | Can Mr. Polk be cheating Mr. Shalley in some way?" |
21416 | Come, what do you say?" |
21416 | DeLong?" |
21416 | Did n''t you hear about a sloop running into the_ Helen Shalley_ a few days ago?" |
21416 | Did you bring me here?" |
21416 | Did you fall overboard from the steamboat?" |
21416 | Did you send word that you were coming?" |
21416 | Do n''t you hear me?" |
21416 | Do you know of anybody who would like some sewing done-- your wife or anybody else?" |
21416 | Do you like it at Captain Hadley''s home?" |
21416 | Do you see that boy there?" |
21416 | Do you think the money would bring you happiness, or would it bring only increased cares? |
21416 | Do you want to go along?" |
21416 | Gaffney?" |
21416 | Going to work on the river?" |
21416 | Have ye anything against it?" |
21416 | Have you been watching me?" |
21416 | Have you ever been on a large river steamer?" |
21416 | Have you never studied geography? |
21416 | He had paid the claim, but what had he done with the communication? |
21416 | How are things going with yourself and your mother?" |
21416 | How do you know they are your fish?" |
21416 | How much was it?" |
21416 | I repeat, are those the''Ighlands you talk about so much?" |
21416 | I suppose you get jobs ahead, is that it, or do you go out on the run, so to speak?" |
21416 | In what direction?" |
21416 | Is she safe?" |
21416 | Is that all?" |
21416 | Is this Bill Hosker?" |
21416 | Is your father home?" |
21416 | Know anything about handling trunks and such stuff?" |
21416 | Let me see, her name is Jackson, is n''t it?" |
21416 | May I ask your names?" |
21416 | Or, Adventures in Winding Waters Where is there a youth who does not love a gun, a fishing rod, a canoe, or a roaring camp- fire? |
21416 | Or, The Tyler Will If you had been poor and were suddenly left a half- million dollars, what would you do with it? |
21416 | Polk?" |
21416 | Polk?" |
21416 | Shalley?" |
21416 | Shalley?" |
21416 | Shalley?" |
21416 | That''s a good spot, is n''t it?" |
21416 | Then you have n''t seen her?" |
21416 | Thompson?" |
21416 | Tuller?" |
21416 | Tuller?" |
21416 | Under the doctor''s care, eh?" |
21416 | Up here again, eh?" |
21416 | Vot you mean py dot?" |
21416 | What air you a- doin''here?" |
21416 | What are you thinking about, Sammy?" |
21416 | What brings you to this place?" |
21416 | What can I do for you?" |
21416 | What can he do?" |
21416 | What did you say you wanted?" |
21416 | What does that fellow in the sloop mean?" |
21416 | What does this mean?" |
21416 | What for?" |
21416 | What is the name?" |
21416 | What sort of a game is this?" |
21416 | What time is it?" |
21416 | What''s keeping you?" |
21416 | Where is your father?" |
21416 | Who are you, anyway? |
21416 | Who has got your fish?" |
21416 | Who ordered this stuff here, anyway?" |
21416 | Who says so?" |
21416 | Who shall I say wants to see her?" |
21416 | Who will tell me what to do?" |
21416 | Why did n''t you say you were waiting for Jack?" |
21416 | Why should I do such a thing?" |
21416 | Why should Mr. Polk run into you?" |
21416 | Will you dine with me?" |
21416 | Will you give up the money or not?" |
21416 | You ask him, wo n''t you?" |
21416 | You do n''t object, do you?" |
21416 | a legal case, eh?" |
47627 | But how call you the sow when she is flayed, drawn and quartered, and hung up by the heels like a traitor? |
47627 | Grassor"Race"--but what Race? |
47627 | How many gentlemen have we in France who by their own talk are of royal extraction? 47627 Is this,"he inquires philosophically,"a cause or an effect of the carnivorous regime?" |
47627 | Was it not a pleasant passage of a friend of mine? 47627 _ Mais où sont les nègres a''antan?_"changed to d''antan. |
47627 | --"Does a Puritan swear?" |
47627 | 114 ethnic differentiation.--Why should the_ Norseman_ differ from the kindred_ Teuton_ in the south? |
47627 | A Kentuckian casually encountering a distinguished New Englander at the buffet of an exclusive Eastern club, exclaimed:"Does a_ Puritan_ drink?" |
47627 | A passion for travel, exploration, adventure, field sports, and fine horses? |
47627 | An allusion to Hood''s poem,"O saw ye not Fair Inez?" |
47627 | And a_ Saxon_ in Mr. Hyde? |
47627 | And does it not inspire a disposition to revive and invigorate those pristine instincts of our common race? |
47627 | And who so fit as Shakespeare to depict the features of a royal race? |
47627 | Are these the peoples that gave substance and strength and splendor to the English race? |
47627 | Are they not_ Alderneys_?" |
47627 | Are they persuasive orators, able lawyers, brilliant fighters, ready and practical thinkers; astute and successful negotiators? |
47627 | But was he pleased? |
47627 | Can evidence be more conclusive that the Norman was neither extinguished nor absorbed by the sluggish Saxon who accepted his yoke? |
47627 | Casto? |
47627 | Caudle? |
47627 | Could there be a better example of cumulative verification? |
47627 | Had nature reproduced in Colonel Campian the antique Norman type? |
47627 | Have they scholarly tastes? |
47627 | Have we not a_ Norman_ in Mr. Jekyll? |
47627 | Have you never heard among the old horsemen of the Bluegrass the odd expression,"The colt will be two years old next''grass''"? |
47627 | IV But what are the characteristic traits of the Norman as we find him in his early habitat in France? |
47627 | If a racial quality, what_ race_? |
47627 | In examining this series, one naturally inquires: How do we know that the thousands of names, taken from an old English Directory, are Norman? |
47627 | Is it an element of race? |
47627 | Is it not possible that this deep intra- racial distinction was recognized by the creator of the"melancholy Dane"? |
47627 | Is it possible that so daring and successful a gamester as the Norman was lost in the shuffle when an auspicious destiny was directing the game? |
47627 | Is it to be supposed for an instant that this puissant racial force was dissipated and lost? |
47627 | Is the Norman still living, still powerful, progressive, and prolific? |
47627 | Is the dominant Scandinavian element_ short_? |
47627 | Is there nothing in this record to appeal to a sentiment of national pride in the Kentuckian''s heart? |
47627 | On the other hand, does not the law of the survival of the fittest operate to correct the tendency to transmit defects of structure and organization? |
47627 | Or, in a word, is it, as Mr. Freeman affirms, a Lost Race? |
47627 | Prospective annexation on the old lines, 85 passion for territorial expansion, 85 Vikings: who were they?, 86 VIRGINIA. |
47627 | Social gifts and accomplishments? |
47627 | The question is sometimes asked,"How were the descendants of Stephen Lee related to the Lees of the Northern Neck?" |
47627 | This liquor they drink out of horns; and that is why, said Du Chaillu, convincingly, that we say in Kentucky,"Will you take a horn?" |
47627 | To what, then, must be ascribed this scholastic renascence? |
47627 | Were not these words and phrases conveyed by racial migration from the North of England to Virginia and from Virginia to Kentucky in days lang syne? |
47627 | What are the original, genetic factors behind this varied manifestation of power in that old, Elizabethan stock? |
47627 | What dost thou think of_ that_, friend Gurth?" |
47627 | What has been the result of this intimate commingling of ethnic elements upon English soil? |
47627 | What has produced or determined this extraordinary differentiation of race? |
47627 | What must it be now? |
47627 | What shall be said of thousands historically traced-- the continuous record of a single race? |
47627 | What theory best explains these facts in their relations? |
47627 | What was it? |
47627 | What was the moral geography of the race? |
47627 | What were his thoughts as he looked with wondering eyes upon that charming Southern matron with her fair, delicate features and high- bred air? |
47627 | Who knows? |
47627 | Who will now say that Anglo- Saxon is a more appropriate name for historic England than the original Albion, or Britannia, or Norman- French, or Celt? |
47627 | Why should the Norseman differ from his kindred Teuton in the South? |
47627 | [ 12] Is it not a fit conclusion to our ethnological tale? |
47627 | _ Batten._ Batin( Flemish? |
47627 | exclaimed an anxious friend,"do n''t you know there is a_ fight_ going on down there?" |
47627 | for what''s the matter? |
47627 | of Anglo- Norman sheriffs? |
47627 | or has some demoniac"Berserker"blood slipped into the cross? |
47627 | or was it a vast popular migration such as America has witnessed in later times? |
47627 | or was it not in point of fact both-- an invasion and a migration, the one following the other? |
5686 | Ai n''t ye afeard some steamboat will swash the life out of her? |
5686 | And what ish dat? |
5686 | And what of negroes? |
5686 | Ca n''t you tie up here, just under yonder p''int on the bank? 5686 Did you find his trail?" |
5686 | How do you get the interior details? |
5686 | How much did she cost, any way? |
5686 | Nuffin at all? 5686 Who could have done that?" |
5686 | And where was the flat? |
5686 | First came the sound of voices in the distance; then, as they came nearer, I heard such questions as,"Where is the feller?" |
5686 | Hab you one poat, or hab you not?" |
5686 | Had the poor fellow been murdered? |
5686 | How LARGE was the boat you shipped last fall to Pittsburgh for twenty- five dollars?" |
5686 | I asked them the name of the creek, when one replied,"Why, boss, you do n''t call this a CREEK, do you? |
5686 | I exclaimed;"when did he die?" |
5686 | Men whose humble lives had been spent along the rough coast in daily struggles with the storms of ocean and of life? |
5686 | Now, for instance, how do common boats rank, as first or third class freight?" |
5686 | Now, gentlemen, can you censure me for detesting the Carpet- bag government of my native state after you have heard this statement? |
5686 | Of what use can geography be to girls who will never command a vessel?" |
5686 | Upon consideration, it did not seem so strange a thing, however, for did not this boat represent the work of brains and hands for a generation past? |
5686 | Was it not an attempt to bring chaos again into the universe?" |
5686 | Was it not the result of the study and hard- earned experiences of many men for many years? |
5686 | Whar did you come from? |
5686 | What difference does it make to our business if it be round or flat? |
5686 | What sort o''queer boat is she?" |
5686 | What was his fate, and why did he not come up to time? |
5686 | Where among all our colleges is there a well- supported chair of physical geography occupied by an American? |
5686 | Where was Cloud? |
5686 | Why must an American woman have a rocking- chair? |
5686 | Why not mattress the muddy flat? |
5686 | Why? |
5686 | Would it not"waste its sweetness on the desert air"in the unpeopled wilderness? |
5686 | nuffin at all?" |
5686 | what''s that you are squinting at through the grass?" |
36042 | And all the family? |
36042 | And ca n''t you trap him in the ordinary dead- fall? |
36042 | And did Owen take part in it? |
36042 | And did n''t miss one? |
36042 | And did you really bring down twenty birds in twenty shots? |
36042 | And do you think you can shoot better than such a man? |
36042 | And have him betray me? |
36042 | And have you no clue to the thieves? |
36042 | And how do you explain it now? |
36042 | And how do you like your new office? |
36042 | And how''s that? |
36042 | And how''s that? |
36042 | And is this the news you wished to give me? |
36042 | And it was full of corn each time, was it not? |
36042 | And left that there team on the road? |
36042 | And now I wonder whether the whole cave has fallen in? |
36042 | And the driver was foller''d? |
36042 | And the rest of the family? |
36042 | And the war is over? |
36042 | And then all of our work will be for nothing? |
36042 | And were you at the shooting- match, Mr. Stayford? 36042 And what did Robin say?" |
36042 | And what has that to do with the cave? |
36042 | And where can we stow them all away? |
36042 | And where was his horse? |
36042 | And who is Coon- Hollow Jim? |
36042 | And why did you not get the general''s message about the battle? |
36042 | And why do you think he climbed the tree? |
36042 | And why do you think that you are not the right man for sheriff? |
36042 | And you saw the shooting match? |
36042 | Are there two large rocks before it? |
36042 | Are you hurt? |
36042 | Are you improving? 36042 Are you much frightened?" |
36042 | Are you sure about the result? |
36042 | Are you sure it did n''t hurt you? |
36042 | Boys,he finally asked,"are you dead sure thare''s a squirrel in that thare oak?" |
36042 | But again I ask, Sheriff, why did we not hear the rifle? |
36042 | But did he win? 36042 But do you notice anything peculiar about those beech- trees?" |
36042 | But why did n''t the little fellow show himself? |
36042 | But why should his coming create such excitement? |
36042 | Ca n''t we go out this way? |
36042 | Can we get up to it? |
36042 | Can you ride alone? |
36042 | Come, my boy,said the sheriff,"is there no strange mark on that there barrel?" |
36042 | Could you tell from the smoke how much corn was in the crib? |
36042 | Did he ever come to this country? |
36042 | Did it touch a hair? |
36042 | Did n''t see anything of Owen down the lane? |
36042 | Did n''t you hear something? |
36042 | Did the man show us the night we were there three places where the light entered? |
36042 | Did the people like the new cap and coat I made for you? |
36042 | Did you ever learn that you were not fit for your office? |
36042 | Did you examine those reeds that we cut last fall? |
36042 | Did you hit the center of the target every time? |
36042 | Did you meet no one that night? 36042 Did you see old Hickory?" |
36042 | Did you sleep under a tree? |
36042 | Do n''t you notice that from the other side of the poplar there is another long branch extending over my carriage- house? |
36042 | Do n''t you see plainly that he could have climbed on the roof? |
36042 | Do n''t you think it is going to rain? |
36042 | Do n''t you think that the negro could have climbed from the small tree into the large one? |
36042 | Do they know?--Did you tell them?--Do they know my name? |
36042 | Do you know what Father Byrne called you and me when he heard that I was going to the shooting- match? |
36042 | Do you notice that large limb reaching out toward the tree which you say the negro climbed? |
36042 | Do you see that poplar? |
36042 | Do you see that there mark on the upper part of the rusty barrel? |
36042 | Do you think he will take us in as partners, because we''ve kept the secret so well? |
36042 | Do you think you''ll win? |
36042 | Does he shoot well? |
36042 | Go- go- what''s his name? |
36042 | Go- go- who? |
36042 | Has Jerry''s''hold out''been blown up? 36042 Has anything happened?" |
36042 | Have you any written account of the battle? |
36042 | Have you heard the news? |
36042 | Have you room for all of them? |
36042 | How are you feeling? |
36042 | How are you getting along with the fall wheat? |
36042 | How can I help you? |
36042 | How could I when he shot the horse? |
36042 | How did you find the way? |
36042 | How do you know when to pull? |
36042 | How do you know? |
36042 | How does he know anything about the place? |
36042 | How have I insulted you? |
36042 | How is he? 36042 How many days?" |
36042 | How many robins did you bring along? |
36042 | How many robins did you kill out of the twenty? |
36042 | How many were killed? |
36042 | How would you like to work for him? |
36042 | How''s that? |
36042 | How''s that? |
36042 | How-- a-- did you come to know about this cave? |
36042 | How? 36042 How?" |
36042 | I captured a weasel about two weeks ago,said Owen,"and what do you think he did? |
36042 | I say, youngstars, has you seen any notice of the shootin''-match? |
36042 | I wonder whether he ever saw''Green Briar''? 36042 I''ll finish it to- day, take it to the mill to- morrow-- and then may Martin and I go fishing on Thursday?" |
36042 | Is everybody fixed for the night? |
36042 | Is n''t he a good and kind fellow? 36042 Is there anything to be learned about landing a perch?" |
36042 | Live''round this here part of the country? |
36042 | No; are you sure? |
36042 | No; but you do not know me? |
36042 | Nor a third? |
36042 | One of them things that boys use for throwing rocks? |
36042 | Ow''n, dim me ride? |
36042 | Owen, what has happened? |
36042 | Plow after this heavy rain? |
36042 | Say, do you think there''ll be any ghosts in that barn to- night? |
36042 | So there is something on that page? |
36042 | So you refuse to help me to track the thieves? |
36042 | The message-- did you get the message? |
36042 | The what? |
36042 | Then you were there? |
36042 | Think you can go fishing to- morrow? |
36042 | Was it a big one? |
36042 | Well, Uncle Pius,inquired Mr. Howard,"can you tell from the smoke what has been burning over at Bowen''s place?" |
36042 | Well, where can they sleep? |
36042 | Were the passages marked? |
36042 | What I tole you do? |
36042 | What about that field along the river to be plowed? |
36042 | What are you going to do with this little troop? |
36042 | What are you saying? 36042 What brought you here?" |
36042 | What can I do? |
36042 | What dead- fall? |
36042 | What did you know? |
36042 | What do you think about the fire over at old Bowen''s? |
36042 | What do you think done it? |
36042 | What else was written on that leaf? |
36042 | What have you found? |
36042 | What horses did you take? |
36042 | What is all this excitement about? |
36042 | What is it? |
36042 | What is that? |
36042 | What made you suspect that your plans were discovered? |
36042 | What part am I to get? |
36042 | What was it? |
36042 | What would Jerry say,asked one,"if he knew that we had blasted the rock door into fragments?" |
36042 | What''d I tell you? |
36042 | What''s that? |
36042 | What''s the matter there, boys? |
36042 | What''s the matter, old feller? |
36042 | What''s to be done? |
36042 | What, the''coon? |
36042 | What? |
36042 | When and how is it to be delivered? |
36042 | When do you think that there mark was made? |
36042 | When was the battle fought? |
36042 | When? |
36042 | Where are the boys going to sleep? |
36042 | Where did that flag come from? |
36042 | Where is Owen? |
36042 | Where is he? 36042 Where''s the wagon?" |
36042 | Where? |
36042 | Where? |
36042 | Where? |
36042 | Who are you? |
36042 | Who are you? |
36042 | Who brought the news from the South? |
36042 | Who burned it? |
36042 | Why did n''t I ask him about that dead- fall? |
36042 | Why did n''t I think of it before? 36042 Why did n''t you bring the deer this way, old fellow?" |
36042 | Why did you not let us know that you were up on that hill? |
36042 | Why do n''t you answer the Father''s question? |
36042 | Why do n''t you let us out here? |
36042 | Why do you say that? |
36042 | Why do you think it is going to rain before night? |
36042 | Why? 36042 Wife,"he continued, appearing at the kitchen door,"can you get the little things something to eat? |
36042 | Wo n''t Squire Grundy be surprised when he hears how it all happened? |
36042 | Wo n''t a fourth do? |
36042 | Wo n''t you come and finish your dinner before starting? |
36042 | Wo n''t you step into the house? |
36042 | You did? 36042 You do?" |
36042 | You have come after poor old''Robinson Crusoe,''have you? |
36042 | Youngstar,he continued,"do you see that yeller- hammer off yonder through them there bushes?" |
36042 | A goat? |
36042 | Again I ask, will you give me any assistance in this matter?" |
36042 | And how are you this morning, Zach?" |
36042 | And how is your wheat getting along?" |
36042 | And the cave, could it be there? |
36042 | And the"hold out"? |
36042 | And what makes you think it is going to rain?" |
36042 | And what wagon?" |
36042 | Are you dreaming?" |
36042 | Beech, beech, beech; who could number them? |
36042 | Besides, was not he the man who befriended them during that eventful night in the cave? |
36042 | Besides, what good would it do?" |
36042 | But how was he to get at the monster? |
36042 | But the corn- crib; why did Uncle Pius mention it? |
36042 | But what could be the object of his visit? |
36042 | But what could the object be? |
36042 | But what did he do when he got in the large tree?" |
36042 | But what did old Go- li- yah fight with-- a horse- pistol, I reckon?" |
36042 | But what were these two men waiting for? |
36042 | But where is Jerry? |
36042 | But where is he?" |
36042 | But where was Owen? |
36042 | But why do you ask me that question? |
36042 | But why not go alone? |
36042 | Ca n''t you go, old Hickory?" |
36042 | Cooper?" |
36042 | Could Hickory stand the race for seven miles? |
36042 | Could he reach the opposite shore; it was not ten feet away? |
36042 | Could it be possible that he had slept during the entire night? |
36042 | Could not Owen tell his father that he knew of the cave and persuade him to start at once to rescue Mr. Lane? |
36042 | Could these be the huge monsters that thundered down the river bank and crushed the giant oaks on that eventful night? |
36042 | Did I not ride my horse half to death before you borrowed that second one from the farmer?" |
36042 | Did Owen win? |
36042 | Did he not come?" |
36042 | Did his eyes deceive him? |
36042 | Did this dark, weird, treacherous cavern shelter beneath its gloomy arches some strange occupant? |
36042 | Did you ever hear of young Howard?" |
36042 | Did you have a good rest?" |
36042 | Did you meet no one?" |
36042 | Do n''t you?" |
36042 | Do n''t you?" |
36042 | Do you hear, old fellow?" |
36042 | Do you intend to compete?" |
36042 | Do you think you will win? |
36042 | Had they not shown their gratitude by keeping the secret which they had promised so faithfully to keep? |
36042 | Has he heard of Charlie''s going to the shooting- match? |
36042 | Have you grown any larger since you became sheriff?" |
36042 | He was not surprised that the sheriff should have kept the robber''s revolver, but why did he insist on Owen''s examining it? |
36042 | How did he say to fix them?" |
36042 | How is the poor old fellow?" |
36042 | How long did it last? |
36042 | How many did you miss? |
36042 | How many robins did you kill? |
36042 | How much am I to get?" |
36042 | How was he to regain the money which he had lost? |
36042 | How''s that? |
36042 | Howard?" |
36042 | I have to do it; ca n''t you go? |
36042 | I wonder where he hid it?" |
36042 | Is that you, Simpson?" |
36042 | Is there no one around here except yourselves?" |
36042 | Mr. Bowen, why are you so cruel with your slaves? |
36042 | Mr. Lane was sheriff now-- had he come to arrest the old villain? |
36042 | Owen, did you win?" |
36042 | The two boys, whom he had wished to kill had, no doubt, divulged the secret of the cave-- why had he spared them? |
36042 | Was Owen feeling well? |
36042 | Was he coming to thank Owen for assisting him in capturing the robbers? |
36042 | Was he pursued? |
36042 | Was it cold during the night? |
36042 | Was it the dripping of the water from the damp arches above? |
36042 | Was not this the pistol, too, that had fallen from the robber''s hand? |
36042 | Was there connected with that cave a secret which they did not know? |
36042 | Was there no way to bring him help? |
36042 | Was there really a poem on Kentucky? |
36042 | Well, what did the preacher say about you and me and the shootin''-match?" |
36042 | What could a farmer- boy who had read scarcely a dozen books expect to gather from the pages of Shakespeare? |
36042 | What could be his object in watching them so closely? |
36042 | What could be the cause of these strange proceedings? |
36042 | What could it be? |
36042 | What else does a fellow want?" |
36042 | What else have you to say?" |
36042 | What made you so late?" |
36042 | What news?" |
36042 | What of it?" |
36042 | What then?" |
36042 | What was to be done? |
36042 | What would the poet have thought could he have heard the remarks of his two young admirers beyond the ocean? |
36042 | What''s the matter?" |
36042 | What''s your opinion?" |
36042 | When did the rain commence? |
36042 | Where did you stay that night?" |
36042 | Where is he? |
36042 | Why did he not give the alarm as he had resolved to do? |
36042 | Why did n''t you speak about it?" |
36042 | Why do n''t you work as Bounce does? |
36042 | Why had he spared a Howard? |
36042 | Why had they concealed themselves here so close to the road? |
36042 | Why wo n''t he come to- night? |
36042 | Would it fall? |
36042 | Yet which should he do? |
36042 | You did? |
36042 | You saw a light in there?" |
36042 | did you notice that when the man left us, he opened another door there to the right, and that there was another light farther in the cave?" |
36042 | did you win, Owen? |
36042 | did you win, Owen?" |
36042 | how?" |
36042 | tired of the cave?" |
36042 | was n''t it?" |
36042 | what has happened?" |
36042 | what is this?" |
36042 | where is he?" |
42315 | Do you dispute the authority of the United States Government? |
42315 | I then said to General Johnston:''How long can you hold Sherman north of the Chattahoochee River? 42315 Why should ships be an exception? |
42315 | ''Did you not tell my daughter there was no God? |
42315 | ''Do you believe in a God, miss?'' |
42315 | ''Do you hear that sound-- click, click?'' |
42315 | ''What are they going to do with me?'' |
42315 | ''Why, what makes you think that?'' |
42315 | 239; only the people of the State,299; how could the Government of the United States appear in a State and attempt to institute a State government? |
42315 | 451; to the State government, 451; the powers of the State government are just powers, 451; is the citizen''s life in danger? |
42315 | 457; the Government of the United States, 457; where was the government of the State of Tennessee and the sovereign people? |
42315 | 624; who is responsible for the war? |
42315 | 762; when the cause was lost, what cause was it? |
42315 | Above all, should he be compelled to fall back for want of supplies, beat him? |
42315 | Also, what has become of the unalienable right of property, which all the State governments were created to protect and preserve? |
42315 | And suppose they could be induced by a proclamation of freedom from me to throw themselves upon us, what should we do with them? |
42315 | April 11th he asks,"When will you launch, and when will she be ready for action?" |
42315 | Are the freedom and personal liberty of the citizen in danger from unlawful arrest and imprisonment? |
42315 | Can not you hire night- gangs for triple wages?" |
42315 | Can you aid him?" |
42315 | Can you not cut him off from it? |
42315 | Could human ingenuity devise a method for a more perfect subversion of a constitutional duty? |
42315 | Did he do it? |
42315 | Does any one doubt that Major Pitcairn meant subjugation, or that Great Britain meant subjugation? |
42315 | Does not this demonstrate an intent to subjugate our States? |
42315 | Finally, the question was put to General Johnston categorically to this effect:''Will you surrender Atlanta without a fight?'' |
42315 | Floyd said,"General Buckner, if I place you in command, will you allow me to draw out my brigade?" |
42315 | For what honest purpose were these declarations made? |
42315 | Had Congress and the President made new laws of war? |
42315 | Have the eternal principles of the Declaration of Independence been hid from our sight for ever? |
42315 | How can we feed and care for such a multitude? |
42315 | How could an invader attempt to"institute"a republican State government? |
42315 | How would you like to have both your arms cut off?'' |
42315 | If a man may build a vessel for the purpose of offering it for sale to either belligerent party, may he not execute an order for it? |
42315 | If it be asked,"Why did not General Johnston wait until the enemy marched from the river instead of attacking him at Shiloh or Pittsburg Landing?" |
42315 | If it had the power now to do what it before had not, whence was it derived? |
42315 | If the former, then what are constitutions worth for the protection of rights? |
42315 | Is anything to be done?" |
42315 | Is it henceforth to be a dictum of humanity that man may no more take up arms in defense of rights, liberty, and property? |
42315 | Is it not evident that, only by a fiction of speech, such proceedings can be called an insurrection? |
42315 | Is it strange that the men grew weak and attenuated? |
42315 | Is not this an attempt, while pretending to establish, to destroy true republicanism? |
42315 | Is such treatment of the Constitution the manner to preserve, protect, and defend it? |
42315 | Is the citizen''s life in danger from violence? |
42315 | Is the personal property of the citizen in danger of robbery or abduction? |
42315 | Is the property of the citizen in danger of a violent and unjust seizure and unlawful detention or destruction? |
42315 | Is there a single court, or magistrate, or individual that would be influenced by it there? |
42315 | Let posterity answer the questions: Who were the revolutionists? |
42315 | May not the House of Representatives impeach the President for such refusal?" |
42315 | Now, then, tell me, if you please, what possible result of good would follow the issuing of such a proclamation as you desire? |
42315 | Now, where were the"just powers"of the State government at this time? |
42315 | Of what avail to ask for the privilege of bail when in military custody, which knows no such thing as bail? |
42315 | Pemberton replied by asking:"Have you force enough to hold your position? |
42315 | President Lincoln replied:"What good would a proclamation of emancipation from me do, especially as we are now situated? |
42315 | STEVENS, THADDEUS, his remark,"Who pleads the Constitution against our proposed action"of confiscation? |
42315 | The inquiry naturally arises, Was it because of this difference that Pope had been assigned to the command of the Army of Virginia? |
42315 | Under these circumstances, who was the sovereign in Tennessee? |
42315 | Under what principles, then, could the Government of the United States appear in Louisiana and attempt to institute a State government? |
42315 | Was it against them as individuals in an unorganized condition, or as organized political communities? |
42315 | Was it thus obeyed by Mr. Lincoln as the supreme law of the land? |
42315 | Was the inherent sovereignty of the people destroyed by shot and shell? |
42315 | Was this a government resting on the consent of the governed? |
42315 | Was this an attempt to enforce a fiction or to establish the truth? |
42315 | Were Federal prisoners left to suffer, and afterward photographed"to aid in firing the popular heart of the North"? |
42315 | Were these the appropriate means by which to execute the laws, and in suppressing rioters to secure tranquillity and preserve a voluntary union? |
42315 | What can you do? |
42315 | What cause was it? |
42315 | What need was thereof this second stipulation? |
42315 | What were these supposed safeguards? |
42315 | What, then, is the Government of the United States? |
42315 | What, then, is this necessity? |
42315 | When the cause was lost, what cause was it? |
42315 | When the war closed, who were the victors? |
42315 | Whence came the change? |
42315 | Where must the American citizen look for the security of the rights with which he has been endowed by his Creator? |
42315 | Where was the government of the State of Tennessee and the sovereign people? |
42315 | Where was the sovereignty of the people under these proceedings? |
42315 | Which is sovereign, Mr. Lincoln and his proclamation or the Constitution? |
42315 | Which is the higher authority, Mr. Lincoln and his emancipation proclamation or the Constitution? |
42315 | Who is the criminal? |
42315 | Who is to decide what persons are"loyal"? |
42315 | Who pleads the Constitution against our proposed action?" |
42315 | Who shall decide? |
42315 | Who was to be the umpire in such a case? |
42315 | Who were really destroying the Constitution of the United States? |
42315 | Who, then, had a right to"institute"a republican government for Louisiana? |
42315 | Why call on him now?'' |
42315 | Why should ships alone be in themselves contraband? |
42315 | Why were they not hung? |
42315 | Will it always be thus? |
42315 | Will it stand? |
42315 | Will the safety of your army allow more time? |
42315 | Would my word free the slaves, when I can not even enforce the Constitution in the rebel States? |
42315 | _ Citizen''s life_, is it in danger? |
42315 | _ Constitutions, Paper_, of what value are they? |
42315 | _ Highwayman, The_, is he henceforth to be the lord of the highway? |
42315 | _ Pirate, A_, who is one? |
42315 | _ Power, where found_, for the United States to coöperate with a State in emancipation? |
42315 | _ Revolutionists_, who were the? |
42315 | _ Rights unalienable_, shall man no more take up arms in defense of? |
42315 | _ Victors, Who were the_, when the war closed? |
42315 | _ Which is the higher authority_, Mr. Lincoln''s emancipation proclamation, or the Constitution? |
42315 | _ Who is the criminal?_ Let posterity answer, 178. |
42315 | _ Why were they not hung?_ Our soldiers taken prisoners,"as rebels and traitors,"13. |
42315 | and Why, the battle having been preconceived, were they so far removed as not to hear the first guns? |
42315 | of the United States, who were really destroying? |
42315 | the State guarantees his protection, 451; is the citizen''s personal liberty in danger? |
47647 | Ah,said Red Jacket, thoughtfully,"is that it? |
47647 | Am I not King of this country? 47647 And what, pray, did my red brother dream?" |
47647 | Are you friendly to these English invaders, or would you care to see them exterminated? |
47647 | Art thou Winsnow? |
47647 | Art thou, indeed, Winsnow? 47647 Captain Brant wants to know why you came here?" |
47647 | Did I not tell the Great White Eagle( General Carrington) so, in the council at the house, called Laramie by the palefaces? 47647 Did I not tell you that the Long Knives would move against us?" |
47647 | Do all these men want to talk with Captain Brant also? |
47647 | Have you then any method by which you can change your palates every time you change your plates? 47647 Have you tried Opechancanough?" |
47647 | Have you tried the Chickahominies? |
47647 | How do you know this, Chanco? |
47647 | How is it that you are doing this kind of work while your neighbors are all being murdered around you? |
47647 | How many are there? |
47647 | I want to know whether you intend to ally yourself with the British or not? |
47647 | If all you want to do is to see the poor Indians, why, pray, do you bring all these white soldiers with you? |
47647 | Is he dead? |
47647 | Is it for warfare against the French that they are preparing? |
47647 | Is that so? |
47647 | May I inquire the reason of my being honored by a visit from such an eminent man as yourself? |
47647 | Men, will you follow me? |
47647 | Merciful Providence, what shall we do? |
47647 | We Indians have never objected to that, and what business is it of yours what we do among ourselves? 47647 What can we do against you English?" |
47647 | What did my paleface brother dream? |
47647 | What do you wish for them? |
47647 | What does he want? |
47647 | What have the English ever done for us,he exclaimed,"that we should become homeless and helpless wanderers for their sakes?" |
47647 | What is he saying? |
47647 | What is your name? |
47647 | What is your name? |
47647 | What say you, good Captain, if I and two others go ashore with our fowling pieces to look for game? |
47647 | What will you do now? |
47647 | What, Captain Brant? |
47647 | Who has come? |
47647 | Why do I see so many of my father''s young men standing in the street with their guns? |
47647 | Why do you not go to see this affair? |
47647 | You are scared, are you not? |
47647 | Am I not as I have been? |
47647 | Am I too feeble to revenge myself upon my enemies? |
47647 | And what can you get by war if we escape you and hide our provisions in the woods? |
47647 | Are not all the towns about here of my dominions and the people in them? |
47647 | But how came it that he was called Red Jacket, when these other names were so much more distinguished and musical? |
47647 | But how could he secure the Indian maiden, for she appeared to manifest no desire to go on board the vessel? |
47647 | Did I not say that if he and his Long Swords stole the country of our fathers without asking my permission that we would take their scalps? |
47647 | Did I not tell him that the fireboat which walks on mountains( locomotive) could not come into our hunting grounds and scare off all the game? |
47647 | Do I not own it by direct descent from my parents? |
47647 | Does the Indian not hold this land from the Great Father? |
47647 | Fire flashed from the beady eyes of Tecumseh, as he exclaimed in a loud tone:"My father, eh? |
47647 | Have they ever violated any of the treaties made with the red men? |
47647 | Have they taken anything from you? |
47647 | He even called Tecumseh before him, and said:"Why are you trying to bring about a union of the different Indian tribes?" |
47647 | He paused for a reply, and then added,"Now let us kill all our women and children and go out and fight the palefaces until we die?" |
47647 | He said but little, but his appealing looks seemed to ask,''Is this treachery?'' |
47647 | How can I have faith in you? |
47647 | How can he answer to his country? |
47647 | How dare you wreak vengeance upon defenseless men? |
47647 | How do we know this to be true? |
47647 | How is it, then, that you now no longer wish to honor the very man for whom you used to pray?" |
47647 | How shall we know when to believe, being so often deceived by the white people? |
47647 | I replied:''_ Can he be heard in the morning?_''The General looked at me steadily for an instant, but did not answer. |
47647 | I say to myself,''Which of these things can you do?'' |
47647 | If there is but one religion, why do you white people differ so much about it? |
47647 | In a tone of great anger and scorn, the red leader rose, and said:"For what purpose do you come here? |
47647 | Is it true?" |
47647 | That I will do, for do not I command all the country about you? |
47647 | Then, turning to the interpreter, he continued:"What is the meaning of this? |
47647 | To see every day dead bodies floating down the river, mangled and disfigured? |
47647 | Turning suddenly around, he saw an Indian near by, and raising his hayrake for protection, cried out:"Red man, what do you want?" |
47647 | Was it not very agreeable to hear every day of the savages cutting, carving, boiling, and eating our companions? |
47647 | What can your few brave warriors do against the innumerable warriors of the Seventeen Fires( Seventeen States)? |
47647 | What did this alkali- covered column mean-- there upon the bleak, unpopulated Wyoming plains? |
47647 | What do you expect to gain by destroying us who provide you with food? |
47647 | What harm is there in this, pray? |
47647 | What have the English done for us? |
47647 | What reason have you to complain of the Seventeen Fires? |
47647 | What was that for?" |
47647 | What will they do for us if they win, but insist upon a division of our land?" |
47647 | What will they think of this in England?" |
47647 | When I am gone to the other world-- when the Great Spirit calls me away-- who among my people can take my place? |
47647 | Who can reckon what bitter thoughts must have assailed this red Napoleon when he considered the humiliating close of his campaign? |
47647 | Who is there to mourn for Logan? |
47647 | Why not all agree, as you can all read the book? |
47647 | Why should we give up everything for these men, I say, when we are happy and peaceful here? |
47647 | Why these grim- visaged warriors: these munitions of war: these scouts and vigilant- eyed officers of the Government? |
47647 | Will any man try for the opposite bank with me?" |
47647 | Will you oppose our surveyors when we send them into this country?" |
47647 | Will you sign a treaty with me?" |
47647 | Would it not be well if we made a treaty of peace and lived in friendly relations to these invaders?" |
47647 | You must then suppose that the plates and knives and forks retain the taste of the cookery?" |
40388 | ; comparison with the Judiciary establishment of Virginia; reply to Mason''s argument on the Fairfax title;what security have you for justice? |
40388 | Ask you what matter fills his various page? 40388 By the national government only"could these things be done;"shall we refuse to give it power to do them?" |
40388 | By what tribunals will they be determined? 40388 Can history produce an instance of rebellion so honourably conducted?" |
40388 | Can nothing be done in our Assembly for poor Paine? 40388 Do n''t let us go too fast.... Why all this racket?" |
40388 | Does not every gentleman know that the causes in our[ State] courts are more numerous than they can decide? |
40388 | Have you a jury trial when a judgment is obtained on a replevin bond or by default? |
40388 | How are our debts to be discharged unless taxes are increased? |
40388 | I ask you if your House of Representatives would be better than it is, if a hundredth part of the people were to elect a majority of them? 40388 If I be tried in the Federal Court for a crime which may effect my life, have I a right of challenging or excepting to the jury?" |
40388 | If he has this right[ to collect quitrents] and comes to Virginia, what laws will his claims be determined by? |
40388 | If,he argued,"a law be exercised tyrannically in Virginia, to whom can you trust? |
40388 | Is not a jury excluded absolutely? |
40388 | Must the parent and the child be forever at variance? 40388 Shall Americans give up that[ jury trial] which nothing could induce the English people to relinquish?" |
40388 | Were those who are now friends to this Constitution less active in the defense of liberty, on that trying occasion, than those who oppose it? |
40388 | What is it that makes us trust our[ State] judges? 40388 What will he gain by an unjust demand? |
40388 | When I call this the most mighty state in the Union, do I not speak the truth? 40388 Where,"exclaimed Henry,"are the purse and the sword of Virginia? |
40388 | Who but the people have a right to form government?... 40388 Who, sir, is to pay the debts of the yeomanry and others?" |
40388 | Why not leave it to Congress? 40388 Will any state depend on its own exertions?" |
40388 | Will he get more than justice there? 40388 Will our most virtuous and able citizens wantonly attempt to destroy the liberty of the people? |
40388 | Will you call him before the Senate? 40388 Will your mace- bearer be a match for a disciplined regiment?" |
40388 | [ 1309] But, under the Constitution, are not National judgeschosen with as much wisdom as the judges of the state governments? |
40388 | [ 337] Would Washington never strike? 40388 [ 404] What held the patriot forces together at this time? |
40388 | [ 422]Where is Jefferson?" |
40388 | [ 925] If there was not money enough, let the Government make more-- what was a government for if not for that? 40388 And can either of them be happy, independent of the other? |
40388 | And did not many of the ablest, purest, and most trusted public characters in the Old Dominion think the same? |
40388 | And even if a jury be possible in National Courts, still, under the Constitution, where is there any right to challenge jurors? |
40388 | And how do the people feel even in the States that had ratified it? |
40388 | And if government could not make good money, what was the good of government? |
40388 | And if his title be really unimpeachable, to what purpose are his predecessors criminated, and the patents they obtained attacked? |
40388 | And surely they would suffer even more, they felt, under this stronger power; but would they and their"liberties"survive its"oppression"? |
40388 | And was not this"sacred right"one of the foundation stones, quarried from Magna Charta, on which Virginia''s"liberties"had been built? |
40388 | And what men, asked Mason, would be in Congress from Virginia? |
40388 | And what was their complaint? |
40388 | And who, he asked, will punish them? |
40388 | And why not use the expression"We, the people"? |
40388 | And"will the officers of the government become improper to be on a jury? |
40388 | And, indeed, where was Thomas Jefferson? |
40388 | And, inquired he, how could these agents act for the people if they did not have power to do so? |
40388 | Are they not equally, if not more independent? |
40388 | Are you sure your federal judiciary will act thus? |
40388 | As to a Republican Government not being fitted for an extensive country, he asked,"How small must a country be to suit the genius of Republicanism?" |
40388 | As to the navigation of the Mississippi, he asked:"How shall we retain it? |
40388 | As to"the exclusion of trial by jury, in this case,"Marshall asked,"Does the word_ court_ only mean the judges? |
40388 | Assuming this to be true"what are the subjects of the jurisdiction"of National Courts? |
40388 | But if the Constitution was adopted, what would happen? |
40388 | But what did this Nationalist extradition bill do? |
40388 | But what kind of power, and how displayed? |
40388 | But whence came that power? |
40388 | But why not? |
40388 | But why thus decrepit, the organization called the American army? |
40388 | But will he submit to punishment? |
40388 | But, asked he,"Who can penetrate into futurity?" |
40388 | But,"what are the... maxims of democracy?... |
40388 | By retaining that weak government which has hitherto kept it from us?" |
40388 | Can he foretell future events? |
40388 | Can he go four or five hundred miles? |
40388 | Can he stand the expense attending it? |
40388 | Can not Virginia import arms...[ and] put them into the hands of her militia men?" |
40388 | Can"Congress"go beyond the delegated powers?" |
40388 | Could Virginians themselves boast that their own Government was based on justice? |
40388 | Could the people themselves make treaties, enact laws, or administer the Government? |
40388 | Did Virginia''s Constitution make such a guaranty? |
40388 | Did his critics think"the soldiers were made of stocks and stones?" |
40388 | Did the British Constitution do so by any express provision? |
40388 | Did they think an active winter campaign over three States with starving naked troops"so easy and practicable a business? |
40388 | Does a claim establish a right? |
40388 | Does he imagine that he who can raise the loudest laugh is the soundest reasoner?" |
40388 | Does not Virginia surpass every state?" |
40388 | Does not our naval weakness invite an attack on our commerce?" |
40388 | Does not the determination of the jury necessarily lead to the judgment of the court? |
40388 | For was not Jefferson the penman who had inscribed the Declaration of Independence, for which they were fighting, suffering, dying? |
40388 | For were not the British grenadiers invincible? |
40388 | For"has the government of the United States power to make laws on every subject?... |
40388 | From Congress? |
40388 | From the States? |
40388 | Had the Federal Convention exceeded its powers? |
40388 | Here the Federal Courts are to sit.... What sort of a jury shall we have within the ten miles square?" |
40388 | How are armies to be raised? |
40388 | How could war be conducted, how could battles be fought and won, through such freakish, uncertain power as that? |
40388 | How else can he at this time discover what the''spirit of America''is?... |
40388 | How far will this principle carry him? |
40388 | How will gentlemen like to pay an additional tax on lands in the Northern Neck?" |
40388 | If Washington would so write, is it not likely that the men would so talk? |
40388 | If so, is it not probable there may be collections for the same accursed purpose nearer home? |
40388 | If so,"will they not be equally fair and impartial? |
40388 | If this be a principle universally acknowledged, what can destroy its application to the case before the court?" |
40388 | If war should come"what government is able to protect you?" |
40388 | If we invite them by our weakness to attack us, will they not do it? |
40388 | If your senators were for life, would they be more agreeable to you? |
40388 | Is it not their business to appreciate this money? |
40388 | Is that judiciary as well constructed, and as independent of the other branches, as our state judiciary? |
40388 | Is there anything"in the Constitution"which gives the[ National] judges exclusive jurisdiction of matters of fact? |
40388 | Item I give and bequeath unto my well Beloved son Thomas Marshall one negro woman named hanno and one negroe child named Jacob? |
40388 | Little Steward( could you believe it?) |
40388 | Much as he liked and admired Mason, Lee asked him"if he has not pursued the very means to bring into action the horrors which he deprecates?" |
40388 | Must the merits of_ Common Sense_ continue to glide down the stream of time unrewarded by this country? |
40388 | Must we not have money for that purpose?" |
40388 | Or by the Bill of Rights? |
40388 | Ought they not, then, to meet an adequate return?" |
40388 | Shall it be a maxim that a man shall be deprived of his life without the benefit of the law?" |
40388 | Shall we object to this because the citizen of another state can obtain justice without applying to our state courts?" |
40388 | So why insert it in the American Constitution? |
40388 | The question was"whether rights not given up were reserved?" |
40388 | The question was, whether the taxing power was"necessary to perform the objects of the Constitution?... |
40388 | Therefore, writes Washington, in angry exasperation,"in the present situation of things, I can not help asking-- Where is Mason-- Wythe-- Jefferson? |
40388 | Thus he appealed for Kentucky votes:"Shall we appear to care less for their interests than for that of distant people[ the Spaniards]?" |
40388 | True, the people had suffered by the loose arrangement under which they now lived; but, after all, had not they and their"liberties"survived? |
40388 | Was it because of their tenure of office or the method of choosing them? |
40388 | Was it not the favored of the earth that government protected? |
40388 | Was jury challenge secured by Magna Charta? |
40388 | Was not Edward Braddock an experienced commander, whose bravery was the toast of his fellow officers? |
40388 | Was not government a fortress built around property? |
40388 | Was that accurate? |
40388 | Was the new Government not for them? |
40388 | Was this the intelligence of the masses? |
40388 | Was this the justice of liberty? |
40388 | Was this the manner of liberty? |
40388 | Was this the way a people fighting for their freedom confronted their enemy? |
40388 | Was"this power[ over the militia] not retained by the states, as they had not given it away?" |
40388 | Were not the Indians the natural foes of these white Lords of the earth? |
40388 | Were the grotesque charges against these men the laurels with which democracy crowned those who had drawn the sword for freedom? |
40388 | Were"powers not given retained by implication?" |
40388 | What are the objects of national government? |
40388 | What are the objects of the National Government? |
40388 | What chance will poor men get?... |
40388 | What did the poor and needy get from government except oppression and the privilege of dying for the boon? |
40388 | What good would it do for Congress merely to remonstrate with the States, as Henry had proposed, if we were at war with foreign enemies? |
40388 | What harm could it do? |
40388 | What has become of your country? |
40388 | What has happened since this to alter his opinion?" |
40388 | What has he to get? |
40388 | What have the state governments to do with it?" |
40388 | What have you for our Dinners, Boys? |
40388 | What have you got for Breakfast, Lads? |
40388 | What is it to the government whether this man or that man succeeds? |
40388 | What is the object of a jury trial? |
40388 | What is your Supper, Lads? |
40388 | What mischief results from some causes being tried there[ in the National Courts]?" |
40388 | What need, therefore, had the lowly for its embattled walls? |
40388 | What object is to be effected by it? |
40388 | What right, he asked, had the framers of the Constitution to say,"_ We, the people_, instead of_ We, the states_"? |
40388 | What security have you for justice? |
40388 | What shall restrain them? |
40388 | What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? |
40388 | What was the matter? |
40388 | What was there wrong with the expression"We, the people,"since upon the people"it is to operate, if adopted"? |
40388 | What would be the end of this contract and that? |
40388 | What would become of this, that, and the other? |
40388 | What, asked Henry, were the reasons for this change of government? |
40388 | What, then, would happen to the people"if their master had been at Philadelphia or New York?" |
40388 | Where are your landmarks in this government? |
40388 | Where, asked Henry, were the dangers the Constitutionalists conjured up? |
40388 | Who knows the dangers this new system may produce? |
40388 | Who were the Indians, anyway, except a kind of wild animal very much in the frontiersman''s way and to be exterminated like other savage beasts? |
40388 | Why are the words"We, the people,"improper? |
40388 | Why did the opposition make"the distinction of_ well- born_ from others?... |
40388 | Why had he allowed Howe to escape when that general marched out to meet him? |
40388 | Why had they done what they had no power to do? |
40388 | Why not abolish Virginia''s Legislature and be done with it? |
40388 | Why this avoidable sickness, this needless suffering, this frightful waste? |
40388 | Why this scanty supply of arms? |
40388 | Why this want of food even for such of the soldiers as were willing and eager to fight for their country? |
40388 | Why would he not oust the British from Philadelphia? |
40388 | Why, exclaimed the popular voice, should this expedient of war be recognized? |
40388 | Why, then, attempt"to terrify us into an adoption of this new form of government?... |
40388 | Will a man on the eastern shore be sent to be tried in Kentucky, or a man from Kentucky be brought to the eastern shore to have his trial? |
40388 | Will he take the chances that the injured man will not appear and defend the unjust suit? |
40388 | Will it not be so in the Federal court?" |
40388 | Will the most virtuous act the most wickedly?" |
40388 | Would anybody incur great expense to oppress another? |
40388 | You agree to bind yourselves hand and foot-- for the sake of what? |
40388 | You go into a dungeon-- for what? |
40388 | [ 1310] If some of these suits be carried to other courts, will it be wrong? |
40388 | [ 717]"If we are now to pay the debts due to the British merchants, what have we been fighting for all this while?" |
40388 | exclaimed Marshall,"Will no one stay there but the tools and officers of the government?... |
40388 | is it not a reasonable inference that the Virginia officers in the familiar talk of comrades, spoke of Jefferson in terms less mild? |
40388 | laws affecting the mode of transferring property, or contracts, or claims, between citizens of the same state? |
40388 | said he,"borrow money to discharge interest on what was borrowed?... |
20053 | A biplane, eh? 20053 A biplane, eh?" |
20053 | A shotgun? 20053 A tourin''car? |
20053 | Ai n''t no danger o''an explosion, is there? |
20053 | Airship, eh? |
20053 | All ready? |
20053 | All ready? |
20053 | And do you swim? |
20053 | And how far is it? |
20053 | And how much did they get from you? |
20053 | And the touring car went on? |
20053 | And what about the biplane? |
20053 | Another way? 20053 Any girls want to go up?" |
20053 | Any luck? |
20053 | Anybody around? |
20053 | Anything new? |
20053 | Are n''t you going to try to take it home? |
20053 | Are the others invited? |
20053 | Are there any side roads between here and Plankville? |
20053 | Are they all up at that old mansion now? |
20053 | Are they here with you? |
20053 | Are they in bad shape? |
20053 | Are they up to some trick? |
20053 | Are you O. K., Dick? |
20053 | Are you afraid? |
20053 | Are you afraid? |
20053 | Are you alone? |
20053 | Are you game? |
20053 | Are you going to take the full course? |
20053 | Are you going to take the lantern? |
20053 | Are you hurt? |
20053 | Are you men going on? |
20053 | Are you sure they did n''t harm anything? |
20053 | Are you sure you are following the trail? |
20053 | Are you sure? |
20053 | Are you sure? |
20053 | Are you sure? |
20053 | Are you two going to settle down here? |
20053 | Around here? |
20053 | Arrested? 20053 But can we do it? |
20053 | But did they get over? |
20053 | But how did you manage to follow us so quickly? |
20053 | But oh, do you think it is quite safe? |
20053 | But the engine? |
20053 | But the shots? |
20053 | But were n''t you afraid? |
20053 | But what in the world can they be doing in this out- of- the- way place? |
20053 | But what is it? |
20053 | But what shall we do, Dick? |
20053 | But what would be the use of trying to follow on horseback? 20053 But why does he come here?" |
20053 | But you heard what the girls said, did n''t you? |
20053 | But you saw the auto, with the men and the girls in it? |
20053 | By itself? |
20053 | By the way, Dick, how much longer are you going to linger before you scrape up money enough to pay the minister''s fee? |
20053 | Ca n''t I help? |
20053 | Ca n''t something be done? |
20053 | Ca n''t we get closer and make sure? |
20053 | Ca n''t we use it to go after the biplane? |
20053 | Ca n''t you go after them? |
20053 | Ca n''t you land? |
20053 | Can a fellow ride horseback on those horses? |
20053 | Can it be the boys? |
20053 | Can we come in? |
20053 | Can we go upstairs now? |
20053 | Can we use the same gasoline as we use in the auto? |
20053 | Can you do it, Tom? |
20053 | Can you keep to the course? |
20053 | Can you run her, Dick? |
20053 | Can you tell me where I can find Miss Stanhope, or the Misses Laning? |
20053 | Caught in the hailstorm? |
20053 | Dat road? |
20053 | Dat way or dat way? |
20053 | Dead, hey? 20053 Dead? |
20053 | Dead? |
20053 | Dick, can you manage her? |
20053 | Dick, do n''t you think we ought to be getting to the_ Dartaway_ pretty soon? |
20053 | Dick, do n''t you think you ought to help him in these affairs? |
20053 | Dick, do you think you''ll be able to take that trip? |
20053 | Did I see the car? |
20053 | Did dad give any particulars? |
20053 | Did he come to the house? |
20053 | Did n''t I see you looking over that furniture and picture catalogue the other day? 20053 Did n''t you know he was found on the railroad tracks dead?" |
20053 | Did n''t you recognize those young fellows? |
20053 | Did she go alone? |
20053 | Did the airship come down, do you think? |
20053 | Did the flying machine do it? |
20053 | Did they go on foot? |
20053 | Did they say what they intended to do? |
20053 | Did you come from the direction of Snagtown? |
20053 | Did you get a bad tumble? |
20053 | Did you have much gasoline on board? |
20053 | Did you say Josiah Crabtree? |
20053 | Did you see anything of a big automobile going that way, one with a coach top? |
20053 | Did you see anything of it? |
20053 | Did you see him? |
20053 | Did you see the money on the table? |
20053 | Did you see who was in the auto? |
20053 | Did-- did you find them? 20053 Do I look like I was dead?" |
20053 | Do n''t you remember the one that came and cut down our corn some years ago? |
20053 | Do n''t you think we can do it, with the sticks and pistols? |
20053 | Do n''t you want a passenger? |
20053 | Do n''t you want any help? |
20053 | Do n''t you want to go up, Songbird? |
20053 | Do they want us home? |
20053 | Do you boys want us to go in the biplane? |
20053 | Do you know him? |
20053 | Do you know how far those places are? |
20053 | Do you know if he is at his barber shop now? |
20053 | Do you know what I think we ought to do? 20053 Do you know what we are doing? |
20053 | Do you know where they went? |
20053 | Do you live here? |
20053 | Do you ride bicycles? |
20053 | Do you see any place where we can land? |
20053 | Do you suppose it is possible that Sobber thinks to come here and blow the house up? |
20053 | Do you suppose that Mrs. Sobber is in this? |
20053 | Do you think I play a joke? |
20053 | Do you think Koswell and Larkspur are in this game? |
20053 | Do you think Tad Sobber is with old Crabtree? |
20053 | Do you think it will rain? |
20053 | Do you think she''d be safe here? |
20053 | Do you think somebody sent that message to decoy Dora away from the seminary, Dick? |
20053 | Do you think the ladder is long enough? |
20053 | Do you think we can get her ashore? |
20053 | Do you think we could put it in the boathouse for the present-- or in the shed of the gymnasium? |
20053 | Do you want to pitch me out on my head? |
20053 | Do you wear the order of the Red Garter? |
20053 | Does he and uncle stand to lose much? |
20053 | Does he say how he is feeling? |
20053 | Does n''t it look that way? 20053 Dom, he peen a regular aviadventurer, or vot you call him?" |
20053 | Eh, Tom? |
20053 | Eh, what? 20053 Examine''em?" |
20053 | Five? |
20053 | Going to a wedding? |
20053 | Going to leave me tied up? |
20053 | Going to take the machine right away, ai n''t you? |
20053 | Going? |
20053 | Got a pretty good rap, did n''t I? 20053 Got that spark connected all right?" |
20053 | Great work, eh, Dudd? |
20053 | Had n''t you better go up a bit, Dick? |
20053 | Had n''t you better remain behind? 20053 Hans, did you get heart failure?" |
20053 | Has Dick been up? |
20053 | Has he heard anything more of Crabtree or Sobber? |
20053 | Have any of you seen a big auto go through here, an enclosed auto-- one with a coach- like body? |
20053 | Have n''t you read the newspapers? |
20053 | Have they any idea where they went to? |
20053 | Have you a lantern on the wagon? |
20053 | Have you any in mind? |
20053 | Have you heard anything more from dad? |
20053 | He did n''t speak to you, did he? |
20053 | Hello, what''s this, a hold- up? |
20053 | How about being an angel, Aleck? |
20053 | How about it, Songbird, ca n''t you rise to the occasion? |
20053 | How about thet busted- up bonfire, an''that snaky cigar? 20053 How about when I and my brother came after you on horseback? |
20053 | How are you going to get the biplane back here, even if you do find it? |
20053 | How are you going to get the machine back? |
20053 | How are you going to get to town? |
20053 | How are you going to serve the ice- cream? |
20053 | How can he be here, in this out- of- the- way place? |
20053 | How did it feel to be up in the air? |
20053 | How far away from here is that place? |
20053 | How far is it to that deserted village? |
20053 | How far is that bridge from here? |
20053 | How far is that place? |
20053 | How far is that? |
20053 | How far to a good ford? |
20053 | How is Miss Minnie? |
20053 | How is it, Dick? |
20053 | How is she going? |
20053 | How many men were there? |
20053 | How many of them were there? |
20053 | How shall we go? |
20053 | How so? |
20053 | How so? |
20053 | How was that? |
20053 | How? |
20053 | However did you manage it? |
20053 | Hurt? |
20053 | I say, who are you? |
20053 | I wonder where you got mixed up? |
20053 | I wonder who that so- called doctor was? |
20053 | If it am a flyin''machine wot fo''you call it a biplane? |
20053 | If this is your farm, could you rent me a shed in which to store this biplane until she is mended? |
20053 | If we should n''t meet them, will you tell them we called, in our biplane? |
20053 | In that case, how could he be scared stiff? |
20053 | In the sitting room? 20053 Is Sam in there?" |
20053 | Is Tad Sobber with you? |
20053 | Is dot you, Sam? |
20053 | Is it William Philander Tubbs? |
20053 | Is it a joke? |
20053 | Is it about the Stanhopes-- about Dora? |
20053 | Is she smashed much? 20053 Is the engine goin''to bust?" |
20053 | Is there any other side road? |
20053 | Is this your lot? |
20053 | Is yo''-all armed? |
20053 | Jim? 20053 Looks so, does n''t it?" |
20053 | Massa Tom, am yo''really thinking ob goin''up in dat contraption? |
20053 | May I ask how far you''ve come? |
20053 | Me in a case in court? |
20053 | Me? 20053 Me? |
20053 | Mr. Crabtree, do you know that we can have you arrested? |
20053 | Mr. Marley, are you sure of the footing? |
20053 | None at all? |
20053 | Not hurt much, really? |
20053 | Now I guess it''s my turn, is n''t it? |
20053 | Now then, all ready? 20053 Now what in the world can old Crabtree and Sobber be up to?" |
20053 | Now what''s the next move? |
20053 | Now what? |
20053 | Now would n''t that get your scalp- lock? |
20053 | Now, is n''t that just like them? 20053 Oh, Sam, what of Grace?" |
20053 | Oh, do n''t you think I had better go too? |
20053 | Oh, so thet''s it, eh? 20053 Oh, then this is the Dawson farm?" |
20053 | Quarrelling? 20053 Rather make up verses about flying than fly, eh?" |
20053 | Read about-- ah-- what, please? |
20053 | Safe and sound, eh? |
20053 | Sam, do you want to take Grace back, or come with us? |
20053 | Say, Dick, is n''t it proper to salute your future sister- in- law? |
20053 | Say, Dom, he peen a regular aviadventurer, hey? |
20053 | Say, Mr. Crabtree, why do n''t you show yourself? |
20053 | Say, ai n''t you afraid ob gitting shot, or sumfing like dat? |
20053 | Say, but he looks like a real Lord, does n''t he? |
20053 | Say, but she makes some noise, does n''t she? |
20053 | Say, do you see any telephone wires? |
20053 | Say, is he any good-- or is he all-- well, all poetry? |
20053 | Say, is the machine hurt much? |
20053 | Say, look here, what does this mean? |
20053 | Say, look here, what does this mean? |
20053 | Say, that was some sail, was n''t it? |
20053 | Say, that was something fierce, was n''t it? |
20053 | Say, what''s happened? |
20053 | See an airship? |
20053 | See anybody? |
20053 | See who? |
20053 | Seen''em, did you? |
20053 | Shall we land and question him? |
20053 | Shall we sail over now, or wait until to- morrow? |
20053 | Sobber said that? |
20053 | Sobber, if you are in there why do n''t you show yourself? 20053 Sobber, what has become of Jerry Koswell and Bart Larkspur?" |
20053 | Supposing I call to him? |
20053 | Supposing I swim it? |
20053 | Tell me, what have they done with the two young ladies? |
20053 | Tell me, where does that mainroad on the other side of the river run to? |
20053 | Tell us what? |
20053 | That I fell out of the machine? |
20053 | That''s true, Sam,returned Tom, and then he added with a sudden broad grin:"But how about an egg that was only half bad-- would you want to eat it? |
20053 | The_ Dartaway_? 20053 Then what''s the use of keeping out of sight? |
20053 | Then you have the flying machine here? |
20053 | Then you saw''em? |
20053 | Then you think they carried the girls off for money? |
20053 | Then you''d have to leave Brill, would n''t you? |
20053 | Then you''ll consent? |
20053 | They did n''t hurt you, did they? |
20053 | They kept to this road? |
20053 | Thinking of dad''s western affairs? |
20053 | This sort of food goes away ahead of the college stuff; eh, boys? |
20053 | Thomas, my dear fellow, what-- er-- what does it mean? |
20053 | Tom, Tom, ca n''t you do something? |
20053 | Vot is dot? |
20053 | Vy ton''t you got dem arrested? |
20053 | Want any help? |
20053 | Want to catch''em, eh? |
20053 | Want to go up, Hansy, old boy? |
20053 | Want to take a sail through the clouds for a change? |
20053 | Was n''t that a dandy initial flight? |
20053 | Was n''t you scared, Massa Sam? |
20053 | Was your trip a success? |
20053 | Wat''s dat? 20053 We can go in with you, ca n''t we?" |
20053 | We might have fried a few over the light, eh? |
20053 | Well, boys, got back, eh? |
20053 | Well, did ye find the feller ye was after? |
20053 | Well, what''s the next move? |
20053 | Well, what''s to do next, Dick? |
20053 | Well, would n''t you like it yourself? |
20053 | Were n''t you afraid, Sam? |
20053 | Were they to meet anybody? |
20053 | Were you wrecked? |
20053 | What about it, Tom? 20053 What about your father, Dick? |
20053 | What are their names? |
20053 | What are they up to? |
20053 | What are we going to do then? 20053 What are you doing here this time of night?" |
20053 | What are you going to do next? |
20053 | What are you going to do with me? |
20053 | What ca n''t you understand? |
20053 | What can I do for you? |
20053 | What can they be doing up around Hope? |
20053 | What did happen, Sam? 20053 What did the Queen say when she decorated you?" |
20053 | What did the rascals say to them? |
20053 | What did you do? 20053 What did you find out?" |
20053 | What did you tell them? |
20053 | What do you say, Dick? |
20053 | What do you suppose he meant by blowing us sky- high? |
20053 | What do you suppose he meant? |
20053 | What do you want? |
20053 | What do you want? |
20053 | What does she say? |
20053 | What does that look like to you, Sam? |
20053 | What does that mean? |
20053 | What have you made up about airships, anything really fine, Songbird? |
20053 | What house? |
20053 | What important thing? |
20053 | What is going on down there? |
20053 | What is it, Grace? |
20053 | What is it, dad''s business affairs? |
20053 | What is it? |
20053 | What is the matter-- is it a-- er-- a cyclone? |
20053 | What news? |
20053 | What of the girls? |
20053 | What rascals? |
20053 | What shall we do? |
20053 | What were the folks in the auto doing? |
20053 | What you- all wants? |
20053 | What''s gone wrong? |
20053 | What''s that, Hans? |
20053 | What''s that? |
20053 | What''s that? |
20053 | What''s the matter? |
20053 | What''s the trouble now? |
20053 | What''s the trouble? |
20053 | What''s the use of leaving her behind? 20053 What''s the use? |
20053 | What''s the use? 20053 What''s this, another joke?" |
20053 | What''s up, Dick? |
20053 | What''s up? |
20053 | What''s wrong now? |
20053 | What, me? 20053 What, to the town?" |
20053 | What, will you go in that touring car? |
20053 | What? |
20053 | What? |
20053 | Whatever are they up to now, do you think, Dick? |
20053 | When can we go to Rayville? |
20053 | Where are the others? |
20053 | Where are you? 20053 Where can I find them?" |
20053 | Where did they go to, I wonder? |
20053 | Where did they pick her up? |
20053 | Where did you come down? |
20053 | Where did you see them? |
20053 | Where does that road lead to? |
20053 | Where does that road run to? |
20053 | Where is Sam? |
20053 | Where is he? |
20053 | Where is he? |
20053 | Where to? |
20053 | Where would they sit, in our laps? |
20053 | Where''s the biplane? |
20053 | Which is that? |
20053 | Which way did the auto go? |
20053 | Which way did the car go? |
20053 | Which way was it headed? 20053 Which way was it headed?" |
20053 | Who are you? |
20053 | Who fired those shots? |
20053 | Who is firing a gun this time of night? |
20053 | Who is going to go on the raft? |
20053 | Who is it? 20053 Who is running it, that aviator?" |
20053 | Who is this man-- an officer? |
20053 | Who is to do the steering? |
20053 | Who is to run the machine? |
20053 | Who lives at the place? |
20053 | Who said anything about going to bed? |
20053 | Who wants any supper? |
20053 | Who was around? |
20053 | Who was in the crowd? |
20053 | Who was she? 20053 Who was the third fellow?" |
20053 | Who were they? |
20053 | Who were they? |
20053 | Who would be so mean? |
20053 | Who''s dead? |
20053 | Why ca n''t we search the road for tracks? |
20053 | Why did n''t you stop him, or shoot him? |
20053 | Why did n''t you? |
20053 | Why not? 20053 Why not?" |
20053 | Why not? |
20053 | Why should I be? |
20053 | Why should we leave? |
20053 | Why stop there? |
20053 | Why, Aleck, do n''t you know what that is? |
20053 | Why, Mr. Ricks, what''s your rush? |
20053 | Why, do you want to go? |
20053 | Why-- er-- weally, do n''t you know, what does-- er-- this mean? |
20053 | Why? |
20053 | Why? |
20053 | Will you let me go if I help you? |
20053 | Will you? 20053 Wonder if it will rain?" |
20053 | Wonder where we could ship it to, so the other fellows would n''t get on to what was doing? |
20053 | Wot about''em? |
20053 | Wot did Tom Rover say? |
20053 | Wot makes the thing go, Job? |
20053 | Wot you- all gwine to do now? |
20053 | Wot''s he going to do here? |
20053 | Wot''s this noise about, an''wot''s that thing? |
20053 | Would n''t you like some refreshments? |
20053 | Would you go? |
20053 | Yes, and she did_ dart away_, did n''t she? |
20053 | Yo''do n''t mean to say it am lak a plane a carpenter man uses, does yo'', Massa Dick? 20053 You are sure about that?" |
20053 | You are sure that car did n''t go through Plankville? 20053 You did n''t?" |
20053 | You got struck and knocked down, do n''t you remember? |
20053 | You mean Dora and Nellie? |
20053 | You mean wind? |
20053 | You saw them go? |
20053 | You wo n''t be afraid? |
20053 | Your property? |
20053 | ''Do you see that?'' |
20053 | A flyin''machine? |
20053 | A prisoner?" |
20053 | After me?" |
20053 | An airship, eh? |
20053 | An angel, eh? |
20053 | And what were the men in the auto, and the girls, doing?" |
20053 | Any reward fer her?" |
20053 | Any special news from home?" |
20053 | Are you hurt? |
20053 | Are you scared?" |
20053 | As late as this? |
20053 | As much as that?" |
20053 | But who was the crazy loon as was runnin''her?" |
20053 | But, of course, if you object, Dora----""Did I object?" |
20053 | CHAPTER II SOMETHING ABOUT THE ROVER BOYS"Oh, Dick, are you hurt?" |
20053 | CHAPTER XXII OVER THE BIG WOODS"Is there a hardware store handy?" |
20053 | CHAPTER XXIV AT THE SWAMP"Where are they? |
20053 | CHAPTER XXX THE ROUND- UP-- CONCLUSION"What''s this?" |
20053 | Can you tell us the best road to the college?" |
20053 | Correction:"How far is it to that deserted village?" |
20053 | Could they catch up to it before those running the machine had a chance to slip them in the darkness? |
20053 | Crabtree?" |
20053 | Did he say anything to you about business?" |
20053 | Did n''t you catch up to them? |
20053 | Did something break?" |
20053 | Did you bring them back?" |
20053 | Did you get that fussing with the biplane?" |
20053 | Did you meet it on the road?" |
20053 | Do n''t you think I''d better hop out an''arrest the bunch?" |
20053 | Do n''t you think it''s a good idea?" |
20053 | Do you think he''d show himself?" |
20053 | Do you think the money would bring you happiness, or would it bring only increased cares? |
20053 | Had the engine been damaged after all? |
20053 | He paused to catch his breath,"Where was Ham killed? |
20053 | He was a teacher, was n''t he?" |
20053 | How about the engine, Dick?" |
20053 | How are you?" |
20053 | How could she come down any other way? |
20053 | How did you happen to think of it?" |
20053 | How is that prisoner?" |
20053 | How long would an auto keep to the road without somebody steering?" |
20053 | How much do they cost?" |
20053 | How vas der udder poys?" |
20053 | How was that?" |
20053 | How?" |
20053 | Indeed, Dick is thinking of getting married and settling down, and with such a nice girl as Dora Stanhope, who could blame him? |
20053 | Is he going to start the mill up ag''in?" |
20053 | Is n''t it great, Hans?" |
20053 | Is that any of your business?" |
20053 | It was a terrible trouble, was n''t it?" |
20053 | Kase why? |
20053 | Marley?" |
20053 | Me go up in a airship? |
20053 | Me let the train run over him?" |
20053 | Now what''s to be did?" |
20053 | Now you understand, do n''t you, Aleck?" |
20053 | Now, what''s the news? |
20053 | Oh, Mr. Rover, is anything wrong?" |
20053 | On the tracks? |
20053 | Or, Adventures in Winding Waters Where is there a youth who does not love a gun, a fishing rod, a canoe, or a roaring camp- fire? |
20053 | Or, The Tyler Will If you had been poor and were suddenly left a half- million dollars, what would you do with it? |
20053 | Over what?" |
20053 | Perhaps some very sentimental things were said-- especially between Dick and Dora-- but if so, who can blame them? |
20053 | Sanderson?" |
20053 | Say yes, wo n''t you?" |
20053 | Say, how is we- all to git ober dat stream after dis?" |
20053 | Say, they do n''t belong at Brill, do they?" |
20053 | Say, yo''know wot I think? |
20053 | See that fallen tree? |
20053 | Shorely, Massa Dick, yo''ai n''t gwine to try to fly?" |
20053 | Supposing I give you two dollars for the use of the horses and another dollar for the lantern, how will that strike you?" |
20053 | Tell me where to take him, will you?" |
20053 | The college faculty did it-- they could n''t do less, to one so decorated, or knighted,--which is it, please? |
20053 | The same thought was in the mind of each; should they follow the touring car on foot, or go back for the airship? |
20053 | Then, oh, was n''t it strange? |
20053 | Vot is dot, some kind of a saw- mill alretty?" |
20053 | Vot you do mid him, Sam?" |
20053 | Vot you poys going to git next?" |
20053 | Was it your machine? |
20053 | Was that the name of the craft?" |
20053 | Was this some new trick? |
20053 | We come out ahead every time, do n''t we?" |
20053 | What did it, the auto?" |
20053 | What did the machine do, Tom; go to smash?" |
20053 | What do you want?" |
20053 | What for?" |
20053 | What was her name?" |
20053 | What''s the trouble?" |
20053 | When did she tell you that?" |
20053 | Where did it go to?" |
20053 | Where''s them newspapers?" |
20053 | Who are you?" |
20053 | Who fired those shots?" |
20053 | Who says Dick ca n''t fly? |
20053 | Who told you this?" |
20053 | Who was running it? |
20053 | Who''s doin''it? |
20053 | Why did n''t you stop and find out what we wanted?" |
20053 | Why did n''t you think of that before? |
20053 | Why do n''t you show yourself?" |
20053 | Why not build a raft and float her over instead of bringing her ashore here? |
20053 | Why not go on straight to Fremville? |
20053 | Why should anybody send word that I was hurt, when I was n''t?" |
20053 | Why, do n''t you know that flying in the air is getting to be a common thing these days? |
20053 | Why, do you think it''s that?" |
20053 | Wo n''t you please say yes?" |
20053 | Wot be you a''doin''here in my pasture lot?" |
20053 | Wot kin I do, Massa Tom?" |
20053 | Wot''s that?" |
20053 | Would n''t you like to buy a good shooter?" |
20053 | Would they find the flying machine, and if so, would it be in serviceable condition or so smashed up as to be worthless? |
20053 | Would you like to hear them?" |
20053 | You got excited, did n''t you? |
20053 | You must have come about three miles a minute, eh? |
20053 | came from the three, and then all continued in a chorus:"Did the biplane get here?" |
20053 | got to have gasoline to run''em, eh?" |
20053 | he had you them times, did n''t he?" |
20053 | vot for you do him?" |
20053 | what does this mean?" |
20053 | you going up by der sky in him?" |
6896 | By what authority? |
6896 | What shall I say, brave Admiral, say, If we sight naught but seas at dawn? |
6896 | And if a ship should sail to the undermost part, how could it come back? |
6896 | BATTLE OF BRANDYWINE.--What, meantime, had Howe been doing? |
6896 | Brave Admiral, say but one good word; What shall we do when hope is gone?" |
6896 | Brave Admiral, speak; what shall I say?" |
6896 | But did it flow into the Gulf? |
6896 | Could a ship sail up hill? |
6896 | FOOTNOTES[ 1] A closely related question was, What shall be done for the negroes set free by the Emancipation Proclamation? |
6896 | In February, 1793, the French Republic declared war on Great Britain, and so brought up the question, Which side shall the United States take? |
6896 | Might not this, it was asked, be the long- sought northwest passage to the Indies? |
6896 | THE DEBT AND THE CURRENCY.--The financial question to be settled included two parts: What shall be done with the bonds( p. 381)? |
6896 | THE PUBLIC LANDS.--The rise of new Western states brought up the troublesome question, What shall be done with the public lands? |
6896 | THE WAR IN THE NORTH.--What meantime had happened in the North? |
6896 | The first was, What shall be done to destroy the institution of slavery? |
6896 | The question of the hour thus became, Shall New Mexico and California be slave soil or free soil? |
6896 | The question then became, Which of these duplicate sets shall Congress count? |
6896 | The second was, What shall be done with the late Confederate states? |
6896 | Then the question arose, Which was the better of two routes, that by Lake Nicaragua, or that across the isthmus of Panama? |
6896 | Was it necessary to remove the Acadians? |
6896 | What shall be done with the currency? |
6896 | Why did John Dickinson oppose a declaration of independence? |
6896 | Why did the commissioners fail? |
6896 | [ 12] THE COAST OF FLORIDA EXPLORED.--What meantime had happened along the coast of North America? |
6896 | [ 16] Why would not Great Britain make a trade treaty with us? |
6896 | and What shall be done with the paper money? |
41777 | All right; do you say keep on? |
41777 | And did he catch ye? |
41777 | And how about you chaps? |
41777 | And how came father and mother to miss them? |
41777 | And is that the honest truth now, Whart? |
41777 | And so ye want to mix in this business? |
41777 | And they will try to prevent us doing so? |
41777 | And what did Arqu- wao do? |
41777 | And what is that? |
41777 | And what then? |
41777 | And where were Blazing Arrow and the rest in waiting? |
41777 | Are ye sure it''s yersilf, Whart? |
41777 | Are you all right? |
41777 | At whom did you fire? |
41777 | Because I see him; look beyant, right across the lake-- don''t ye obsarve him? |
41777 | Big house-- fort-- place where white men are? |
41777 | But is it the right one? |
41777 | But what about the two that wint across a little while ago? |
41777 | But why not? 41777 But you do n''t explain; did you see anything of Red Crow?" |
41777 | But you say you saw Blazing Arrow? |
41777 | Did n''t you aim at him? |
41777 | Did you ever see a red crow, younkers? |
41777 | Did you run as fast as you could? |
41777 | Did you see anything of an Indian with a bow and arrow? |
41777 | Do n''t you think Red Crow is acting wisely? |
41777 | Do n''t you understand what it means? |
41777 | Do ye hear that? |
41777 | Do ye mind now that they wo n''t start before morning, and they ca n''t reach the falls till about noon? |
41777 | Do you want to help us? |
41777 | Halloo, what''s up now? |
41777 | Has Blazing Arrow ever injured him? |
41777 | Has Red Crow had time to reach the spot? |
41777 | Have you discovered anything? |
41777 | Have you had anything to do with him? |
41777 | How are ye going to get to the same? |
41777 | How can he help himself? |
41777 | How can we know which course to take? 41777 How can ye know that?" |
41777 | How can you know that? |
41777 | How do things look to you? |
41777 | How do you know he ca n''t? 41777 How is it that he and the others did not kill my father and mother as they rode along the trail?" |
41777 | How long ago did they pass this way? |
41777 | How long ago did you leave? |
41777 | How shall we manage it? |
41777 | How was it, Kenton, that you came to shoot awhile ago? |
41777 | How will he account for his failure to capture me, and what explanation will he give for the loss of my gun? 41777 How will we manage it?" |
41777 | I believe that is what has happened; they had a quarrel when they met in the trail; why did n''t Blazing Arrow kill him then? |
41777 | I can see none; do you? |
41777 | I say, what''s the matter? |
41777 | I wonder if he can throw across the lake? |
41777 | I wonder if he''s right? |
41777 | I wonder what sort of yarn he will tell his people when he goes back? |
41777 | I wonder what that means? |
41777 | I wonder what the name means? |
41777 | I wonder what''s become of Whart? 41777 I wonder where he is?" |
41777 | I wonder where that cratur is? |
41777 | I wonder where they can be? |
41777 | I wonder whether any of them have got over yet? |
41777 | I wonder whether he has any suspicion that I am behind him? |
41777 | I wonder whether he intends we shall cross it? |
41777 | I wonder whether he means us to stand right here or to dodge behind the trees, as we did before? |
41777 | I wonder whether, if we have a fight, he will help us or Blazing Arrow? 41777 I''m thinking it means an Indian half- scared to death; but, Whart, what''ll we do wid him, now that we''ve got him?" |
41777 | If I had outrun you would I have been allowed to go free? |
41777 | If the Indians had to take one, why did n''t they take mesilf? 41777 Is the whole party coming over one by one? |
41777 | It is a purty good tramp yet afore we reach the settlement; can you all stand it? |
41777 | It''s off yonder, is n''t it? |
41777 | Kenton, why was it you were in such a hurry to get along the trail when you left the block- house? |
41777 | Me catch dem,he hastened to say;"horse walk-- Arqu- wao run faster den horse-- he hurry-- tell dem-- me do that?" |
41777 | No, do you? |
41777 | See dere-- eh-- see dat? |
41777 | Suppose I had beaten you? |
41777 | Suppose he can beat me? |
41777 | Suppose we get into trouble? |
41777 | The same to yersilf; and have ye suffered no harrum? |
41777 | Then I can beat you? |
41777 | Then we''ll consider it settled; and how are ye? |
41777 | We heard a rifle awhile ago; do you know anything about it? |
41777 | Well? |
41777 | What can be his business with us unless it be unfriendly? |
41777 | What can this mean? |
41777 | What do you mean? |
41777 | What do you think of it, Simon? |
41777 | What do you think of that, Larry? |
41777 | What does all this mean? |
41777 | What hindered you from catching me? |
41777 | What is it, owld felly? |
41777 | What led you to follow them in such haste? 41777 What makes you say that?" |
41777 | What of his manner just now? |
41777 | What the mischief can I do? |
41777 | What war the hurry? 41777 What were ye trying to do, anyway?" |
41777 | What''s that? |
41777 | What''s that? |
41777 | What''s that? |
41777 | Where are they? |
41777 | Where did you overtake them? |
41777 | Where does father intend to return to the main trail? |
41777 | Who can say where they are waiting for us? 41777 Who made that?" |
41777 | Who said there was n''t, younker? |
41777 | Why did n''t Blazing Arrow and the others wait for us to come? |
41777 | Why did n''t I think of the same? |
41777 | Why did n''t ye sind word to me, so that I could have stood by ye and cheered ye on and watched the sight? 41777 Why did you come here?" |
41777 | Why have n''t they appeared to us? |
41777 | Why not? |
41777 | Why so? |
41777 | Why will we be killed? |
41777 | Why, Kenton, did n''t you tell me this before? |
41777 | Why, then, do n''t ye run yersilf? |
41777 | Ye are right,straightening up,"which means that two people have passed this way-- pretty lately, too; but how can we know who they were?" |
41777 | Yes-- me know-- me show,replied Red Crow, with such haste that he unconsciously dropped into English, which he spoke ill."Where is it?" |
41777 | You say that you know a better way to the settlement, where we can take the horses? |
41777 | And did he, while quickly weighing the chances, hesitate? |
41777 | But what should be done? |
41777 | Could it be that his friend was not only free from the Shawanoes, but was so near? |
41777 | Did you hear him yell?" |
41777 | Do ye mind that tree over there to the right, beyant, that has been knocked all to splinters by lightning? |
41777 | Do ye mind that, I say?" |
41777 | Do ye mind, too, that we can travel a good many miles atween this time and sunrise?" |
41777 | Do you think he would take it kindly if I threw my cap in the air and gave him a hurrah?" |
41777 | Had they looked down at the ground they must have discovered the footprints of the boys, and what then? |
41777 | Have the folks passed that yet?" |
41777 | He kept it up, however, for he was now running for life, and what is to be compared to such a stake? |
41777 | He shook the hand of each in turn, and Wharton asked:"Where did you come from, Kenton?" |
41777 | He''ll be the first to stop; but, Wharton, what about you?" |
41777 | How did you know they were in such great danger?" |
41777 | How was it that this Indian was in possession of the signal which the two youths used when in danger? |
41777 | Howdy?" |
41777 | I wonder what''s become of Whart?" |
41777 | I wonder whether he knows about that?" |
41777 | If two or three succeeded in getting to the rear of his position( and what was to prevent it?) |
41777 | Pointing to the hoofprints, clearly showing in the earth, he asked:"What do they mean, Arqu- wao?" |
41777 | She listened in amazement, and then said:"Why, do you think you could write a book like that?" |
41777 | Suppose that a party of them made up their minds to cross at the same time we do?" |
41777 | They ai n''t fur off, Brigham?" |
41777 | Was it not you who tried to kill me when we were about to run a race?" |
41777 | Was it work? |
41777 | Wharton now advanced and spoke:"Arqu- wao, do you know where the block- house is?" |
41777 | Wharton related in as few words as possible their experience with the strange creature, and asked:"Has he always been that way?" |
41777 | What could he do without me? |
41777 | What do you think?" |
41777 | What does Whart maan by sinding me away while he stays and wo n''t jump? |
41777 | What does it mean?" |
41777 | What more likely to deceive them than the act of taking them to a plainly marked path through the woods? |
41777 | What would you have done to me if you had outrun and captured me?" |
41777 | What''s the matter wid ye?" |
41777 | Where can the fellow be?" |
41777 | Where has he gone?" |
41777 | Whither had he gone? |
41777 | Why could n''t that spalpeen have showed himself where he made me expect him? |
41777 | Why did not the pursuer stop short and bring his rifle into play? |
41777 | Why does he have such a strange name?" |
41777 | Why have you chased me so far to- day?" |
41777 | You remember the natural clearing, a little way out toward the block- house?" |
41777 | do ye note what the spook is at?" |
41777 | do you hear that? |
41777 | exclaimed the father, recognizing the names, and striding in front of the Indian;"do you know anything about those two boys?" |
41777 | exclaimed the pioneer to his wife,"do you see that, Margaret?" |
41777 | muttered the enraged Simon Kenton,"why did n''t I get hyar jes''a minute sooner? |
6665 | Shall we now withhold ourselves from her? |
6665 | Why should not you lend to us? |
6665 | CHAPTER I A UNION IN FORM ONLY When did the sovereign nation of the United States begin? |
6665 | Did it include slaves? |
6665 | Had Congress a right or the power to coerce her into the Union? |
6665 | Had a Congress representing eleven States the right, even if it had the power, to legislate for thirteen sovereign States? |
6665 | Have we not the power to shake off these firebrands?" |
6665 | How had it been done? |
6665 | How will it be when a member from New Hampshire is to make out a road for Georgia?" |
6665 | If Europe was to become the champion of monarchy and legitimacy, why should not America become the guardian of freedom and republicanism? |
6665 | Is it given to the departed to know such a mortal pleasure as vindication? |
6665 | Justice Wilson, of Pennsylvania, thought the question involved even a higher point-- do the people of the United States form a nation? |
6665 | Must it hesitate and temporise while the blood of its citizens was being shed? |
6665 | Should all this good work be undone and the hands turned backward on the dial of liberty by conspiring European monarchs? |
6665 | Should legitimacy cast its blight again on the New World as it had already done on the Old? |
6665 | Should the Holy Alliance be allowed to extend its monarchical compulsion to the Spanish- American republics under the sacred garb of religion? |
6665 | Should the dangerous authority now be given over to the Executive? |
6665 | Should this menace be allowed to continue? |
6665 | Suppose the"monarchists"should again come into national control and pass new Alien and Sedition laws? |
6665 | What caused the change to be made? |
6665 | What offices had these other candidates for the Presidency ever refused? |
6665 | What territorial conquest in the history of the world has been entirely free from criticism? |
6665 | What was meant by"population,"which had been substituted for wealth as a basis of apportioning delegates in the popular branch? |
6665 | What was to become of a veteran who was disabled? |
6665 | What will become of me? |
6665 | Where could these inhabitants of a territory find a protector? |
6665 | Why should the one gain more population and have more political strength than the other? |
6665 | Would Protestant England join the Holy Alliance? |
7882 | Have you any business with me? |
7882 | What''s the matter over there? |
7882 | ''Can we do that?'' |
7882 | ''Is this like human nature?'' |
7882 | ''Ought we to do this?'' |
7882 | But I asked,''how do you know it is wolf; why not a fox, or a coyote, or even a deer?'' |
7882 | Could it be the Blackfeet were seeking to throw the whites off their guard? |
7882 | Is this right?'' |
7882 | Looking his antagonist straight in the eye, Carson demanded:"Are you looking for me?" |
7882 | The General saw this, and in vexation cried out,''My God, why do n''t you take a chair when there are plenty here not occupied?'' |
7882 | Twelve men were selected for the most difficult and dangerous task and need we give the name of the youth who was made the leader? |
7882 | What should it be? |
7882 | and you call sich soldiers Christians, do ye? |
46200 | About Early Ann, could she possibly be...? |
46200 | Ai n''t that what you wanted? |
46200 | Ai n''t we going to eat sometime today? |
46200 | Ai n''t you ashamed to be so messy? |
46200 | And then...? |
46200 | And who are your folks? 46200 Anybody busted in your new shoes?" |
46200 | Are you all right, Early Ann? |
46200 | Are you going to Chicago all by yourself? |
46200 | Are you just going to sit there all night? |
46200 | Aw, Sarah, why do n''t you tell me what''s eating you? 46200 Ay t''ink next yar Ay vill gif you sometink to eat, ya?" |
46200 | Be what? |
46200 | Been wrastling her much, kid? |
46200 | But I''ll tell you what I''ll do...."Tomorrow? |
46200 | But why do you want to go? |
46200 | But you just said...."How old is the girl? |
46200 | Can I walk you home? |
46200 | Can you take''er apart and put''er together? |
46200 | Did n''t tip over the lantern? |
46200 | Did you notice the hobble skirt? |
46200 | Did you see the Board of Trade? |
46200 | Did you see the stock yards? |
46200 | Do n''t you ever want to be a lady, Early Ann? 46200 Do you think anybody will notice if I do n''t wear a corset? |
46200 | Drive over to Lake House Point at night? |
46200 | Duck on a Saturday? |
46200 | Duck on a week- day? |
46200 | Gee, could I meet Mr. O''Casey sometime? |
46200 | Had a fight with your girl? |
46200 | Has she got a long scraggly neck and a raggedy black parasol, and a black shawl, and does she wear glasses? |
46200 | How about a cornfield? |
46200 | How are those emaciated razor- backs doing on that run- down farm of yours? |
46200 | How''d it start? |
46200 | How''d you know? |
46200 | How''d you know? |
46200 | How''s the stallion? |
46200 | I suppose you''ll want a death certificate, eh? |
46200 | I was tending a sick stallion and...."Was you smoking? |
46200 | I''ve been wanting to ask you for weeks now...."What, Sarah? |
46200 | In Rock County? |
46200 | Is it good cider or ai n''t it? |
46200 | Is that Christian? 46200 Is that your motorcycle out in front?" |
46200 | Know anything about trailers? |
46200 | Me take you right down to the ice- cream parlor and buy you an ice- cream sundae? |
46200 | Me, tuckered? |
46200 | Me? |
46200 | Might n''t we wait a few days, Stanley? |
46200 | Might you come back to the farm? |
46200 | My land- a- living, why do you tolerate the brute? |
46200 | Need a good hand? |
46200 | Not Pankhurst and Belle La Follette and that sort of thing? |
46200 | Not really? |
46200 | Or Sears, Roebuck''s? |
46200 | Or have the law on him? |
46200 | She went clear out there to start trouble? |
46200 | Shut down for good? |
46200 | Smelled him? |
46200 | So you wanted a job as a mechanic? |
46200 | Someone after the stock, you think? |
46200 | Sure tastes good, do n''t it? |
46200 | Terrible weather for rheumatism, ai n''t it? |
46200 | The one prowling around here nights? |
46200 | Trying to catch one of my''coons? |
46200 | Well, Timothy,said Stud, uncomfortable in his serge suit and well- blacked bulldog shoes,"still making a living robbing the widows and orphans?" |
46200 | Well, what shall we talk about? |
46200 | Well, why does n''t he come to dinner? 46200 What about you?" |
46200 | What about your nightshirt? |
46200 | What does she look like? |
46200 | What was it you were going to say? |
46200 | What you been up to? |
46200 | What''d you do if the''Trailer''shut down for good? |
46200 | What''d you do? |
46200 | What''s the matter with''em? |
46200 | What''s the matter? |
46200 | What''s your name? |
46200 | Whatcha reading? |
46200 | Where is he? |
46200 | Where would you find a man to run your shell game while you was gone? |
46200 | Where''d you come from anyway? |
46200 | Where''s the water, Stud? |
46200 | Who was it? |
46200 | Who you going to marry? |
46200 | Who''d you find to defraud your clients meanwhile? |
46200 | Why do n''t we chase him off the Point? |
46200 | Why do n''t we play like we used to, Stanley? |
46200 | Why do n''t you be a man? |
46200 | Why do n''t you go do your knitting? |
46200 | Why do n''t you mosey over and see who it is? |
46200 | Why do n''t you take me down to the ice- cream parlor and buy me a lover''s delight sometime? |
46200 | Why do n''t you take me for a ride on the handlebars of your new motorcycle sometime? |
46200 | Why not? |
46200 | Why not? |
46200 | Why not? |
46200 | Why should n''t a girl have pretty underclothes? |
46200 | Why... what are you crying about, Mother? |
46200 | Will you please come to the point, Miss Crandall? |
46200 | Wo n''t you have my chair? |
46200 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
46200 | Would you mind if I closed the door into the kitchen? |
46200 | You ai n''t the fellow who''s moved in over on the Point? |
46200 | You ai n''t thinking of taking up woman suffrage, are you? |
46200 | You''re Sarah''s hired girl, ai n''t you? |
46200 | You''re a wild woman, ai n''t you? |
46200 | *****"You home, boy?" |
46200 | 3 What did you want, Joe Valentine? |
46200 | Across the kitchen, however, the comments were less cordial:"Did you hear? |
46200 | And getting back to their own affairs Stud asked,"Are you going to the church supper this evening?" |
46200 | And who''s that in the wagon? |
46200 | Are you going to rent me the room or ai n''t you?" |
46200 | But could she be his daughter? |
46200 | But what I came to tell you about, Sarah....""Yes?" |
46200 | But where was Maxine? |
46200 | But who was she, Stanley? |
46200 | Can you tango or sing,''You Great Big Beautiful Doll''?" |
46200 | Do n''t you ever want to learn how to be sweet and talk nice like Sarah Brailsford?" |
46200 | Do n''t you ever want to ride in a hansom cab or a limousine, with ostrich plumes in your hat, and a parasol? |
46200 | How could I help but notice it?" |
46200 | How could a country lout with big feet and clumsy red hands ever hope to reach such pinnacles of success? |
46200 | How did you know?" |
46200 | How is your mother?" |
46200 | Hunt ducks in the fall, plow the land in the spring, help at the birthing of calves and lambs and foals? |
46200 | In the House of God?" |
46200 | Is Early Ann your daughter?" |
46200 | Is that the way Jesus teaches us to treat one another?" |
46200 | Only, why did you tell me?" |
46200 | Was it likely that she was eighteen and not his daughter? |
46200 | What if the"Trailer"shut down for good as it easily might? |
46200 | What kind of a girl do you think I am?" |
46200 | What was the matter with young fellows these days, did n''t they know a good thing when they saw it? |
46200 | What would Sarah ever think if I did n''t feed you? |
46200 | What you horses going to eat next winter, sawdust?" |
46200 | What''s keeping him?" |
46200 | Whatever are you thinking of? |
46200 | Where had he seen the girl before, years ago? |
46200 | Where were you going? |
46200 | Where would he find happiness again? |
46200 | Where would he forget Maxine the more easily? |
46200 | Where''ve you been keeping yourself?" |
46200 | Who did he think he was? |
46200 | Why ca n''t you leave people alone? |
46200 | Why do n''t you get a job? |
46200 | Why not tell Mother? |
46200 | Why should she with every boy in Brailsford Junction running after her? |
46200 | Why... why, what is it?" |
46200 | Wonder what it''ll be like to be a grandfather?" |
46200 | Would he come back to the farm if this ten day layoff were extended, or would he catch a train for Chicago? |
46200 | Would he come back to this farm where his father and grandfather had labored before him, inherit these woods and fields, and marshes? |
46200 | You ai n''t afraid of me, are you?" |
46200 | what''s happened? |
2619 | A reigning queen in Fashion''s whirl? |
2619 | And is there nothing yet unsaid, Before the change appears? 2619 And what did you hear, my Mary, All up on the Caldon- Hill?" |
2619 | And what did you see, my Mary, All up on the Caldon- Low? |
2619 | And what were the words, my Mary, That you did hear them say? |
2619 | And where are they? 2619 And will it, truly?" |
2619 | And will you have her, Robin, To be your wedded wife? |
2619 | And will you have him, Jenny, Your husband now to be? |
2619 | Bless us,cried the Mayor,"what''s that?" |
2619 | But is there nothing in thy track To bid thee fondly stay, While the swift seasons hurry back To find the wished- for day? |
2619 | For why should I grumble and murmur? |
2619 | Hae a''the weans been gude? |
2619 | Has she no faults then,( Envy says), Sir? |
2619 | How many are you, then,said I,"If they two are in heaven?" |
2619 | How many? 2619 I''m sure you must be weary, dear, with soaring up so high; Will you rest upon my little bed?" |
2619 | Is this, is this your joy? 2619 Must I thank you, then,"said the king,"Sir Lark, For flying so high and hating the dark? |
2619 | O then,says Parson Rook,"Who gives this maid away?" |
2619 | Oh, Nightingale,cooed a dove--"Oh, Nightingale, what''s the use? |
2619 | One? 2619 Shall I come in and bite off your threads?" |
2619 | Silly boy, and what of that? |
2619 | Sisters and brothers, little Maid, How many may you be? |
2619 | What are they dreaming of? 2619 What are you at, my little men?" |
2619 | What can you see in Baby- land? |
2619 | What do they do in Baby- land? |
2619 | What do they say in Baby- land? |
2619 | What makes the lamb love Mary so? |
2619 | Where are you going, and what do you wish? |
2619 | Where is my toadstool? |
2619 | Who is the Queen of Baby- land? |
2619 | Why did I come? |
2619 | Why do you read? |
2619 | Yes, and I will,said Emmie,"but then if I call to the Lord, How should He know that it''s me? |
2619 | You rascal, what are you about? |
2619 | You sang, sir, you say? 2619 You want some breakfast too?" |
2619 | You will? |
2619 | ''Tis a note of enchantment; what ails her? |
2619 | ( Are these torn clothes his best?) |
2619 | ----------- A dillar, a dollar, A ten o''clock scholar, What makes you come so soon? |
2619 | ----------- Baa, baa, black sheep, have you any wool? |
2619 | ----------- Barber, barber, shave a pig, How many hairs will make a wig? |
2619 | ----------- If all the world were apple- pie, And all the sea were ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we have to drink? |
2619 | ----------- Pussy- cat, pussy- cat, where have you been? |
2619 | ----------- Run- a- dub- dub, Three men in a tub, And who do you think they be? |
2619 | ----------- The north wind doth blow, And we shall have snow, And what will poor Robin do then, Poor thing? |
2619 | ----------- There was an old woman, and what do you think? |
2619 | Ah, what shall my lord of the manor do? |
2619 | Ah, why should we care what they say? |
2619 | Ai n''t he a funny old Raggedy Man? |
2619 | Ai n''t you sorry for him? |
2619 | Alas, Time stays, we go; Or else, were this not so, What need to chain the hours, For Youth were always ours? |
2619 | And all the dreams that ne''er came true, Like little children dying young-- Do they come back to you? |
2619 | And did Thy Mother at the night Kiss Thee, and fold the clothes in right? |
2619 | And did they tire sometimes, being young, And make the prayer seem very long? |
2619 | And did you think, when you so cried and smiled, How I, in lonely nights, should lie awake, And of those words your full avengers make? |
2619 | And didst Thou feel quite good in bed, Kissed, and sweet, and Thy prayers said? |
2619 | And didst Thou play in Heaven with all The angels, that were not too tall, With stars for marbles? |
2619 | And dost Thou like it best, that we Should join our hands to pray to Thee? |
2619 | And have you come from Heaven to earth? |
2619 | And is the white cloth never done, For you and me done never? |
2619 | And is the white thread never spun, Mother, mother? |
2619 | And must I work forever? |
2619 | And the brown thrush keeps singing,"A nest do you see, And five eggs, hid by me in the juniper- tree? |
2619 | And then old Sport he hangs around, so solemn- like an''still, His eyes they keep a- sayin'':"What''s the matter, little Bill?" |
2619 | And though they sweep their hearths no less Than maids were wo nt to do, Yet who of late, for cleanliness, Finds sixpence in her shoe? |
2619 | And what did it feel like to be Out of Heaven, and just like me? |
2619 | And what does he say, little girl, little boy? |
2619 | And what hast thou done beside To tell thy mother at eventide? |
2619 | And what is the shore where I stood to see My boat sail down to the west? |
2619 | And what shoulder, and what art, Could twist the sinews of thy heart? |
2619 | And when thy heart began to beat, What dread hand and what dread feet? |
2619 | And when will come that happy day, Mother, mother? |
2619 | And why is the old dog wild with joy Who all day long made moan? |
2619 | And why may not I love Johnny As well as another body? |
2619 | And why may not I love Johnny, And why may not Johnny love me? |
2619 | And why may not I love Johnny, And why may not Johnny love me? |
2619 | And why may not I love Johnny, As well as another body? |
2619 | Ann Taylor[ 1782- 1866] THE LAMB Little Lamb, who made thee? |
2619 | Are you as brave? |
2619 | Arlo Bates[ 1850- 1918] A LAD THAT IS GONE Sing me a song of a lad that is gone; Say, could that lad be I? |
2619 | At the edge of the pathless wood, And the button- ball tree with its motley limbs, Which nigh by the doorstep stood? |
2619 | BABY- LAND"Which is the way to Baby- land?" |
2619 | Bayard Taylor[ 1825- 1878] THE SPIDER AND THE FLY"Will you walk into my parlor?" |
2619 | Benjamin Franklin Taylor[ 1819- 1887] GROWING OLD What is it to grow old? |
2619 | Brian Hooker[ 1880- THE ROSE OF THE WORLD Who dreamed that beauty passes like a dream? |
2619 | Bring thee, a spirit undefiled, At God''s pure throne to bow? |
2619 | But as the careworn cheek grows wan, And sorrow''s shafts fly thicker, Ye Stars, that measure life to man, Why seem your courses quicker? |
2619 | But his little daughter whispered, As she took his icy hand,"Is n''t God upon the ocean, Just the same as on the land?" |
2619 | But how did you come to us, you dear? |
2619 | But is n''t he wise-- To jes''dream of stars, as the doctors advise? |
2619 | But long it wo n''t be, Do n''t you know? |
2619 | But they answer,"Are your cowslips of the meadows Like our weeds anear the mine? |
2619 | But we have toiled and wandered With weary feet and numb; Have doubted, sifted, pondered,-- How else should knowledge come? |
2619 | But who is this through the doorway comes? |
2619 | Can I call that home where I anchor yet, Though my good man has sailed? |
2619 | Can I call that home where my nest was set, Now all its hope hath failed? |
2619 | Christina Georgina Rossetti[ 1830- 1894] THE WIND''S SONG O winds that blow across the sea, What is the story that you bring? |
2619 | Could you not stay and whisper words A little child might understand? |
2619 | Did He who made the Lamb, make thee? |
2619 | Did I say alone? |
2619 | Did I say, all? |
2619 | Did the things Play Can you see me? |
2619 | Did they thus affront their Lord? |
2619 | Didst Thou kneel at night to pray, And didst Thou join Thy hands, this way? |
2619 | Didst Thou sometimes think of there, And ask where all the angels were? |
2619 | Do n''t skulk away from our sight, Like a common, contemptible fowl; You bird of joy and delight, Why behave like an owl? |
2619 | Do n''t you hear? |
2619 | Do n''t you see? |
2619 | Do n''t you see? |
2619 | Do n''t you think the Baby Would like that to eat?" |
2619 | Do you feel? |
2619 | Do you hear the children weeping and disproving, O my brothers, what ye preach? |
2619 | Do you know more? |
2619 | Do you question the young children in the sorrow, Why their tears are falling so? |
2619 | Do you think the dark was best, Lying snug in mother''s breast? |
2619 | Does the maiden still swing in thy giant clasp? |
2619 | Dost thou know who made thee? |
2619 | Doth my heart overween? |
2619 | Elizabeth Barrett Browning[ 1806- 1861] THE SHADOW- CHILD Why do the wheels go whirring round, Mother, mother? |
2619 | Ellen Mackay Hutchinson Cortissoz[?-1933] MY BIRTH- DAY"My birth- day"--what a different sound That word had in my youthful ears! |
2619 | Emily is neat and fine; What do you think of Caroline? |
2619 | Ere I was old? |
2619 | Eugene Field[ 1850- 1895] THE SUGAR- PLUM TREE Have you ever heard of the Sugar- Plum Tree? |
2619 | Feet, where did you come, you darling things? |
2619 | For a''sae sage he looks, what can the laddie ken? |
2619 | For all my mouthless body leeched Ere Birth''s releasing hell was reached? |
2619 | For no-- what animal could him replace? |
2619 | For wherefore should I fast and weep, And sullen moods of mourning keep? |
2619 | Frets doubt the maw- crammed beast? |
2619 | Friend of my bosom, thou more than a brother, Why wert not thou born in my father''s dwelling? |
2619 | From Wood- nymph of Diana''s throng? |
2619 | From word of mine could any comfort come? |
2619 | From"Sea Dreams"What does little birdie say In her nest at peep of day? |
2619 | Gems of the mountain and pearls of the ocean, Myrrh from the forest, or gold from the mine? |
2619 | George Peele[ 1558?-1597?] |
2619 | Had? |
2619 | Hadst Thou ever any toys, Like us little girls and boys? |
2619 | Hast Thou an angel there to mother him? |
2619 | Have I heard, have I seen All I feel, all I know? |
2619 | Have they, who nursed the blossom, seen No breach of promise in the fruit? |
2619 | Have we not from the earth drawn juices Too fine for earth''s sordid uses? |
2619 | He sits beside my chair, And scribbles, too, in hushed delight, He dips his pen in charmed air: What is it he pretends to write? |
2619 | He who himself was"undefiled?" |
2619 | Hearest thou voices on the shore, That our ears perceive no more, Deafened by the cataract''s roar? |
2619 | Helen Barron Bostwick[ 1826-?] |
2619 | How could I bear with the sights and the loathsome smells of disease But that He said"Ye do it to me, when ye do it to these"? |
2619 | How could I tell That ere the worm within its shell Its gauzy, splendid wings had spread, My little Madchen would be dead? |
2619 | How could angels bear the sight? |
2619 | How did they all just come to be you? |
2619 | How is it with the child? |
2619 | How many pounds from the crowning curl To the rosy point of the restless toe?" |
2619 | How might I do to get a graff Of this unspotted tree? |
2619 | How shall I sadden them to make them wise?) |
2619 | How shall ye wear the yoke that must be worn?) |
2619 | How with thy faults has duty striven? |
2619 | I have, within my pantry, good store of all that''s nice; I''m sure you''re very welcome-- will you please to take a slice?" |
2619 | I hear you ask,"Pray who is she?" |
2619 | I never was among The choir of Wisdom''s song, But pretty lies loved I As much as any king, When youth was on the wing, And( must it then be told?) |
2619 | I pray you what is the nest to me, My empty nest? |
2619 | I say he loves me best-- if he forgets, If Thou allow it that my child forgets And runs not out to meet me when I come-- What are my curses to Thee? |
2619 | I''m here, The child you lost;"while we in sudden fear, Dumb with great doubt, shall find no word to say? |
2619 | II Blue eyes, looking up at me, I wonder what you really see, Lying in your cradle there, Fragrant as a branch of myrrh? |
2619 | II Lord Michael, wilt not thou rejoice When at last a little boy''s Heart, a shut- in murmuring bee, Turns him unto thee? |
2619 | If all day long I run and run, Run with the wheels forever? |
2619 | If all the world were sought so far, Who could find such a wight? |
2619 | If he lack One of his kisses-- ah, my heart, my heart, Do angels kiss in heaven? |
2619 | If thou regret''st thy youth, why live? |
2619 | In what distant deeps or skies Burnt the fire of thine eyes? |
2619 | In what furnace was thy brain? |
2619 | Insulted by a lazy ribald With idle pipe and vesture piebald? |
2619 | Into what dreary mazes will they wander, What dangers will they meet? |
2619 | Is it for beauty to forego her wealth? |
2619 | Is it to feel each limb Grow stiffer, every function less exact, Each nerve more loosely strung? |
2619 | Is it to feel our strength-- Not our bloom only, but our strength-- decay? |
2619 | Is it to lose the glory of the form, The lustre of the eye? |
2619 | Is there a word, or jest, or game, But time incrusteth round With sad associate thoughts the same? |
2619 | Isaac Bickerstaff[?--1812?] |
2619 | Isaac Bickerstaff[?--1812?] |
2619 | It may be strange-- yet who would change Time''s course to slower speeding, When one by one our friends have gone And left our bosoms bleeding? |
2619 | James Ferguson[ 18--?] |
2619 | John Heywood[ 1497?-1580?] |
2619 | John Williamson Palmer[ 1825- 1906]"ARE THE CHILDREN AT HOME?" |
2619 | Josiah Gilbert Holland[ 1819- 1881] CRADLE SONG From"Bitter- Sweet"What is the little one thinking about? |
2619 | Just as he said this, what should hap At the chamber- door but a gentle tap? |
2619 | Katherine Tynan Hinkson[ 1861- 1931]"WHAT DOES LITTLE BIRDIE SAY?" |
2619 | Keep thee as thou art now? |
2619 | Laurence Alma- Tadema[ 18--"WHO HAS SEEN THE WIND?" |
2619 | Little Lamb, who made thee? |
2619 | Little Robin Redbreast jumped upon a wall, Pussy- cat jumped after him, and almost got a fall; Little Robin chirped and sang, and what did pussy say? |
2619 | Mary Lamb[ 1764- 1847] WEIGHING THE BABY"How many pounds does the baby weigh-- Baby who came but a month ago? |
2619 | Matthew Prior[ 1664- 1721] EX ORE INFANTIUM Little Jesus, wast Thou shy Once, and just so small as I? |
2619 | Matthias Barr[ 1831-?] |
2619 | Matthias Barr[ 1831-?] |
2619 | Mine-- yes or no, unseen its soul divine? |
2619 | Mull was astern, Rum on the port, Eigg on the starboard bow; Glory of youth glowed in his soul: Where is that glory now? |
2619 | Murdered by poison!--no one knows for what!-- Was ever dog born capable of that?" |
2619 | Must He dwell with brutal creatures? |
2619 | Not a crumb to be found On the snow- covered ground; Not a flower could he see, Not a leaf on a tree:"Oh, what will become,"says the cricket,"of me?" |
2619 | Not that, amassing flowers, Youth sighed,"Which rose make ours, Which lily leave and then as best recall?" |
2619 | Not there!--Where, then, is he? |
2619 | Now I wonder what would please her,-- Charlotte, Julia, or Louisa? |
2619 | Now, who shall arbitrate? |
2619 | O columbine, open your folded wrapper, Where two twin turtle- doves dwell? |
2619 | O fingers small of shell- tipped rose, How should you know you hold so much? |
2619 | O my life, have we not had seasons That only said, Live and rejoice? |
2619 | O what am I that I should train An angel for the skies; Or mix the potent draught that feeds The soul within these eyes? |
2619 | O, how could I serve in the wards if the hope of the world were a lie? |
2619 | Oh tricksy elf, Wouldst drive thy father to despair? |
2619 | Oh who is this comes in Over her threshold stone? |
2619 | Oh, mother, are they giants bound, And will they growl forever? |
2619 | Oh, shall we laugh and sing and play Out in the sun forever? |
2619 | On what wings dare he aspire? |
2619 | Once, when my voice was strong, I filled the woods with song To praise your"rose"and"snow"; My bird, that sang, is dead; Where are your roses fled? |
2619 | Or could it have been Long ago? |
2619 | Or does the greeting to a rout Of giddy Bacchanals belong? |
2619 | Or find the upland slopes of Peace and Beauty, Whose sunlight never fades? |
2619 | Or in some nameless vale, securely sheltered, Walk side by side with Love? |
2619 | Or will those lips e''er stir the town From pulpit ritualistic? |
2619 | Or, may I ask, will those blue eyes-- In baby patois,"peepers"-- E''er in the House of Commons rise, And try to catch the Speaker''s? |
2619 | Perhaps the plaintive numbers flow For old, unhappy, far- off things, And battles long ago: Or is it some more humble lay, Familiar matter of to- day? |
2619 | Pray, when will that be? |
2619 | Pussy- cat, pussy- cat, what did you there? |
2619 | Robert Louis Stevenson[ 1850- 1894] FOREIGN LANDS Up into the cherry tree Who should climb but little me? |
2619 | Rosamund Marriott Watson[ 1863- 1911] TO YOUTH Where art thou gone, light- ankled Youth? |
2619 | Said the cunning Spider to the Fly,"Dear friend, what can I do To prove the warm affection I''ve always felt for you? |
2619 | Samuel Hinds[ 1793- 1872] BABY BELL I Have you not heard the poets tell How came the dainty Baby Bell Into this world of ours? |
2619 | Say, Heavenly Muse, shall not thy sacred vein Afford a present to the Infant God? |
2619 | Say, heart, is there aught like this In a world that is full of bliss? |
2619 | Say, shall we yield Him, in costly devotion, Odors of Edom and offerings divine? |
2619 | See, in what traversed ways, What backward Fate delays The hopes we used to know; Where are our old desires?-- Ah, where those vanished fires? |
2619 | Seest thou shadows sailing by, As the dove, with startled eye, Sees the falcon''s shadow fly? |
2619 | Shall I show you the place where it grows? |
2619 | Shall I show you this little lamp bright? |
2619 | Shall birds and bees and ants be wise, While I my moments waste? |
2619 | Shall"cakes and ale"Grow rare to youth because we rail At schoolboy dishes? |
2619 | Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And days o''lang syne? |
2619 | Sing me a song of a lad that is gone; Say, could that lad be I? |
2619 | Sing me a song of a lad that is gone; Say, could that lad be I? |
2619 | Softly she called from her cot to the next,"He says I shall never live through it; O Annie, what shall I do?" |
2619 | Suppose the glistening Dewdrop Upon the grass should say,"What can a little dewdrop do? |
2619 | THE DEATH AND BURIAL OF COCK ROBIN Who killed Cock Robin? |
2619 | Tell me, little raindrops, Is that the way you play, Pitter patter, pitter patter, All the rainy day? |
2619 | That asked not for causes and reasons, But made us all feeling and voice? |
2619 | That little brain the world''s delight, Its works by all men quoted? |
2619 | The Ancient Mariner Piped the blackbird on the beechwood spray"Pretty maid, slow wandering this way, What''s your name?" |
2619 | The Wind he took to his revels once more; On down, In town, Like a merry- mad clown, He leaped and halloed with whistle and roar--"What''s that?" |
2619 | The ills that are coming, The joys that have been? |
2619 | The little raindrops can not speak, But"pitter, patter pat"Means,"We can play on this side: Why ca n''t you play on that?" |
2619 | The unknown? |
2619 | The wheels are always buzzing bright; Do they grow sleepy never? |
2619 | The world is but a broken reed, And life grows early dim-- Who shall be near thee in thy need, To lead thee up to Him? |
2619 | Then why pause with indecision, When bright angels in thy vision Beckon thee to fields Elysian? |
2619 | These wee pink shoeless feet-- how far Shall go their lengthening tread, When they no longer cuddled close May rest upon this bed? |
2619 | They answer,"Who is God that He should hear us, While the rushing of the iron wheels is stirred? |
2619 | Thomas Bailey Aldrich[ 1837- 1907] IN THE NURSERY MOTHER GOOSE''S MELODIES----------- Mistress Mary, quite contrary, How does your garden grow? |
2619 | Thomas Dekker[ 1570?-1641?] |
2619 | Thomas Hood[ 1799- 1845] THE FAIRIES OF THE CALDON- LOW A Midsummer Legend"And where have you been, my Mary, And where have you been from me?" |
2619 | Thomas S. Jones, Jr.[ 1882- 1932] MY OTHER ME Children, do you ever, In walks by land or sea, Meet a little maiden Long time lost to me? |
2619 | Thou blessed soul, what canst thou fear? |
2619 | Thou, heaven''s consummate cup, what needest thou with earth''s wheel? |
2619 | Time goes, you say? |
2619 | To have a place in the high choir Of poets, and deserve the same-- What more could mortal man desire Than poet''s fame? |
2619 | To his friends so good?" |
2619 | To man, propose this test-- Thy body at its best, How far can that project thy soul on its lone way? |
2619 | Translated by John R. Thompson from the French of Gustave Nadaud[ 1820-?] |
2619 | Up comes her little gray coaxing cat With her little pink nose, and she mews,"What''s that?" |
2619 | Up spoke our own little Mabel, Saying,"Father, who makes it snow?" |
2619 | VI But from our course why turn-- to tread A way with shadows overspread; Where what we gladliest would believe Is feared as what may most deceive? |
2619 | VII At last he came, the messenger, The messenger from unseen lands: And what did dainty Baby Bell? |
2619 | WHERE DO FAIRIES HIDE THEIR HEADS?" |
2619 | Waiting without stood sparrow and crow, Cooling their feet in the melting snow:"Wo n''t you come in, good folk?" |
2619 | Was I, the world arraigned, Were they, my soul disdained, Right? |
2619 | Was ever such a startling thing? |
2619 | Was ever thing so pretty? |
2619 | Was hardly One? |
2619 | Was joy, in following joy, as keen As grief can be in grief''s pursuit? |
2619 | Was there nothing but a manger Cursed sinners could afford To receive the heavenly stranger? |
2619 | What are garlands and crowns to the brow that is wrinkled? |
2619 | What care I for the wreaths that can only give glory? |
2619 | What does he think of his mother''s eyes? |
2619 | What does he think of his mother''s hair? |
2619 | What does little baby say, In her bed at peep of day? |
2619 | What dost thou wail for? |
2619 | What doth the poor man''s son inherit? |
2619 | What doth the poor man''s son inherit? |
2619 | What doth the poor man''s son inherit? |
2619 | What hast thou learned by field and hill, By greenwood path and by singing rill? |
2619 | What hast thou to do with sorrow, Or the injuries of to- morrow? |
2619 | What have I done to keep in mind My debt to her and womankind? |
2619 | What have I done, or tried, or said In thanks to that dear woman dead? |
2619 | What if your house be small? |
2619 | What if your yard be narrow? |
2619 | What is he but a brute Whose flesh has soul to suit, Whose spirit works lest arms and legs want play? |
2619 | What is it God hath given me to cherish, This living, moving wonder which is mine-- Mine only? |
2619 | What kind word to thy playmate spoken? |
2619 | What makes the light in them sparkle and spin? |
2619 | What makes your cheek like a warm white rose? |
2619 | What makes your forehead so smooth and high? |
2619 | What of the cradle- roof, that flies Forward and backward through the air? |
2619 | What promise of morn is left unbroken? |
2619 | What shadows creep across the face That shines with morning light? |
2619 | What shall I call thee? |
2619 | What shall preserve thee, beautiful child? |
2619 | What strange disguise hast now put on To make believe that thou art gone? |
2619 | What tenderness of archangels In silver, thrilling syllables Pursued thee, or what dulcet hymn Low- chanted by the cherubim? |
2619 | What the anvil? |
2619 | What the hammer? |
2619 | What the hand dare seize the fire? |
2619 | What then? |
2619 | What thing to thee can mischief do? |
2619 | What think you of the light of the sun? |
2619 | What though the earlier grooves Which ran the laughing loves Around thy base, no longer pause and press? |
2619 | What though, about thy rim, Scull- things in order grim Grow out, in graver mood, obey the sterner stress? |
2619 | What toil must stain these tiny hands That now lie still and white? |
2619 | What will you give me, sleepy one, and call My wages, if I settle you all right? |
2619 | What will you more we say? |
2619 | What woman''s happier life repays Her for those months of wretched days? |
2619 | What? |
2619 | Whatna noise is that I hear Coomin''doon the street? |
2619 | When all these tyrants rest, and thou Art warring with the mighty dead? |
2619 | When he walked forth the folks would roar,"Godfrey Gordon Gustavus Gore, Why do n''t you think to shut the door?" |
2619 | When joys have lost their bloom and breath, And life itself is vapid, Why, as we reach the Falls of Death, Feel we its tide more rapid? |
2619 | When the stars threw down their spears, And watered heaven with their tears, Did He smile His work to see? |
2619 | When we went with the winds in their blowing, When Nature and we were peers, And we seemed to share in the flowing Of the inexhaustible years? |
2619 | When will you pay me? |
2619 | When youth had flown did hope still bless Thy goings-- or the cheerfulness Of innocence survive to mitigate distress? |
2619 | Whence that three- cornered smile of bliss? |
2619 | Where Do Fairies Hide Their Heads?" |
2619 | Where did you get that little tear? |
2619 | Where did you get this pearly ear? |
2619 | Where did you get those arms and hands? |
2619 | Where did you get those eyes so blue? |
2619 | Where is it now, the glory and the dream? |
2619 | Where should I fly to, Where go to sleep in the dark wood or dell? |
2619 | While sunshine children are at play? |
2619 | Whither vanished? |
2619 | Who can foretell for what high cause This darling of the gods was born? |
2619 | Who can tell How he fares, or answer well What the little one has found Since he left us, outward bound? |
2619 | Who can tell what a baby thinks? |
2619 | Who can tell?" |
2619 | Who caught his blood? |
2619 | Who has seen the wind? |
2619 | Who has seen the wind? |
2619 | Who knows the solemn laws of fate, That govern all creation? |
2619 | Who knows what lot awaits your boy-- Of happiness or sorrow? |
2619 | Who saw him die? |
2619 | Who''ll be chief mourner? |
2619 | Who''ll be the clerk? |
2619 | Who''ll be the parson? |
2619 | Who''ll bear the pall? |
2619 | Who''ll bear the torch? |
2619 | Who''ll carry his coffin? |
2619 | Who''ll dig his grave? |
2619 | Who''ll make his shroud? |
2619 | Who''ll sing his dirge? |
2619 | Who''ll toll the bell? |
2619 | Whom hast thou pitied, and whom forgiven? |
2619 | Why do I feel so tired each night, Mother, mother? |
2619 | Why do I pick the threads all day, Mother, mother? |
2619 | Why do the birds sing in the sun, Mother, mother? |
2619 | Why should I sleep till beams of morn Their light and glory shed? |
2619 | Why should love bring naught but sorrow, I wonder? |
2619 | Why, why dost thou weep, dear? |
2619 | Will e''er that tiny Sybarite Become an author noted? |
2619 | Will no one tell me what she sings? |
2619 | Will nobody guess? |
2619 | Will that smooth brow o''er Hansard frown, Confused by lore statistic? |
2619 | Will they go stumbling blindly in the darkness Of Sorrow''s tearful shades? |
2619 | Will they go toiling up Ambition''s summit, The common world above? |
2619 | Will yonder dainty dimpled hand-- Size, nothing and a quarter-- E''er grasp a saber, lead a band To glory and to slaughter? |
2619 | Will you awake him? |
2619 | William Blake[ 1757- 1827] ANSWER TO A CHILD''S QUESTION Do you ask what the birds say? |
2619 | William Blake[ 1757- 1827] BABY From"At the Back of the North Wind"Where did you come from, baby dear? |
2619 | William Blake[ 1757- 1827] LITTLE RAINDROPS Oh, where do you come from, You little drops of rain, Pitter patter, pitter patter, Down the window- pane? |
2619 | William Blake[ 1757- 1827] LULLABY Baloo, loo, lammy, now baloo, my dear, Does wee lammy ken that its daddy''s no here? |
2619 | William Blake[ 1757- 1827] NIKOLINA O tell me, little children, have you seen her-- The tiny maid from Norway, Nikolina? |
2619 | William Makepeace Thackeray[ 1811- 1863] AULD LANG SYNE Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And never brought to min''? |
2619 | William Thom[ 1798?-1848] THE CRY OF THE CHILDREN Do ye hear the children weeping, O my brothers, Ere the sorrow comes with years? |
2619 | Wilt thou be mine? |
2619 | Wilt thou heed thine armor well-- To take his hand from Gabriel, So his radiant cup of dream May not spill a gleam? |
2619 | With pure heart newly stamped from nature''s mint,( Where did he learn that squint?) |
2619 | With what unimagined mates to play? |
2619 | Without thee what were life? |
2619 | XI"How?" |
2619 | Yet whilst with sorrow here we live oppressed, What life is best? |
2619 | You bird of beauty and love, Why behave like a goose? |
2619 | You hope, because you''re old and obese, To find in the furry civic robe ease? |
2619 | You moon, have you done something wrong in heaven That God has hidden your face? |
2619 | You talk of wondrous things you see, You say the sun shines bright; I feel him warm, but how can he, Or make it day or night? |
2619 | You think for one white streak we grow At once satiric? |
2619 | You threaten us, fellow? |
2619 | and what''s the matter now?" |
2619 | are the children home?" |
2619 | are ye comin''ben? |
2619 | burning bright, In the forests of the night, What immortal hand or eye Could frame thy fearful symmetry? |
2619 | burning bright, In the forests of the night, What immortal hand or eye Dare frame thy fearful symmetry? |
2619 | cried the Mayor,"d''ye think I brook Being worse treated than a Cook? |
2619 | did you leave celestial bliss To bless us with a daughter''s kiss? |
2619 | does not the baby this way bring, To lay beside this severed curl, Some starry offering Of chrysolite or pearl? |
2619 | dost thou arm when now This bold rebellious race are fled? |
2619 | has it come? |
2619 | little brown brother, Are you awake in the dark? |
2619 | little brown brother, What kind of flower will you be? |
2619 | not content with seas and skies, With rainy clouds and southern wind, With common cares and faces kind, With pains and joys each morning brought? |
2619 | questioned she-- Her laughing lips and eager eyes All in a sparkle of surprise--"And shall your little Madchen see?" |
2619 | quoth he--"What''s your name? |
2619 | such a lot of beds in the ward?" |
2619 | the unseen? |
2619 | through their wings? |
2619 | what ails my dear, What ails my darling thus to cry? |
2619 | what dread grasp Dare its deadly terrors clasp? |
2619 | what shall I do? |
2619 | what signifies a pin, Wedged in a rotten board? |
2619 | what the chain? |
2619 | where do fairies hide their heads, When snow lies on the hills, When frost has spoiled their mossy beds, And crystallized their rills? |
2619 | who may read the future? |
2619 | whom should I see Within, save ever only thee? |
2619 | why did I roam where the elfins ride, Their glimmering steps to follow? |
2619 | you really fancy so? |
2619 | you''re a sun- flower? |
18127 | Am I big enough now? |
18127 | How are you? |
18127 | How''s that? |
18127 | What cheer, friend? 18127 ''Well, Friend Charles,''said Penn,''suppose a canoe full of Indians should cross the sea and should discover England, would that make it theirs? 18127 ''Why, is not the whole of America mine?'' 18127 83. Who owned the greater part of America? 18127 After General Jackson had beaten the Indians, where did they go? 18127 After a time what general got the command of all the armies of the North? 18127 After he returned from the Black Hawk War, what did Lincoln do? 18127 Are you alone? 18127 Are you sure? 18127 At the beginning of 1733 how many English colonies were there in America? 18127 Before Whitney invented his cotton- gin how much cotton did we send abroad? 18127 Can any one in the class repeat what was on the banner? 18127 Did Clark take the fort? 18127 Did Franklin think that anything more would be discovered about electricity? 18127 Did Sir Walter''s attempt to settle Virginia do any good? 18127 Did he ever land on any part of what is now the United States? 18127 Did he ever stand in the presence of any kings? 18127 Did the Indians trouble the Quakers? 18127 Did they ever elect him to the state legislature again? 18127 Did they have guns? 18127 Did they have horses and wagons? 18127 Did they have iron hatchets and knives? 18127 Did we buy it? 18127 Did we own New Orleans or Louisiana when Whitney invented his cotton- gin? 18127 Do you swear to it? 18127 Do you think he was mistaken about that? 18127 For what profession was Jefferson educated? 18127 From what place in England, and in what ship, did the Pilgrims sail? 18127 Had Columbus ever seen it? 18127 He did not care for a gold mine-- why should he? 18127 He said, Why not try lightning or electricity? 18127 He would laugh, and tell them that his father used to repeat to him this saying of Solomon''s:_ Seest thou a man diligent in his business? |
18127 | How can you make a small wire telegraph? |
18127 | How did Captain Smith get corn? |
18127 | How did Clark save the lives of some of the men? |
18127 | How did Columbus get help at last? |
18127 | How did Columbus think he could reach Asia and the Indies? |
18127 | How did Franklin look to Miss Read? |
18127 | How did Washington take Boston? |
18127 | How did he get help about his telegraph? |
18127 | How did he help his father? |
18127 | How did he live? |
18127 | How did he make his nails? |
18127 | How did he pay his debt? |
18127 | How did he save money to buy books? |
18127 | How did many of the people of Massachusetts feel about Mr. Williams? |
18127 | How did most of the people at the North feel about it? |
18127 | How did most of the people at the South feel about slavery? |
18127 | How did most of the people of the slave states feel when Lincoln became President? |
18127 | How did the Indians feel about the west? |
18127 | How did the New World come to be called America? |
18127 | How did the North and the South feel about President Lincoln? |
18127 | How did they feel? |
18127 | How did they fight? |
18127 | How far did the United States then extend towards the west? |
18127 | How far off was Fort Vincennes? |
18127 | How far up the Hudson did it go? |
18127 | How large was Louisiana then? |
18127 | How long ago did the Revolution end? |
18127 | How long did General Harrison live after he became President? |
18127 | How long did he stay abroad? |
18127 | How long did the war last? |
18127 | How long had the war lasted? |
18127 | How long is it since Columbus discovered America? |
18127 | How many counties and towns in the United States are now called by his name? |
18127 | How many miles of telegraph are there now in the United States? |
18127 | How many people went to California? |
18127 | How many pounds of cotton would his cotton- gin clean in a day? |
18127 | How many states did we have then? |
18127 | How many such additions have we made in all? |
18127 | How much could one negro clean? |
18127 | How much did we pay? |
18127 | How much do we send from New Orleans now? |
18127 | How much land did we get? |
18127 | How much of the world was then known? |
18127 | How was Fort Vincennes taken? |
18127 | How was the Declaration sent to all parts of the country? |
18127 | How was the news carried to Philadelphia? |
18127 | How were Catholics then treated in England? |
18127 | How were the Quakers then treated in England? |
18127 | In 1819? |
18127 | In 1846? |
18127 | In 1848? |
18127 | In 1867? |
18127 | Is anything left for us to do? |
18127 | Is there a telegraph line under the sea? |
18127 | Of what was Maryland the home? |
18127 | Presently the chief gave him a push and said, Do move further on, wo n''t you? |
18127 | Roger Williams at Seekonk;[6]"What cheer, friend?" |
18127 | Tell what you can about Franklin''s landing in Philadelphia? |
18127 | Tell why so many people in the South wished to leave the Union? |
18127 | The message on the strip of paper above is the question,_ How is trade?_] 228. |
18127 | Then what happened? |
18127 | Then where did they send him? |
18127 | They looked at each other, and asked,"What does it mean?" |
18127 | To what did the people of Illinois elect Lincoln? |
18127 | To what office was Houston elected? |
18127 | To what part of the country did it spread? |
18127 | To what state did his father move? |
18127 | To whom did King Charles the Second owe a large sum of money? |
18127 | To whom did New Orleans and Louisiana then belong? |
18127 | Was he going any higher? |
18127 | Was the captain pleased with the discovery? |
18127 | What American plants did the emigrants send him? |
18127 | What about Captain Smith''s trial? |
18127 | What about De Soto? |
18127 | What about Fort Necessity? |
18127 | What about Georgia powder in the Revolution? |
18127 | What about Governor Berkeley and Mr. Bacon? |
18127 | What about Indian Rock? |
18127 | What about Jackson and Weathersford? |
18127 | What about Lafayette? |
18127 | What about Massasoit? |
18127 | What about Paul Revere? |
18127 | What about Squanto? |
18127 | What about emigrants? |
18127 | What about him when he was nineteen? |
18127 | What about his books and maps? |
18127 | What about his old age? |
18127 | What about his sea- fight? |
18127 | What about people going west? |
18127 | What about railroads? |
18127 | What about raising silk? |
18127 | What about the German emigrants and Ebenezer? |
18127 | What about the Revolution? |
18127 | What about the battle of Long Island? |
18127 | What about the battle with the Mexicans? |
18127 | What about the discovery of land? |
18127 | What about the first Thanksgiving? |
18127 | What about the gold- diggers? |
18127 | What about the last voyages of Columbus? |
18127 | What about the picture of the king? |
18127 | What about the raft? |
18127 | What about tobacco? |
18127 | What can you tell about Captain John Smith before he went to Virginia? |
18127 | What city did Penn begin to build here? |
18127 | What city did the British take? |
18127 | What could the French say? |
18127 | What could the North and the South do? |
18127 | What could the giant do? |
18127 | What did Abraham Lincoln and John Hanks do? |
18127 | What did Abraham Lincoln hire out to do in New Salem? |
18127 | What did Andrew do? |
18127 | What did Andrew use to do at the blacksmith shop? |
18127 | What did Boone do when he became old? |
18127 | What did Cabot do when he went on shore? |
18127 | What did Captain Parker of Lexington say to his men? |
18127 | What did Captain Smith want to do? |
18127 | What did Clark and his men start to do? |
18127 | What did Clark get for us? |
18127 | What did Clark say to the people in the fort? |
18127 | What did Clark undertake to do? |
18127 | What did Columbus name the island? |
18127 | What did Congress do on July 4th, 1776? |
18127 | What did Congress do? |
18127 | What did Cornwallis do? |
18127 | What did Cornwallis do? |
18127 | What did Eli make in that workshop? |
18127 | What did Eli make next? |
18127 | What did Eli''s fiddle seem to say? |
18127 | What did Franklin do after he returned to Philadelphia? |
18127 | What did Fulton say? |
18127 | What did General Harrison do in Canada? |
18127 | What did General Rufus Putnam do for Washington? |
18127 | What did George''s mother say? |
18127 | What did Governor John Winthrop do? |
18127 | What did Jefferson say? |
18127 | What did Jefferson write? |
18127 | What did Kentucky get for him? |
18127 | What did King George the Third determine to do? |
18127 | What did Lord Baltimore''s son do? |
18127 | What did Massasoit and Governor Carver do? |
18127 | What did Massasoit do for Mr. Williams? |
18127 | What did Menendez do in Florida? |
18127 | What did Mr. Livingston say about Louisiana? |
18127 | What did Mr. Whitney build at Whitneyville? |
18127 | What did Mr. Whitney say? |
18127 | What did Mr. Williams do at Seekonk? |
18127 | What did Mr. Williams do? |
18127 | What did Mrs. Greene say to the planters? |
18127 | What did Mrs. Jackson do? |
18127 | What did Myles Standish do there? |
18127 | What did Penn and the Indians do? |
18127 | What did Penn do in 1682? |
18127 | What did Penn want the land here for? |
18127 | What did Pocahontas do? |
18127 | What did Ponce De Leon do? |
18127 | What did President Lincoln do for the slaves? |
18127 | What did Professor Morse make? |
18127 | What did Robert do for his mother? |
18127 | What did Samuel Morse say to himself? |
18127 | What did Sevier become? |
18127 | What did Sir Walter then do? |
18127 | What did Tarleton say? |
18127 | What did Tecumseh determine to do? |
18127 | What did Tecumseh do when he got back? |
18127 | What did Texas become? |
18127 | What did Thomas Lincoln''s new wife say about"Abe"? |
18127 | What did Washington and Jefferson do? |
18127 | What did Washington do for Robertson? |
18127 | What did Washington do? |
18127 | What did Washington say about the settlers? |
18127 | What did bands of armed men use to do in the country where Andrew lived? |
18127 | What did he and Robertson do? |
18127 | What did he ask Congress to do? |
18127 | What did he begin to build at Coloma? |
18127 | What did he buy there? |
18127 | What did he call it? |
18127 | What did he call the river he discovered? |
18127 | What did he cut on a beech tree? |
18127 | What did he do for Philadelphia? |
18127 | What did he do in 1792? |
18127 | What did he do in 1839? |
18127 | What did he do in Lisbon? |
18127 | What did he do then? |
18127 | What did he do there? |
18127 | What did he do when he was fourteen? |
18127 | What did he do with it in France? |
18127 | What did he do with those plants? |
18127 | What did he do? |
18127 | What did he do? |
18127 | What did he do? |
18127 | What did he do? |
18127 | What did he find on it? |
18127 | What did he find? |
18127 | What did he first carry round the globe? |
18127 | What did he hire Washington to do? |
18127 | What did he invent? |
18127 | What did he learn at school? |
18127 | What did he make for her? |
18127 | What did he make the settlers do? |
18127 | What did he make there? |
18127 | What did he make while his father was away? |
18127 | What did he say about her? |
18127 | What did he say after he became a man? |
18127 | What did he say he would do about Texas? |
18127 | What did he say to himself? |
18127 | What did he say? |
18127 | What did he think would happen? |
18127 | What did he try to do in Portugal? |
18127 | What did he try to do? |
18127 | What did he try to find? |
18127 | What did he use to write on? |
18127 | What did he want to find? |
18127 | What did he wish to do for the poor debtors? |
18127 | What did he write in one of his writing- books? |
18127 | What did his father say? |
18127 | What did many Englishmen refuse to do? |
18127 | What did most of the people at the North think about this? |
18127 | What did most of the people in England think about this? |
18127 | What did people think of him after he began to practise law? |
18127 | What did she do for Walter Raleigh? |
18127 | What did some men in Congress say? |
18127 | What did some of the greatest men in England say? |
18127 | What did some of them try to do? |
18127 | What did such people think we were like? |
18127 | What did the Americans get possession of by this victory? |
18127 | What did the Americans say to that? |
18127 | What did the British do the next year? |
18127 | What did the British have in the west? |
18127 | What did the Cabots carry back to England? |
18127 | What did the Dutch do? |
18127 | What did the Dutch hire him to do? |
18127 | What did the English general do about the great elm in the Revolution? |
18127 | What did the English people offer him? |
18127 | What did the Indians agree to do? |
18127 | What did the Indians call him? |
18127 | What did the Indians call it? |
18127 | What did the Indians say about the"Prophet"after the battle? |
18127 | What did the Pilgrims build to protect them from the Indians? |
18127 | What did the Pilgrims do on the Cape? |
18127 | What did the South do at last? |
18127 | What did the chief men of Boston do? |
18127 | What did the colonies now do? |
18127 | What did the cotton- planters say? |
18127 | What did the governor of Virginia do when Washington returned? |
18127 | What did the governor of Virginia do when Washington returned? |
18127 | What did the governor order him to do? |
18127 | What did the king name the country? |
18127 | What did the king name the country? |
18127 | What did the king of England give Lord Baltimore in America? |
18127 | What did the king of France do? |
18127 | What did the king promise Lord Baltimore? |
18127 | What did the king say? |
18127 | What did the king then try to do? |
18127 | What did the king want the Americans to do? |
18127 | What did the people now begin to call themselves? |
18127 | What did the people of New England do in the Revolution? |
18127 | What did the people of his state like to call him? |
18127 | What did the people of the west say? |
18127 | What did the people who held slaves at the South want to do? |
18127 | What did the planters say about cotton? |
18127 | What did the settlers name their town? |
18127 | What did the success of the North do? |
18127 | What did the war of the Revolution do? |
18127 | What did these people do? |
18127 | What did they build there on Manhattan Island? |
18127 | What did they call the English troops? |
18127 | What did they call the place? |
18127 | What did they do at Cape Cod Harbor? |
18127 | What did they name the country? |
18127 | What did they nickname him in the printing- office? |
18127 | What did they want to do? |
18127 | What did we add in 1845? |
18127 | What did we buy in 1853? |
18127 | What did we fight about? |
18127 | What did we get at the end of the war? |
18127 | What did we get by that war? |
18127 | What did we say? |
18127 | What did"Abe"do? |
18127 | What does Philadelphia mean? |
18127 | What does it show us? |
18127 | What does the name mean? |
18127 | What does the unfinished pyramid stand for? |
18127 | What else did Myles Standish do besides fight? |
18127 | What else did he publish? |
18127 | What else did we get? |
18127 | What experiments did Franklin make? |
18127 | What friend did Boone have in North Carolina? |
18127 | What friend did Daniel Boone have in Virginia? |
18127 | What good did the battle of Tippecanoe do? |
18127 | What good work did the people of Georgia do? |
18127 | What had Philadelphia grown to be by 1733? |
18127 | What had the North and the South come to be like? |
18127 | What happened after Captain Gray returned to Boston? |
18127 | What happened after that? |
18127 | What happened after that? |
18127 | What happened after that? |
18127 | What happened at Chicago? |
18127 | What happened at Hadley? |
18127 | What happened at Lexington and at Concord? |
18127 | What happened at Princeton? |
18127 | What happened at Saratoga? |
18127 | What happened at the end of the Revolutionary War? |
18127 | What happened at the south? |
18127 | What happened during the winter? |
18127 | What happened in 1812? |
18127 | What happened in 1846? |
18127 | What happened in Boston? |
18127 | What happened in May, 1848? |
18127 | What happened in New York? |
18127 | What happened in the course of eighty years? |
18127 | What happened in the spring of 1861? |
18127 | What happened next? |
18127 | What happened on the Alamance River? |
18127 | What happened on the first part of the voyage? |
18127 | What happened on the way down the Ohio River? |
18127 | What happened then? |
18127 | What happened to Captain Hudson the next year? |
18127 | What happened to Captain Smith when he went in search of the Pacific? |
18127 | What happened to Captain Sutter? |
18127 | What happened to Jamestown? |
18127 | What happened to King Philip himself? |
18127 | What happened to him on his way to Virginia? |
18127 | What happened to him when he went back to Boston on a visit? |
18127 | What happened to him? |
18127 | What happened to one of them? |
18127 | What happened to the Virginia settlement? |
18127 | What happened to the settlers? |
18127 | What happened when he died? |
18127 | What happened when he got there? |
18127 | What has been found there? |
18127 | What has made such a wonderful change? |
18127 | What has"Brother Jonathan"done? |
18127 | What help did the people of Boston get? |
18127 | What if he will not listen to us? |
18127 | What in 1867? |
18127 | What in England? |
18127 | What is a telegraph? |
18127 | What is said about Abraham Lincoln and his party? |
18127 | What is said about Balboa? |
18127 | What is said about Benedict Arnold? |
18127 | What is said about Canonchet? |
18127 | What is said about Canonicus and Governor Bradford? |
18127 | What is said about Captain Smith''s cold- water cure? |
18127 | What is said about Fort Alamo? |
18127 | What is said about General Greene? |
18127 | What is said about General Wayne? |
18127 | What is said about Marshall? |
18127 | What is said about Monticello? |
18127 | What is said about Walter Raleigh? |
18127 | What is said about Weymouth? |
18127 | What is said about a magic fountain? |
18127 | What is said about her afterward? |
18127 | What is said about him and the Indians? |
18127 | What is said about it? |
18127 | What is said about negro slaves at the time of the Revolution? |
18127 | What is said about one of the great seals of the United States? |
18127 | What is said about our war with Mexico? |
18127 | What is said about railroads? |
18127 | What is said about signs of land? |
18127 | What is said about slavery? |
18127 | What is said about that river? |
18127 | What is said about the Friends or Quakers? |
18127 | What is said about the Indian guide? |
18127 | What is said about the Indians? |
18127 | What is said about the Indians? |
18127 | What is said about the Indians? |
18127 | What is said about the Indians? |
18127 | What is said about the North and the South in the war? |
18127 | What is said about the North and the South since the war? |
18127 | What is said about the West? |
18127 | What is said about the boy''s mother? |
18127 | What is said about the celebration of that discovery? |
18127 | What is said about the church in Jamestown? |
18127 | What is said about the end of the war? |
18127 | What is said about the landing of the settlers in Virginia? |
18127 | What is said about the price of cotton cloth? |
18127 | What is said about the second voyage of the Cabots? |
18127 | What is said about the settlement of Savannah? |
18127 | What is said about the telephone? |
18127 | What is said about the war? |
18127 | What is said about the"Praying Indians"? |
18127 | What is said of Abraham Lincoln at seventeen? |
18127 | What is said of General Houston in the great war between the North and the South? |
18127 | What is said of General Oglethorpe in old age? |
18127 | What is said of General Washington after the war? |
18127 | What is said of George the Third? |
18127 | What is said of Jack Armstrong? |
18127 | What is said of King Philip''s wife and son? |
18127 | What is said of Lafayette? |
18127 | What is said of Lord Fairfax? |
18127 | What is said of Lord Fairfax? |
18127 | What is said of Ohio at that time? |
18127 | What is said of Providence? |
18127 | What is said of Queen Mary of France? |
18127 | What is said of Samoset? |
18127 | What is said of St. Augustine? |
18127 | What is said of Washington at the age of twenty- one? |
18127 | What is said of his death and burial? |
18127 | What is said of his death? |
18127 | What is said of his funeral? |
18127 | What is said of his return to Bristol? |
18127 | What is said of negro slaves? |
18127 | What is said of other islands? |
18127 | What is said of steamboats at the west? |
18127 | What is said of the Indians in Kentucky? |
18127 | What is said of the Revolution? |
18127 | What is said of the Texas flag? |
18127 | What is said of the city of Baltimore? |
18127 | What is said of the country west of the Mississippi? |
18127 | What is said of the fort at Boonesboro''? |
18127 | What is said of the grave at Louisville, Kentucky? |
18127 | What is said of the growth of Philadelphia? |
18127 | What is said of the last days of Sir Walter Raleigh? |
18127 | What is said of the men whose lives we have read in this book? |
18127 | What is said of the return of Columbus to Spain? |
18127 | What is said of the"Sons of Liberty"? |
18127 | What is said of"Captain George"? |
18127 | What is the river he discovered called now? |
18127 | What kind of a bargain did he make for a new pair of trousers? |
18127 | What kind of boats did they have? |
18127 | What kind of houses did they live in? |
18127 | What lady did he become acquainted with? |
18127 | What land did they first see in America? |
18127 | What land did they see? |
18127 | What land did we buy in 1803? |
18127 | What land did we buy in 1853? |
18127 | What lands did they come to? |
18127 | What made them both certain that the dust was gold? |
18127 | What must be done to raw cotton before it can be made into cloth? |
18127 | What name did Queen Elizabeth give to the country? |
18127 | What name did a boy cut on a door? |
18127 | What name did they give it? |
18127 | What news did Miss Annie Ellsworth bring him? |
18127 | What other great man died on the same day? |
18127 | What saying of Solomon''s did Franklin''s father use to repeat to him? |
18127 | What sayings did he print in his almanac? |
18127 | What state grew out of the Watauga settlement? |
18127 | What the next November? |
18127 | What three things did he do for Virginia? |
18127 | What title did a college in Scotland now give him? |
18127 | What two states were made out of the Oregon Country? |
18127 | What two things did Franklin do in the Revolution? |
18127 | What two things did he find out by means of this kite? |
18127 | What war then broke out? |
18127 | What was David Crockett''s motto? |
18127 | What was Jefferson chosen to be? |
18127 | What was Lord Baltimore to pay for Maryland? |
18127 | What was done at New York? |
18127 | What was done then? |
18127 | What was done there in the Revolution? |
18127 | What was done to Boston? |
18127 | What was done with three of Philip''s men? |
18127 | What was he called? |
18127 | What was he talking about on his voyage back to America? |
18127 | What was the country on the Miami River called? |
18127 | What was the first message sent by telegraph in 1844? |
18127 | What was the saddest thing which happened at the close of the war? |
18127 | What were the four steps in Andrew Jackson''s life? |
18127 | What were we like? |
18127 | What words did Jefferson have cut on his gravestone at Monticello? |
18127 | What would Hudson say if he could see New York City now? |
18127 | What would a traveller going west then find? |
18127 | When Mr. Whitney came back he asked his housekeeper,"What has Eli been doing?" |
18127 | When and where did the emigrants land? |
18127 | When and where was Columbus born? |
18127 | When and where was George Washington born? |
18127 | When did Jefferson die? |
18127 | When did he sail? |
18127 | When did we buy Florida? |
18127 | When he left college where did he go? |
18127 | When they met a farmer, they would stop him and ask,''Which side are you for?'' |
18127 | When was Abraham Lincoln born? |
18127 | When was Texas added to the United States? |
18127 | Where and how did the war begin? |
18127 | Where did Cornwallis shut himself up with his army? |
18127 | Where did Franklin find work? |
18127 | Where did Fulton make and try his first steamboat? |
18127 | Where did General Putnam go in 1788? |
18127 | Where did Houston go after he became governor of Tennessee? |
18127 | Where did Houston go next? |
18127 | Where did Robertson and others go? |
18127 | Where did Washington go? |
18127 | Where did Washington take command of the army? |
18127 | Where did he first go in Spain? |
18127 | Where did he go after he gave up making nails? |
18127 | Where did he go after that? |
18127 | Where did he go when he became a man? |
18127 | Where did he go? |
18127 | Where did he go? |
18127 | Where did he go? |
18127 | Where did he go? |
18127 | Where did he live? |
18127 | Where did he live? |
18127 | Where did he then go? |
18127 | Where did the British go? |
18127 | Where did the_ Mayflower_ stop? |
18127 | Where did they land on December 21st, 1620? |
18127 | Where did they settle? |
18127 | Where is Fulton buried? |
18127 | Where is he buried? |
18127 | Where is he buried? |
18127 | Where is his monument? |
18127 | Where is his monument? |
18127 | Where is one foot? |
18127 | Where is the other? |
18127 | Where was Colonel Washington living? |
18127 | Where was Washington''s army? |
18127 | Where was a great battle fought with the Indians in 1811? |
18127 | Where was he born? |
18127 | Where was the first blood shed? |
18127 | Where were the last battles fought? |
18127 | Where were three of those forts? |
18127 | Who became the chief defender of the South? |
18127 | Who bought them for us? |
18127 | Who built the throne for King Cotton? |
18127 | Who commanded the British soldiers in Boston? |
18127 | Who did Mr. Williams think first owned the land in America? |
18127 | Who did a great deal for Philadelphia? |
18127 | Who did this work? |
18127 | Who fired the first gun in the war? |
18127 | Who fought the greatest battle of the War of 1812? |
18127 | Who gained the victory? |
18127 | Who helped emigration to the west? |
18127 | Who hired the Indians to fight? |
18127 | Who sailed with him? |
18127 | Who seized New Netherland? |
18127 | Who stopped them? |
18127 | Who was Captain Sutter? |
18127 | Who was General Oglethorpe? |
18127 | Who was Henry Hudson? |
18127 | Who was John Cabot? |
18127 | Who was Lord Baltimore, and what did he try to do in Newfoundland? |
18127 | Who was Myles Standish? |
18127 | Who was Roger Williams? |
18127 | Who was Thomas Jefferson? |
18127 | Who was Wamsutta? |
18127 | Who was William Henry Harrison? |
18127 | Who was its great military leader? |
18127 | Who was the tall man in Congress from Illinois? |
18127 | Who was"King Philip"? |
18127 | Why did Captain Smith go back to England? |
18127 | Why did Franklin go to London? |
18127 | Why did Hudson turn back? |
18127 | Why did Lincoln get the name of"Honest Abe"? |
18127 | Why did he go to Spain? |
18127 | Why did he hate the white men? |
18127 | Why did he name the settlement Providence? |
18127 | Why did he run away? |
18127 | Why did he want to go there? |
18127 | Why did some Englishmen in Holland call themselves Pilgrims? |
18127 | Why did some of the people of Virginia trouble them? |
18127 | Why did they give him that name? |
18127 | Why did they like to be there? |
18127 | Why did they now wish to go to America? |
18127 | Why did we fight the British? |
18127 | Why had they left England? |
18127 | Why is Virginia sometimes called the"Mother of Presidents"? |
18127 | Why not? |
18127 | Why was he made a general? |
18127 | Why was the new settlement called Georgia? |
18127 | Why? |
18127 | Would you give up the country to them?'' |
18127 | [ 4] and so have n''t I the right to it?'' |
18127 | [ Can any one in the class tell how many we have now?] |
18127 | replied the king;''did n''t my people discover it? |
18127 | what cheer?" |
6812 | ''Where did Lincoln learn his surveying?'' 6812 Did you not pledge yourselves to assist me as sheriff in the arrest of any person against whom I might have a writ?" |
6812 | I want to ask you a close question-- Are you now, in_ feeling_ as well as_ judgment,_ glad you are married as you are? 6812 What has become of your case?" |
6812 | And who that thinks with me will not fearlessly adopt that oath that I take? |
6812 | But a few days later they saw two men approaching and hailed them with the hunter''s caution,"Hullo, strangers; who are you?" |
6812 | But how unite this opposition made up of Whigs, of Democrats, and of so- called abolitionists? |
6812 | But if the negro is a man, is it not to that extent a total destruction of self- government to say that he too shall not govern himself? |
6812 | Can you there, any more than here, raise corn and wheat and oats without work? |
6812 | Could a repeal be carried? |
6812 | Do I misunderstand them?" |
6812 | I should like to know whether he or the committee were intimidated on account of the platforms of 1852?" |
6812 | If the agreement of a generation could be thus annulled in a breath, was there any safety even in the Constitution itself? |
6812 | If you ca n''t now live with the land, how will you then live without it? |
6812 | Is a final settlement open to discussion and agitation and controversy by its friends? |
6812 | Is the land any richer? |
6812 | May she not enter into an alliance with Texas? |
6812 | Our political problem now is,"Can we as a nation continue together_ permanently_--_forever_--half slave, and half free?" |
6812 | Should all this security be swept away, and their runaways find a free route to Canada by simply crossing the county line? |
6812 | Should the power to regulate commerce be allowed to control or terminate their importation? |
6812 | Should the price of their personal"chattels"fall one- half for want of a new market? |
6812 | Should they be represented? |
6812 | Should they be taxed? |
6812 | The form of the question put by the chairman was,"Shall the clause stand?" |
6812 | What can you do in Missouri better than here? |
6812 | What effect would it have upon the presidential election of 1856? |
6812 | What manner of settlement is that which does not settle the difficulty and quiet the dispute? |
6812 | Who could have done the duty which he bore as lightly as if he had been fashioned for it from the beginning of time? |
6812 | Who will go with him? |
6812 | Who would offer it and lead it? |
6812 | Will anybody there, any more than here, do your work for you? |
49352 | And why is it ealled the rebel flower? |
49352 | And why,said the governor,"do you ask that?" |
49352 | Did he hit you? |
49352 | How far is it to the next gate? |
49352 | Robert, what security canst thou give? |
49352 | Were any of your family up, Lydia,he asked,"on the night when I received company in this house?" |
49352 | What can you do for me? |
49352 | Who told you to say that? |
49352 | Why so gloomy at a ball? |
49352 | Will it be advisable to hazard a general engagement? |
49352 | ''Jemmy Steptoe,''he said to the clerk,''what the divil ails ye, mon?'' |
49352 | ''Who did this?'' |
49352 | * Alluding to this fact, an anonymous poet wrote:"But where, O where''s the hallowed sod Beneath whose verd the hero''s ashes sleep? |
49352 | *"Dear Doctor,--I have asked Mrs. Cochran and Mrs. Livingston to dine with me to- morrow; but am I not in honor bound to apprise them of their fare? |
49352 | ** It was to one of the prisoners, taken at this time, that Arnold put the question,"If the Americans should catch me, what would they do with me?" |
49352 | And what have we to oppose them? |
49352 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
49352 | But neber mind; need n''t work''less I''m a mind too;''nough to eat, and pretty soon I die?" |
49352 | But when shall we be stronger? |
49352 | But why dwell upon the sad and sickening scene of the battle- field with the dead and dying upon it? |
49352 | Can escape from death he possible? |
49352 | Do you suppose they will stand by, idle and indifferent spectators to the contest? |
49352 | Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of armies and navies? |
49352 | Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled, that force must be called in to win us back to our love? |
49352 | He asked the question,"If we should be obliged to abandon the town, ought it to stand as winter quarters for the enemy?" |
49352 | I ask, gentlemen, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission? |
49352 | I''m amazed-- have we routed the foe? |
49352 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
49352 | Is there not public spirit enough in Virginia to complete this memorial of her most honored daughter? |
49352 | Is this the cold, neglected, moldering clod? |
49352 | May it not be a part of the circumvallation of a city of the mound builders? |
49352 | No one seemed willing to break that silence, until a grave- looking member, in a plain, is it?" |
49352 | No one seemed willing to propose it; and when, to Gates''s remark,"Gentlemen, you know our situation, what are your opinions?" |
49352 | Or that the grave at which I ought to weep? |
49352 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
49352 | Shall we try argument? |
49352 | The great men who composed our first council-- are they dead, have they deserted the cause, or what has become of them? |
49352 | This effected, Washington rode back to Lee, and, pointing to the rallied troops, said,"Will you, sir, command in that place?" |
49352 | To show the spot where matchless valor lies? |
49352 | What consequences have we rationally to expect?" |
49352 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
49352 | What is the cause? |
49352 | What orator or sage ever expressed more in so few words? |
49352 | What would they have? |
49352 | Where is the man that will dare to advise such a measure? |
49352 | Where is the man? |
49352 | Where were the landgraves, and caciquies, and lords of manors to be found among them? |
49352 | Where will they be all this while? |
49352 | Wherefore? |
49352 | Who had the courage? |
49352 | Who is there to mourn for Logan? |
49352 | Who wandered there alone? |
49352 | Why rises not some massy pillar high, To grace a name that fought for Freedom''s prize? |
49352 | Will it be next week, or next year? |
49352 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
49352 | Wraxall asked Lord George Germain how North"took the communication?" |
49352 | [ Illustration: 9358] As Chatham sat down, his brother- in- law, Lord Temple, said to him,"You forgot to mention what we talked of; shall I get up?" |
49352 | [ Illustration: 9790] Instead of being its destroyer, who, in like circumstances, would not have been its defender? |
49352 | ``` Shall we yield? |
49352 | ``` Though too true to herself, e''er to crouch to oppression,``` Who can yield to just rule more loyal submission? |
49352 | ``` Would you worry the man that has found you in shoes? |
49352 | ```` Who shall thy gay buffoonery describe? |
49352 | and how is it to be remedied? |
49352 | and where were mansions for the nobility and aristocracy? |
49352 | be asleep all this time? |
49352 | general, why would you be overpersuaded by men of inferior judgment to your own? |
49352 | shall we lie down like dogs beneath``` The keeper''s lash? |
49352 | what measure should be first proposed? |
49352 | what notes of discord are these which disturb the general joy, and silence the acclamations of victory? |
49352 | where is Holland? |
49352 | where is Spain? |
49352 | who shall know the might"But wouldst thou know his name, Of the words he utter''d there? |
49352 | { 267}the various delegates were then presented, and now came a pause; who should take the lead? |
49352 | { 348}why is not the latter commenced without hesitation? |
592 | Friend Chang,I said,"San Francisco sleeps as the dead-- Ended license, lust and play: Why do you iron the night away? |
592 | Pocahontas''body, lovely as a poplar, sweet as a red haw in November or a pawpaw in May-- did she wonder? 592 What will you do to end war for good? |
592 | ''The Craftsman'':"Has America a National Poetry?" |
592 | And do his bauble- bells beyond the clouds Ring out, and shake with mirth the planets bright? |
592 | And do you laugh, when Jim, from Huck apart Gropes through the rain and night with breaking heart? |
592 | And who is here to say us nay? |
592 | And why, until the dawning sun Are flames coming up from the ground? |
592 | But do you laugh when Jim bows down forlorn His babe, his deaf Elizabeth to mourn? |
592 | But who can dodge this genius of the stream, The Mississippi Valley''s laughing dream? |
592 | Can it go on in the absence of its initiators? |
592 | Deep in the ages, long, long ago, I was your sweetheart, there on the sand-- Storm- worn beach of the Chinese land? |
592 | Do you remember, ages after, At last the world we were born to own? |
592 | I had a silvery name, I had a silvery name, I had a silvery name-- do you remember The name you cried beside the tumbling sea?" |
592 | II What marching men of Buffalo Flood the streets in rash crusade? |
592 | In the breezes nod and wheeze? |
592 | Is it his deacon- beard, or old bald pate That makes the band upon his whims to wait? |
592 | O market square, O slattern place, Is glory in your slack disgrace? |
592 | One crow asked the other crow a riddle: The muttering crow Asked the stuttering crow,"Why does a bee have a sword to his fiddle? |
592 | Second Section America Watching the War, August, 1914, to April, 1917 Where Is the Real Non- resistant? |
592 | Shall we be as weird as these? |
592 | WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE? |
592 | WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE? |
592 | WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE? |
592 | WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE? |
592 | WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE? |
592 | WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE? |
592 | WILL YOU BRING YOUR FINE PEACE TO THE NATIONS TODAY?" |
592 | Was it a palace or a barn? |
592 | What landlord, lawyer, voodoo- man has yet A better native right to make men sweat? |
592 | Where are those oddities and capers now That used to"set the table on a roar"? |
592 | Which of our freemen did she greet the first, Seeing him come against the fires accurst? |
592 | While the monster shadows glower and creep, What can be better for man than sleep?" |
592 | Who can surrender till death His words and his works, his house and his lands, His eyes and his heart and his breath? |
592 | Who can surrender to Christ? |
592 | Who can surrender to Christ? |
592 | Who shall end my dream''s confusion? |
592 | Why did they mumble, brood, and stare When the court- players curtsied fair And the Gonzago scene began? |
592 | Why does a bee have a sword to his fiddle?" |
592 | Why? |
592 | Will you die for the nations, making them whole? |
592 | Will you stand by the book- case, be nailed to the wood?" |
592 | You were the heir of the yellow throne-- The world was the field of the Chinese man And we were the pride of the Sons of Han? |
592 | does she remember-- in the dust-- in the cool tombs?" |
18840 | A British general, you say? |
18840 | A fine woman, is she? |
18840 | Ah, Evaleen, did you enjoy your ramble? |
18840 | Am I lost in the woods? |
18840 | Am I the tree or the undercurrent? |
18840 | Amen, Solly; how''s the Halcyon Itinerary? |
18840 | And could you leave your earthly paradise? |
18840 | And what will you be, mamma? |
18840 | And you accepted the challenge? |
18840 | And you think she likes Arlington? |
18840 | Are her thoughts like yours? |
18840 | Are you ready to start, my lad? |
18840 | Are you sick, Lucrèce? 18840 Are you sure they are engaged?" |
18840 | Are you sure? 18840 Are you tired of me already,"she playfully chided,"and curious to make a new friend? |
18840 | Are you well rested? 18840 Arlington? |
18840 | At Gallipolis? 18840 At a moment''s warning?" |
18840 | Bought? 18840 Bringing the palm?" |
18840 | Brother? |
18840 | Buy? |
18840 | By what authority do you detain me, a private citizen, attending peaceably to my own affairs, on a public thoroughfare? |
18840 | Byle? 18840 Can we depend on David Clarke''s co- operation?" |
18840 | Can you justify your deceptions, practised on me, or make amends for the injury done the Blennerhassetts? |
18840 | Can you procure for me the family boat which my husband provided for us at Marietta? |
18840 | Cap''n, you ric''lect Colonel Plug, that carried on at Hurricane Island and the mouth of Cash, after Wilson was nabbed? 18840 Captain Danvers your brother?" |
18840 | Could I make verse, I would sing of October in the Ohio Valley, or of Indian Summer, which comes in November, do n''t it? |
18840 | Could you imagine that a son of my father, Major Arlington, would hold the principles of Adams and Jay? |
18840 | Cur? 18840 Danvers? |
18840 | Daughter? 18840 Dear madam, will you console Theodosia with one of your brave, loving, womanly letters? |
18840 | Did I not say the gods are propitious? |
18840 | Did he betray Burr, or did he only find him out? 18840 Did n''t I see him first, Eva?" |
18840 | Did you answer my-- my question? |
18840 | Did you name your daughter, may I ask, Colonel Burr, anticipating extraordinary rank for her? 18840 Did you receive mine, in which I explained the mistakes of Byle?" |
18840 | Do I speak poetically? 18840 Do many boats go to New Orleans?" |
18840 | Do n''t you Pittsburgers drink a las''snort before goin''to bed? 18840 Do n''t you know Arlington, Squire Hale? |
18840 | Do you believe this? |
18840 | Do you hear the water swash against the logs along the shore? |
18840 | Do you know anything of the far West? |
18840 | Do you know what that is? |
18840 | Do you mean Colonel Burr? |
18840 | Do you mean that low island? |
18840 | Do you mean to cast reflections on my character, sir? |
18840 | Do you mean to insult me, sir? 18840 Do you purpose returning South to remain?" |
18840 | Do you recollect passing Bacchus Island? |
18840 | Do you say this in earnest or only to please me? |
18840 | Do you see that red head on the top of that tree t''other side of the house? |
18840 | Do you suppose I am afraid of his big names,''General''and''Governor''? 18840 Do you think so?" |
18840 | Do you want it back after all these years? |
18840 | Does Colonel Burr know there are several millions of dollars in the Bank of New Orleans? |
18840 | Does he preach? |
18840 | Does he think I am committed to him, body and soul? 18840 Does he write to her?" |
18840 | Does the mild- eyed thing recollect me? |
18840 | Does the red stuff boil? 18840 Dominick, do you want to go away, away to Mexico, and become rich and great?" |
18840 | Dominick, hey? 18840 Exceedingly fine women, are they not?" |
18840 | Fair fight or rough and tumble? |
18840 | French? 18840 French? |
18840 | General Wilkinson told you so? 18840 Hadley, you?" |
18840 | Has anything gone wrong? |
18840 | Have I the honor of addressing Colonel Burr? |
18840 | Have you been in the business before this? |
18840 | Have you seen our gaunt Hercules? 18840 Have you told me all?" |
18840 | He has grown a big boy, have you not, Gamp? 18840 He is pleasant enough, but too bold, too audacious, is n''t he?" |
18840 | Here is just where you stood when we met for the first time, love; do you remember? 18840 How are_ you_?" |
18840 | How can I decide? 18840 How d''ye do? |
18840 | How d''ye do? 18840 How did you come by that? |
18840 | How do you feel this morning, Jetty? |
18840 | How many times over has Abe sold you since you ran away from the island? |
18840 | How many wives, widows, spinsters and school- girls did you lead up and down? |
18840 | How soon do you want to start? |
18840 | How, what? 18840 How? |
18840 | Husband, what ails you? |
18840 | I feel that I am rash to talk so positively, but how can there be a difference of opinion on a subject like this? 18840 I know,"said the stranger, smiling, as he turned to ask young Brackenridge,"Is the judge at home?" |
18840 | I looked like a river pirate, did I? 18840 I''m a dog, eh? |
18840 | I''m a sort of self- made doctor, Mr.---- wo n''t you please write your name out just as you spell it yourself, and let me have it? 18840 If it''s good enough for the son of the Duke of Orleans, it''s good enough for me or you, eh? |
18840 | If the inquiry is not impertinent, sir, have you organized a joint stock company? 18840 In regard to Spain?" |
18840 | Invasion? 18840 Is Miss Hale one of those foolish virgins?" |
18840 | Is it possible? |
18840 | Is it the intention to seize upon the deposits of private individuals? |
18840 | Is it your belief that, if war were declared, there would be difficulty in raising volunteers in Virginia? |
18840 | Is n''t it wonderful? 18840 Is that enough for you?" |
18840 | Is there any boat that I can borrow here, or buy? 18840 Is this young woman a sorceress? |
18840 | Is this yourn? |
18840 | It blows a body, do n''t it? |
18840 | It''s a prodigious long name, ai n''t it? 18840 Likes him, does she?" |
18840 | Look out, you will soil your shoes; shall I remove the mud? |
18840 | Margaret, ought I leave them and you unprotected? |
18840 | May I come in, mamma? 18840 My dear girl, will you give no credit to human saviors? |
18840 | Neighbors,said he, listening to the receding hoof- beats of the horses,"did you notice that man''s face and his feet? |
18840 | New Orleans would be your capital city, at first, would it not?--and our home would be there and not in Mexico? |
18840 | New York City? 18840 Not I. I suppose you do?" |
18840 | Not even that? |
18840 | Oh, Warren, is it really you? 18840 Oh, the island over yonder is a damned sight more dangerous, ai n''t it, Abe?" |
18840 | One apiece for us, eh, Mex? |
18840 | Peggin''away, all hands, eh? 18840 Perhaps you prefer the violin or the flute?" |
18840 | Père,asked the girl anxiously, in a gentle voice, so clear that every word she spoke reached the ear of Burr,"may you go with them?" |
18840 | Reckon it were a case of one askeert and an''t''other da''sn''t, eh, Hen? |
18840 | Scipio,''ave you''oed the corn? |
18840 | Shall I holler to them? |
18840 | Shall we go back to our boat? 18840 Smith? |
18840 | So these is your offspring, as the preacher says, are they, Chester? 18840 Son of Colonel Presley Neville?" |
18840 | Speaking of Washington County, General Morgan,--are the people of your neighborhood prosperous and contented? |
18840 | Story? 18840 Surely? |
18840 | That seems impossible-- shoe- and- stocking trees, did you say? |
18840 | That was a mysterious affair-- the disappearance of the schooner-- what was the vessel''s name, Danvers? |
18840 | That''s claiming a good deal, is n''t it? |
18840 | The Rose of Sharon? |
18840 | The Sacred Scripture? 18840 The soldiers, will they perhaps overtake us?" |
18840 | Then why do you confine your liberty? 18840 Then you are not one of us? |
18840 | Then you desire war? |
18840 | This Captain Danvers--? |
18840 | This hankercher? |
18840 | Tom, eh? 18840 We do n''t ever think of dying, do we, Dicky?" |
18840 | Well, governor, what if I am drunk? 18840 Well, what is your verdict?" |
18840 | What are you spilling, there? 18840 What became of the handsome young Arlington?" |
18840 | What charm? |
18840 | What do you know of them, colonel, further than we learned in Pittsburg? |
18840 | What do you see away down the river? |
18840 | What do you think of that as an estimate of human nature? |
18840 | What do you think of_ her_? |
18840 | What do you want with rifles? 18840 What does this mean? |
18840 | What is the best? |
18840 | What is the condition of the new college at the county seat? 18840 What is the third?" |
18840 | What makes you think so, Peter? |
18840 | What might your name be, now, bub? 18840 What of woman''s education? |
18840 | What rigmarole is this? 18840 What sandbar? |
18840 | What shall I do with them? 18840 What shall we do? |
18840 | What was the use of lying? |
18840 | What will be the course of action? |
18840 | What would you do with them? |
18840 | What you jabbering about now? 18840 What''s a sleeping sawyer?" |
18840 | What''s that? |
18840 | What, Colonel Burr, are you still up? |
18840 | When did he tell you? |
18840 | When? |
18840 | Where can I find this Captain Pierce? |
18840 | Where did you leave the boys? |
18840 | Where is Sott? 18840 Where''s your revelations?" |
18840 | Where? |
18840 | Which way is the Highcockolorum? |
18840 | White antelope? |
18840 | Who are these? 18840 Who is this person?" |
18840 | Who wants John Wood? |
18840 | Who''s that? |
18840 | Why did n''t you name him after me? 18840 Why did you direct our captain to pass this way, if it is a dangerous place?" |
18840 | Why did you mark that passage? |
18840 | Why not? 18840 Why not? |
18840 | Why should I disbelieve? 18840 Why there?" |
18840 | Will Colonel Burr be there? |
18840 | Will you both agree to a compromise and accept some half- romantic, half- pious verses which I composed and set to music? 18840 Will you stop the boat, sir? |
18840 | Wo n''t he come to the fort after luncheon? |
18840 | Wonder how things are growing in the front yard? 18840 Would I be in favor of it? |
18840 | Would you be in favor of that? |
18840 | Yes, do n''t you like him? |
18840 | Yes, sure as coffin- nails; why? 18840 You are confident that the prospect of increasing your capital is good?" |
18840 | You call it Jefferson College; it was named for Washington_ and_ Jefferson, was it not? 18840 You came from Marietta; were you agreeably entertained there?" |
18840 | You did not know? 18840 You did not quite forget the lonely island and its solitary family?" |
18840 | You did? 18840 You do not believe such absurdities, do you Palafox?" |
18840 | You know him then? |
18840 | You know the contents of the enclosure? |
18840 | You know what you called me up at Gallipolis? |
18840 | You shot him? 18840 You think him handsome? |
18840 | You told this Mr. Arlington that my daughter was engaged to marry Captain Danvers? |
18840 | You will not, then, permit me to right myself by the code of honor? |
18840 | You window woman? |
18840 | You wo n''t be rash enough to kill an old army officer, will you? |
18840 | You wo n''t buy, then? |
18840 | You would n''t guess there might be a fortune in these, would you, Blackey? |
18840 | You''ll be back and bunk here, or will you sleep on one of the boats? |
18840 | You_ charmed_ him to sleep? |
18840 | You_ love_ him? 18840 Your new Western college, eh? |
18840 | _ Was_ she drowned? |
18840 | ''Bout thirty to a boat?" |
18840 | ''Oh, Aaron Burr, what have you done? |
18840 | ''Richard,''you say? |
18840 | A captain? |
18840 | A felon who would murder Alexander Hamilton-- what crime would n''t he commit? |
18840 | A screw loose somewhere, eh?" |
18840 | A wooden island?" |
18840 | Addressing the innkeeper, he asked:"Can you inform us whether Judge Brackenridge is in town?" |
18840 | Again the mistress made a vain appeal:"Do American soldiers abuse women?" |
18840 | Am I correctly informed? |
18840 | Am I not right?" |
18840 | Are no inhabitants in this wilderness?" |
18840 | Are not you, Colonel Burr?" |
18840 | Are they in print?" |
18840 | Are they militiamen? |
18840 | Are you a Knight of the Plow?" |
18840 | Are you akin to that Turlipe?" |
18840 | Are you an unconditional Jeffersonian?" |
18840 | Are you going home, Mr. Hale? |
18840 | Arlington, escorting the Lady of the Violets, asked her, in an undertone,"Did you get my last letter from Virginia?" |
18840 | Arlington? |
18840 | Arlington?" |
18840 | Arlington?" |
18840 | As for my bereavement-- my heart history-- why speak of that?" |
18840 | Besides, might he not chance to learn the true condition of affairs regarding Evaleen Hale and the objectionable captain? |
18840 | Burr resumed conversation abruptly:"Arlington, you are not a Federalist?" |
18840 | But how would Madam Blennerhassett judge him? |
18840 | But say to me, my daughter''s dear friend, am I myself Eloy Deville? |
18840 | By crackey, you''ve come out in full blossom, have n''t you, like a red- bud bush? |
18840 | By whose permission are you here? |
18840 | Ca n''t you be persuaded to give up your rash design? |
18840 | Ca n''t you learn that a vessel wo n''t navigate while she''s tied to a tree and stuck fast in the mud?" |
18840 | Can it be you?" |
18840 | Colonel Hugh Phelps, of Parkurgberg, how are you? |
18840 | Colonel, were you ever picked up by puttin''out your paw to the wrong man? |
18840 | Could he be suffering remorse? |
18840 | Could n''t you waive ifs and buts long enough to try the Weehauken experiment and then investigate my pedigree? |
18840 | Danvers?" |
18840 | Did Richard leave you as big a pile of money as folks say? |
18840 | Did anybody ever tell you of the Missouri salt mountain? |
18840 | Did he come home? |
18840 | Did he own it?" |
18840 | Did he--?" |
18840 | Did his memory fly back to the far off, sad days when, a lonesome orphan boy, in a Puritan school, he penned sympathetic letters to his sister? |
18840 | Did n''t I warn you never again to come to me unless sent for? |
18840 | Did not the forty men who settled Marietta bring rifles and ammunition?" |
18840 | Did you ever read Plutarch''s Lives? |
18840 | Did you ever see Alexander Hamilton?" |
18840 | Did you hear such a report? |
18840 | Did you take note of his metaphors? |
18840 | Did you, Mex? |
18840 | Did you, Sott? |
18840 | Do I intrude?" |
18840 | Do I intrude?" |
18840 | Do n''t they make them animals cut dirt? |
18840 | Do n''t we, cap? |
18840 | Do n''t you guess I''ve any feelin'', you onery idiot? |
18840 | Do n''t you know me? |
18840 | Do n''t you know what the Ordinance of''87 says? |
18840 | Do n''t you see I''m busy?" |
18840 | Do n''t you see I''m drowned?" |
18840 | Do n''t you think we are too much be- Jeffersoned?" |
18840 | Do you belong here, Africanus?" |
18840 | Do you care? |
18840 | Do you charge him with disloyalty? |
18840 | Do you expect to have to fight?" |
18840 | Do you fancy he loves you?" |
18840 | Do you know any French girl in Gallipolis?" |
18840 | Do you know his name?" |
18840 | Do you know-- do you know of a family by the name of Hale?" |
18840 | Do you like this black gown better than the blue brocaded one I wore that evening at Princeton?" |
18840 | Do you not know that orders have been issued for the civil authorities to interfere with your plans?" |
18840 | Do you play the violoncello?" |
18840 | Do you recollect, Theodosia, the remark of the Mayor of New York, when he invited you to go on board a war vessel? |
18840 | Do you say it is to meet a brother that you wish to go to Cincinnati?" |
18840 | Do you see that couple walking this way from Campus Martius? |
18840 | Do you think Byle is a plumb fool? |
18840 | Do you think it safe to trifle with me? |
18840 | Do you think they''ll ever drum up five hundred lunatics for such an expedition?" |
18840 | Do you think we are coming on a sleeping sawyer now?" |
18840 | Do you understand me?" |
18840 | Do you worship his successor? |
18840 | Do you write verse, sir?" |
18840 | Do_ you_ know the Spring Beauty?" |
18840 | Does he take it for granted that I am a tool and a fool? |
18840 | Does it not insure to us all the right of habeas corpus?" |
18840 | Does not the vision resemble some Mohammedan Isle of the Blest-- one of the happy seats reserved for blameless souls such as yours and mine? |
18840 | Eh? |
18840 | Eh? |
18840 | Faithful to what?" |
18840 | Fifteen? |
18840 | Folks ought n''t to be too familiar with strangers, ought they? |
18840 | For was not this daring leader wise and powerful and popular? |
18840 | George Hale?" |
18840 | Gosh, baby, you want to grab uncle''s nose, do you? |
18840 | Had he not been Vice President and had he not come within one vote of being President of the United States? |
18840 | Had n''t we better go-- you and I-- to Hinson''s, and learn who these parties are and what they want? |
18840 | Had you in mind Theodosius the First, called the Great, or the second and more famous emperor of the name? |
18840 | Has she bewitched you?" |
18840 | Has the fellow gone mad?" |
18840 | Have I not keep my word? |
18840 | Have you a picture of her?" |
18840 | Have you completed your plans?" |
18840 | Have you entertained the possibility of defection?" |
18840 | Have you got rid of him for good?" |
18840 | Have you seen enough of Palmyra? |
18840 | Have you, Warren, formed the acquaintance of--?" |
18840 | He took Peter''s arm, and with a backward jerk of the head declared interrogatively:"The Mogul is sort of queer, is n''t he? |
18840 | Hello, Cuffey, what do_ you_ want?" |
18840 | Her sudden pallor and dilated eye were observed by Arlington, who asked in a tone of gentle solicitude:"What is it?" |
18840 | Here are the palaces, but where are the citizens? |
18840 | Home from Virginia, Evaleen, to old Marietta, on a visit to the folks? |
18840 | How are my boys, Dominick and-- what''s the younger one''s name?--Yes, Harman, how are they? |
18840 | How are you?" |
18840 | How can it be otherwise? |
18840 | How could I know? |
18840 | How did you get by the guard to- night?" |
18840 | How do you all do?" |
18840 | How far is it?" |
18840 | How goes it?" |
18840 | How long do you calculate to stay, Burlingham?" |
18840 | How many wives do you s''pose I''ve got? |
18840 | How much did he give for you? |
18840 | How much is the doctor wuth? |
18840 | How much is the whole caboodle going to cost you?" |
18840 | How you getting along?" |
18840 | How''s all your kith an''kin? |
18840 | How''s he? |
18840 | I am charmed with him, are not you?" |
18840 | I hope you are not past that?" |
18840 | I presume you wish to learn the conditions of our agreement with volunteers?" |
18840 | I s''pose you reco''nize me, do n''t you? |
18840 | I see two chaps on the upper deck; who are they? |
18840 | I want to tell you, Chester, here is just the spot where I stood when I fit for her--""Fought for my wife?" |
18840 | I wonder what detains Harman? |
18840 | I would like Mr. Daviess to tell us what the Constitution means? |
18840 | I''m consarned sorry for the family over on the island; ai n''t you, neighbor? |
18840 | I''m sorry for you, but-- hold up, what did I tell you? |
18840 | If you are a gentleman--""If? |
18840 | If you, or your younger brother-- I believe you have a brother besides the general?" |
18840 | In case hostilities should be precipitated by the Spaniards--""What in that case?" |
18840 | Is Miss Evaleen in town now? |
18840 | Is Tom Jefferson going to make war on Spain? |
18840 | Is he not due here?" |
18840 | Is he-- a reliable officer?" |
18840 | Is it a family of emigrants? |
18840 | Is it possible that you are satisfied with your present limited sphere?" |
18840 | Is it possible you have forgotten the world since abandoning public affairs?" |
18840 | Is it possible? |
18840 | Is it the singing breeze or the rippling water that causes you to put your principles in language so poetical?" |
18840 | Is n''t he an odd Grecian? |
18840 | Is n''t that so? |
18840 | Is not conversion necessary?" |
18840 | Is she French?" |
18840 | Is she French?" |
18840 | Is she as well as usual?" |
18840 | Is that correct military language, Phelps? |
18840 | Is there not one man here who will defend me?" |
18840 | John, take charge of the cordelle; can you row, doctor? |
18840 | Let''s see; where was I? |
18840 | Look on this place I put my finger"--he tapped the paper angrily--"you see ze Premiereville-- ze Premiereville? |
18840 | Lucrèce caught a quick breath and asked eagerly:"Troops from St. Louis, think you?" |
18840 | May it be convenient should one passenger more be accommodated in your polite boat? |
18840 | May you not be in error? |
18840 | Me kill dandy?" |
18840 | Meanwhile, what had Aaron Burr found to interest him so long in the_ sanctum sanctorum_ of the lord of the island? |
18840 | My daughter? |
18840 | Near the court- house he met a gentleman, whom he accosted, taking him cordially by the hand and inquiring,"Is n''t this Squire George Hale?" |
18840 | No attention being paid to the question, the nonchalant intruder went on:"What plunder are you loaded with? |
18840 | No resk this time, Arlington,_ is_ there? |
18840 | Now can_ you_ tell me, as man to man, why the deuce that hunk of beef is put to soak in that puddle, up at the head of the island?" |
18840 | Now, had n''t you better buy the whole damned correspondence?" |
18840 | Now, how many men will them fifteen boats accommodate, when they''re done? |
18840 | Or maybe you carry passengers? |
18840 | Or might he not reasonably hope to be returned to Congress from one of the new States? |
18840 | Or to secure from the President an appointment as Minister to a foreign court, perhaps that of St. James? |
18840 | Or was he merely making a tour of observation for commercial reasons? |
18840 | Or was recollection busy with the scenes of the Revolutionary War, in which he served his country nobly and won proud laurels? |
18840 | Or who can be sure that the craftiness of the guest was greater than the cunning of the host? |
18840 | P. B. Arlington would sound sort of uppercrusty, eh? |
18840 | Pardon, I do n''t mean that I do n''t like_ you_, of course--""Like-- don''t you love me? |
18840 | Pausing, he asked sarcastically:"Are those your sentiments? |
18840 | Pensacola?" |
18840 | Perhaps you are the Vice- President''s brother, or are you his man- servant?" |
18840 | Recollect what I told you that night? |
18840 | Salt or whiskey, or pork or butter, I reckon? |
18840 | Say, cap, is your new man onto the pass words and signs?" |
18840 | Say, you raw recruit, where''s your pal? |
18840 | Scrutinizing Scipio''s features as he might inspect a wonder in a museum, Byle interrogated him:"Potterin''about for greens, I reckon? |
18840 | Shall I read it aloud?" |
18840 | Shall I send one of my servants to conduct you to the wharf?" |
18840 | Shall he span the Ohio with a bridge, and dig a canal around the falls? |
18840 | Shall our Lexington be suffered to become a hot- bed of sedition? |
18840 | Shall we go to the boat?" |
18840 | Shall you be able to adjust the matter amicably or will the dispute result in war?" |
18840 | Sheldrake, did you ever hear anybody call me a liar? |
18840 | Should it differ from man''s?" |
18840 | So cap''s a colonel? |
18840 | Speaking of bitters and how to cure trouble in this vale of tears, as the saying is, I reckon you have heard of a man by the name of Jonathan Edwards? |
18840 | Spoken words are but breath, and who can report all that passed between the tempter and the tempted? |
18840 | Tell me, now that you are rested and refreshed after your long journey, by what route did you come?" |
18840 | The Mississippi Valley is spacious and fertile, Louisiana is a wide domain, but why limit the scope of enterprise to these? |
18840 | The blue violet, I believe, signifies modesty, does it not?" |
18840 | The citizen has an inalienable right to defend his home and family, and we did, did n''t we, Harman?" |
18840 | The question is, are you a man or a dastard?" |
18840 | The young lady is right when she calls me and you gents, eh, cap?" |
18840 | Then Madam Blennerhassett, speaking aside to Miss Hale, asked:"How long does the captain intend to remain with you in Marietta? |
18840 | They shook their heads, when, glancing up at Scipio, the questioner repeated,"Do you know?" |
18840 | This dispute in regard to the boundary line between Louisiana and Mexico threatens war, does it not?" |
18840 | To Arlington Burr remarked as they passed by the waxen show:"The artist makes me a beauty, do n''t he? |
18840 | Tom, wo n''t you oblige us?" |
18840 | Turning over the leaves of his memorandum book, he asked,"Do you know Mr. Vigo, at Fort Vincent, a Spaniard?" |
18840 | Upon reaching the place where the boats were moored to the bushy shore of the bayou, Turlipe called:"Hello, are you there?" |
18840 | Want to see inside the''stablishment? |
18840 | Was he flying from persecution? |
18840 | Was n''t he court- martialed last spring, after holding the command of the Northern army less than a year? |
18840 | Was one of''em your daughter, grand- daddy?" |
18840 | Well, ca n''t you see the pint? |
18840 | Were the seven cities of Cibola clustered in one golden capital? |
18840 | Whar''s Daniel? |
18840 | What are the conditions?" |
18840 | What are your pursuits? |
18840 | What brings you to this wandering wood like a lost Una?" |
18840 | What cared those intoxicated revellers for a scolding tongue? |
18840 | What could be the noted politician''s object in coming to the West? |
18840 | What could the judge do but discharge the jury? |
18840 | What could your father do? |
18840 | What did Jackson say? |
18840 | What direction shall we take?" |
18840 | What do we care for the prattling of this Graham? |
18840 | What do you say to taking a tour to Blennerhassett''s with me in my piroque? |
18840 | What do you say your name is?" |
18840 | What do you think, Colonel Burr, of the temporizing policy of the administration in regard to Spain?" |
18840 | What do you want, Palafox?" |
18840 | What do you want?" |
18840 | What else?" |
18840 | What facts? |
18840 | What for?" |
18840 | What had Burr been doing in the three- quarters of a year which had elapsed since he bade good- bye to the Blennerhassetts in October? |
18840 | What have you here in your basket-- botanical specimens?" |
18840 | What information did you gather in the progress of your trip, concerning our preparations?" |
18840 | What is the matter?" |
18840 | What is to hold us together? |
18840 | What is your business here, my good man?" |
18840 | What is your opinion of the Alien and Sedition laws? |
18840 | What is your opinion of this one? |
18840 | What is your own feeling on that phase of the subject, may I ask, colonel?" |
18840 | What may not be achieved by genius and courage? |
18840 | What might be his evil design? |
18840 | What might your name be, captain?" |
18840 | What next?" |
18840 | What object had these unknown watermen in conveying their unwilling passengers away from communication with Captain Winslow and Doctor Deville? |
18840 | What shall we do? |
18840 | What spur more sharp than a beautiful woman''s appeal to a proud man''s vanity? |
18840 | What story?" |
18840 | What strange bird is that coming down the river road? |
18840 | What the Holy Moses did you shoot my thumb for? |
18840 | What was the action of Judge Hary Innes? |
18840 | What we care now for ze boat- wreckair, ze bad robbair? |
18840 | What were his meditations? |
18840 | What will become of your rights and mine? |
18840 | What will you drink? |
18840 | What''s the fraction now? |
18840 | What''s the last word from Captain Danvers? |
18840 | What''s the latest news from Washington? |
18840 | What''s''is name?" |
18840 | When did you strike Marietta?" |
18840 | When is that knot to be tied, anyhow? |
18840 | Where do you hail from, Arlington?" |
18840 | Where is he?" |
18840 | Where is the Holy Bible? |
18840 | Where is your commanding officer? |
18840 | Where''s the feller you said wanted to join us? |
18840 | Which channel?" |
18840 | Which is the best road from here to Carson''s Ferry?" |
18840 | Which side are you on?" |
18840 | Which way are you bound? |
18840 | Which way do you hail from now? |
18840 | Who could induce Aaron Burr to come to Ohio?" |
18840 | Who is Arlington?" |
18840 | Who is your travelling companion? |
18840 | Who knows what may come to pass?" |
18840 | Who the devil are you?" |
18840 | Whom do I defraud? |
18840 | Whose boat is this, anyhow, and where bound?" |
18840 | Why am I here? |
18840 | Why are you here?" |
18840 | Why did he keep her constantly in sight? |
18840 | Why did n''t they fight? |
18840 | Why do n''t Congress declare war?" |
18840 | Why do n''t the Government declare war, and conquer Mexico?" |
18840 | Why do you ask? |
18840 | Why play a secondary part? |
18840 | Why was that man furtively following her down the river? |
18840 | Why were you not here twelve hours ago?" |
18840 | Will I go with you, friends and fellow- citizens? |
18840 | Will no one take our part? |
18840 | Will they arrest you? |
18840 | Will you have it in quarters or eighths?" |
18840 | Will you hear it?" |
18840 | Will you meet me with pistol or with sword?" |
18840 | Wonder why that dool''tween Jo and Harry never come off?" |
18840 | Would he find success by settling in some rising city of the West, and resuming the practice of law? |
18840 | Would n''t you like an applejack or a stiff metheglin to make you sleep sound? |
18840 | Would n''t"General"Burr come and see? |
18840 | Would not the conquest of Mexico be easy? |
18840 | Would you like to see''em? |
18840 | Would you like, colonel, to look into the library for a moment?" |
18840 | Yer man''s run away, how will I do for a substitute?" |
18840 | You back again?" |
18840 | You bring documents for me?" |
18840 | You do n''t see anything disgraceful in that, do you?" |
18840 | You grieve to see me a widow? |
18840 | You have heard rumors of war on the Sabine?" |
18840 | You heard that speech, Jim, did n''t you?" |
18840 | You know its products and topography?" |
18840 | You mean Elder Smith?" |
18840 | You recollect, do n''t you? |
18840 | You sot on the summit? |
18840 | You will not deny me this pleasure?" |
18840 | You''re a readin''man-- haven''t you come across what the press wrote about that scorpion in your bozom? |
18840 | You''ve rid in a steamboat, I dare say, going to see your pa, in Orleens? |
18840 | You-- you aren''t--?" |
18840 | Your looks denote that you affiliate with-- shall I say, the common people, the humbler class? |
18840 | Ze Captain Danvers, is he a lunatic?" |
18840 | _ Mon soldat-- mon capitaine_, you love heem-- he love you-- how shall we not hate us?" |
18840 | _ Voila!_ have we not brush away ze mosquito? |
18840 | a filthy cur?" |
18840 | a mountain of real salt one hundred and eighty miles long, and forty- five broad, white as snow, and glittering in the sun? |
18840 | and how is it flattery to charge a man with insincerity?" |
18840 | and your name is--?" |
18840 | echoed Burr, blowing a ring of smoke from his lips,"what do_ you_ think, yourself?" |
18840 | ever hear any one say Burke Pierce was a liar or a foot- licker?" |
18840 | him the hero of Quebec, of Long Island, and of Monmouth? |
18840 | him the very sword hand of Washington?" |
18840 | see, is there not somebody who could come to our aid?" |
18840 | the day I first seed you and Hoopsnake on the roof of his flatboat? |
7147 | Had not the French a right both of prior discovery and prior settlement? |
7147 | Very much obliged? |
7147 | When did La Salle settle? |
7147 | And the future? |
7147 | And the product? |
7147 | Are there arts worthy freedom and a rich people? |
7147 | Are there athletes? |
7147 | Are there crops of fine youths and majestic old persons? |
7147 | Are there perfect women to match the generous material luxuriance? |
7147 | As to the proclamation, Parkman asks, what now remains of the sovereignty it so pompously announced? |
7147 | But who are the people who are to control? |
7147 | Is there a great moral and religious civilization-- the only justification of a great material one? |
7147 | Is there a pervading atmosphere of beautiful manners? |
7147 | Is this colorless, insipid"social consistency"the best wine that the valley can offer of its early vintages? |
7147 | Is this what democracy, undefiled of aristocratic conditions and traditions, has produced? |
7147 | Mistakes, disappointments, crudities, infidelities? |
7147 | Only those who are living and of electoral age and other qualification? |
7147 | Shall they be praised the more that they did not for a century venture beyond the sources of those streams? |
7147 | The first question of that western valley is,"Who is he?" |
7147 | Was its name indeed to be written only in the water which their canoes traversed? |
7147 | What claim has the past as against the needs of industry in the present? |
7147 | What shall I say of his wealth? |
7002 | And what is their temper now? |
7002 | But suppose you had really fallen short, do you think your superlative merit entitles you to greater indulgence than others? 7002 By whose authority do you act?" |
7002 | Do n''t think I seek a place of safety,replied Warren, quickly;"where will the attack be hottest?" |
7002 | Do you think the people of America would submit to pay the stamp duty if it was moderated? |
7002 | If the act is not repealed, what do you think will be the consequences? |
7002 | My dear Halket:--Are we to have you once more among us? 7002 What is it we are contending against?" |
7002 | What right has Onontio here? 7002 What,"he was asked,"was the temper of America towards Great Britain, before the year 1763?" |
7002 | When will you be ready to go? |
7002 | Who is that officer who appears in command? |
7002 | Who run? |
7002 | Will he fight? |
7002 | _ A quel regiment?_was the demand. |
7002 | _ Qui va la?_( who goes there?) |
7002 | _ Qui va la?_( who goes there?) |
7002 | And shall we revisit together a hapless spot, that proved so fatal to many of our former brave companions? |
7002 | And to what end? |
7002 | Are not all these things evident proofs of a fixed and uniform plan to tax us? |
7002 | But have we not tried this already? |
7002 | But what can I do? |
7002 | But what has been the consequence? |
7002 | Have we not addressed the lords, and remonstrated to the commons? |
7002 | How could they be so near without coming to visit him? |
7002 | How was this to be done? |
7002 | How were these double claims to ceremonious respect happening at the same time to be managed? |
7002 | If dissolved, how could another be collected? |
7002 | If dissolved, what would there be to prevent the British from sallying out of Boston, and spreading desolation throughout the country? |
7002 | If we want further proofs, do not all the debates in the House of Commons serve to confirm this? |
7002 | It was granted of course,"for was he not a son of the tribe-- was he not one of themselves?" |
7002 | Now, whether I am to understand this aye or no to the plain simple question asked, Is the fort to be continued or removed? |
7002 | Ought we not, then, to put our virtue and fortitude to the severest tests?" |
7002 | The disposition to uphold the army was general; but the difficult question was, who should be commander- in- chief? |
7002 | Washington eagerly inquired particulars; above all, how acted the militia? |
7002 | What did I get by that? |
7002 | What was to be done? |
7002 | Where are your landmarks-- your boundaries of colonies? |
7002 | Why, soldiers, why? |
7002 | _ But can a virtuous man hesitate in his choice?_"CHAPTER XXXVIII. |
7002 | asked he;"Is it against paying the duty of threepence per pound on tea because burdensome? |
46799 | After you found this paper, Captain, you watched to see if any one seemed to be searching for anything, I suppose? |
46799 | All very well,Dick told him,"but where do I come in?" |
46799 | And he wanted us to know that this man was heading into the east first of all; is that what you mean, Dick? |
46799 | And now all we have to do is to get our bearings, and make a fresh start for the river; is n''t it? |
46799 | And that the warning would be for our benefit, you mean? 46799 And then?" |
46799 | And who can blame him? |
46799 | And, after that, all we have to do is to let the swift current carry us along to the sea; eh, Dick? |
46799 | Are you badly hurt? |
46799 | But I got there, did n''t I? |
46799 | But can he be in the pay of that revengeful Frenchman, François Lascelles? |
46799 | But how do you suppose he could have received the message? |
46799 | But suppose it should? |
46799 | But who could be the guilty man in the camp? |
46799 | But why not? |
46799 | But you remember how that false guide deceived us in the desert, and ran away with one of our horses? |
46799 | But, Dick, who could the treacherous rascal be? 46799 But, if we do trip him up,"continued Roger, reflectively,"what do you believe Captain Lewis will do to the wretch?" |
46799 | Can it be game, and they are being tempted to start on a hunt? |
46799 | Can you make it out at all, Dick? |
46799 | Dick, what does all this mean? 46799 Dick,"whispered Roger,"is n''t it nearly time?" |
46799 | Did you ever see anything so mad as he is, Dick? |
46799 | Did you see Captain Lewis make the gesture he explained to us? |
46799 | Do you mean it might turn out to be a trap? |
46799 | Do you mean that French trader, François Lascelles? |
46799 | Do you mean to tell Captain Lewis about the knife- slit along the bottom of our boat? |
46799 | Do you mean you did n''t like the way that Indian acted, and that you meant to stay awake to keep an eye on him? |
46799 | Do you really mean to say, Dick, he would forgive the rascal on that account? |
46799 | Do you think it would be dangerous if you shot your gun off just once, in case we sighted some game? 46799 Do you think the beast can move the stump?" |
46799 | Do you think the chief will keep his word about the horses, Dick? |
46799 | How are we going to get him out of that trap? |
46799 | How did you feel when going through the air? |
46799 | How do you find it? |
46799 | How far are we from camp, do you think, Dick? |
46799 | How far do you mean to go before stopping, Dick? |
46799 | How is the night going, do you know? |
46799 | If he never knows it there can be no harm done, do n''t you see? |
46799 | If that''s all we need, Dick, how would this one over here do for our purposes? |
46799 | If they should come, Dick, what do you suppose would happen to us? |
46799 | If, instead of taking to their heels, the pack turns on us, and starts to fight, what must we do? |
46799 | It can hardly be more than two miles or so away from here, would n''t you say? |
46799 | It is settled that we are to go along with them, of course? |
46799 | It was a trap, you understand, Roger? |
46799 | Meaning that we will learn who the traitor is? |
46799 | Never mind about that now,the one above told him;"but do you know how you are ever going to get up out of that place again?" |
46799 | Of course they''ll tie us up, as Indians always do their prisoners, Dick? |
46799 | Of course you have not been able to place your hand on the guilty party, Captain, have you? |
46799 | Of course you noticed, Dick, that two of the braves stayed behind when we left the river, though they did catch up with us several hours afterwards? |
46799 | Our fathers never showed the white feather when they faced troubles just as bad, and why should we? 46799 Ready?" |
46799 | Shall we keep on now for the camp, and show this message on the bark to Captain Lewis? |
46799 | So, you fell to the bait, did you, boys? 46799 Suppose you try him, and see if he can understand, Dick?" |
46799 | Tell me how, then? |
46799 | That''s good news; and what next, Dick? |
46799 | The bait will be a stock of powder and ball, and perhaps several guns, unless I fail to catch your meaning, sir? |
46799 | The captain assures me the chances are three to one we will come back by this same pass over the mountains, and why not cache the horns somewhere? 46799 Then are we not going to bring about his rescue, even if it does cost us some of our precious powder and shot?" |
46799 | Then we are to try our luck in the midst of the snarling, white- capped water- wolves, are we, Roger? |
46799 | Then you agree with me, Dick, that those two men must be our bitter foes, François Lascelles and Andrew Waller? |
46799 | Then you agree, do you, Dick? |
46799 | Then you agree, do you? |
46799 | Then you believe, do you, Dick, he planned this thing; that perhaps he even entered our camp with such a game in his mind? |
46799 | Then you must be thinking that some animal may come in here, and you mean to block the passage so we will not be taken by surprise; is that it? |
46799 | Think you own the earth do you? |
46799 | Watch him now, Dick; what does he mean by all that curly stuff? 46799 We may run across game on the way back, do n''t you think, Dick?" |
46799 | Well, we have been able to take care of ourselves lots of times before now, Roger, and why not again? |
46799 | Well, what has that to do with me, Dick? 46799 Well, what of it?" |
46799 | What are you doing, Dick? |
46799 | What can it all stand for? |
46799 | What do you believe Captain Lewis will do about it? |
46799 | What do you expect Captain Lewis will do, Dick? |
46799 | What do you think they expect to do with us now? |
46799 | What does all this mean, my boys? |
46799 | What have you been telling them about us? |
46799 | What is it? |
46799 | What of that,asked Dick,"since we expected to spend a good part of the day in paddling up the stream, after shooting the rapids? |
46799 | What shall we do about the boat? |
46799 | What shall we do first? |
46799 | What shall we do next? |
46799 | What, do you think that, after all, some of the trailers among our friends will be able to follow us, and take these Indians by surprise? |
46799 | When we do strike the river, Dick, can we easily tell whether the expedition has passed or not? |
46799 | Where are you, Roger? |
46799 | Who is the next one you have on your list? |
46799 | Why should I not do so, when the first intimation I received that there was a traitor in the camp came through you two boys? 46799 Will that make any difference; or do you think he may be just shamming?" |
46799 | Yes, what is it, Roger? |
46799 | You do n''t believe there''s any danger lurking near by, do you? |
46799 | You mean about escaping from our captors, do n''t you, Dick? 46799 You mean his money has hired some one to play this terrible trick that might have cost us our lives; is that it, Dick?" |
46799 | You mean the fighting Flat Heads may turn on them, sooner or later; is that it, Dick? |
46799 | You mean, Dick, if the captain wishes to see for himself the mark of the treacherous knife blade? |
46799 | Your gun, Dick? |
46799 | And I do n''t think we''ll be bothered any more by Mr. Bear, do you?" |
46799 | And then, besides, do we not know that the summer is already beginning to wane?" |
46799 | Besides, how can we tell whether this brave is an enemy or a friend?" |
46799 | But I wonder, Dick, how he will manage to let them know about the rifles and ammunition in the supply tent?" |
46799 | But what can a Sioux warrior be doing here, in the land of his foes, the Mandans?" |
46799 | CHAPTER X SPRINGING THE TRAP"I WONDER if the plan will work?" |
46799 | CHAPTER XXVIII AT THE FALLS OF THE COLUMBIA"I HOPE you do n''t think I''m discouraged, Dick, because so far no fish has come near my hook?" |
46799 | Can you make it out, Dick?" |
46799 | Did you ever see such a nest of the''varmints,''as Jasper Williams would call them?" |
46799 | Did you miscalculate the danger, or was it something that could not be helped?" |
46799 | Do you know whether the Sioux and the Dacotahs are enemies or not?" |
46799 | Do you think that can stand for a river?" |
46799 | Do you think that is all put on for effect? |
46799 | Does that mean the trader came back again, in spite of the warning Captain Lewis gave him?" |
46799 | He wondered if any harm could have come to Roger, or was the other trying to get to the fallen sheep that had slipped into a crevice among the rocks? |
46799 | Hear him plunging off, will you, Dick? |
46799 | How about giving him a shot, Dick? |
46799 | How do you feel about that now, Roger?" |
46799 | How will we ever be able to find out about it, do you think?" |
46799 | I wonder if any one could have been caught under a tree when it fell?" |
46799 | I wonder whether the Dacotahs whipped, or were overpowered by their foes? |
46799 | It strikes me we ought to know that hat, cleverly imitated here; what do you say about it?" |
46799 | Now, are you ready to do a lot of yelling?" |
46799 | Suppose we try and see if we can make ourselves understood?" |
46799 | Were they then, after all, to be cheated out of the anticipated triumph they had arranged for that night? |
46799 | What do you make that out to be?" |
46799 | What do you say to it, Dick?" |
46799 | What do you say to trying to knock over one or two of those fine fellows?" |
46799 | What do you say, Roger?" |
46799 | What if the fellow had become suspicious, and determined not to allow himself to be attracted by the bait? |
46799 | What makes them act that way, do you know?" |
46799 | Where do I fall short, Dick?" |
46799 | Where have they all gone? |
46799 | Who''d ever believe such a little knock against a rock would have burst the tough skin of our hide boat?" |
46799 | Why do you think these Indians want to make us prisoners?" |
46799 | With plenty of good venison to last them through many days, what need had they to worry? |
46799 | Would one of our Indian friends have played such a mean trick on us, do you think?" |
46799 | Would you believe it? |
46799 | You understand what that means, of course, Roger?" |
46799 | You''ve got your bearings, of course, and know just where we left our mounts?" |
46799 | how could Beaver Tail, so far away from here, know of any danger that hung over our heads?" |
46799 | is that one of those sheep of the mountains up there on that little patch of grass? |
46799 | what is all that noise ahead of us?" |
12453 | ''Does you feel willin''to swar to de trufe of your insertion, ole dame?'' 12453 ''How shall I woo her? |
12453 | ''How shall I woo her? 12453 ''Old dame,''says the ossifer( for so dey calls him), as pleasant as a mornin''in May;''has you a young gal locked up here as you knows ob? |
12453 | ''Paradise Lost?'' 12453 A fortune and a husband?" |
12453 | About an hour, I believe; but what makes you so particular, all at once, Miss Miriam? |
12453 | After all, what can that invalid and her child be to you in any case? 12453 Am I not permitted to breathe the external air-- to exercise? |
12453 | An eccentric taste for so young a girl; and Byron? 12453 And a little good wine, too, occasionally-- eh, madame?" |
12453 | And cook, what was she about? |
12453 | And do you believe me, Dinah, now that I have promised so solemnly to pay these rewards? |
12453 | And do you really love this child? |
12453 | And how long is this close immurement to continue? |
12453 | And in your state- room, captain? |
12453 | And paintings; do you love them? |
12453 | And suppose, in return, I publish yours to the world,she suggested, coolly;"brand you with baseness? |
12453 | And the other-- where is he? |
12453 | And this is your resolution? |
12453 | And vat can your motif be? 12453 And what is your idea of the way to read Shakespeare, Bertie dear?" |
12453 | And when do you assume your office in Georgia? |
12453 | And whence did he derive his authority? |
12453 | And where is she now? |
12453 | And who gave you the flowers, Ernie? |
12453 | And who would let you in, in the morning, Franklin, if I did this? 12453 And who, let me ask, is this Paladin of chivalry?" |
12453 | And you are a very foolish, dear old nurse, and you_ will_ love our baby, too, wo n''t you now? |
12453 | And your son-- do you count his welfare as nothing? 12453 Answer me truthfully, honorably, as you are a gentleman, has he propagated this vile slander, for as such I feel it, and as such shall resent it?" |
12453 | Are we in the mansion of a decayed queen, or the log- hut of a wayside innkeeper? |
12453 | Are you a fairy, madame? |
12453 | Are you ill, George? |
12453 | At what hour? 12453 Besides, are you not an earl''s granddaughter; why not boast of that instead, which would be the truth?" |
12453 | But Mrs. Raymond-- where is she? 12453 But give me something of Praed''s in return,"he said, rallying suddenly;"is there not a pretty little thing called''How shall I woo her?''" |
12453 | But his earthly hope-- it was that I alluded to; what chance for him? 12453 But how did she get out, Miss Harz?" |
12453 | But how shall we know where to find your friends when we get to port? |
12453 | But that was only a measure of safety for yourself; you surely do not mean to take sides with my persecutors? |
12453 | But what has all this to do with the name of the little girl next door? 12453 But what has startled you, poor thing, since we left the Repository? |
12453 | But what in the world ails you-- has Dunmore, the disconsolate, been making love again? 12453 But why did you not meet me at Milledgeville?" |
12453 | But why not receive bank stocks instead? |
12453 | But, Captain Ambrose-- he did not tell you so? |
12453 | By- the- way, talking of magnetism, do you know, Miss Harz, I think you are the most universally magnetic woman I ever saw? 12453 Called for by whom?" |
12453 | Captain Van Dome, do you mean to say there is no such passenger in your ship''s list as Basil Bainrothe? |
12453 | Certainly, Dinah-- the Bible tells us so; but what is the name of the pretty little girl of whom you speak? 12453 Could have loved? |
12453 | Could you not take him a message from me, Dinah? 12453 Danton, how can you so grieve your mistress?" |
12453 | Did Ady give you these? |
12453 | Did Dr. Physick ever pronounce my disease epilepsy? 12453 Did he love you?" |
12453 | Did he tell you what his thoughts were, Evelyn, or do you merely interpret them after your own fashion? |
12453 | Did he think he was driving a curricle? 12453 Did my dear mother send you to me?" |
12453 | Did n''t you hear Clayton say so? |
12453 | Did the bad man hurt Mirry? |
12453 | Did the fire occur in that way? |
12453 | Did you leave the other passengers at table? |
12453 | Did you speak with him, Dinah? |
12453 | Did you, or did you not, meet this person at Colonel La Vigne''s? 12453 Do n''t ask me-- just go on, low, very low; how did you hear all this?" |
12453 | Do n''t you know you have lost your father from this hour? 12453 Do n''t you know, Bainrothe, I am a fatal upas- tree to the wives of my bosom? |
12453 | Do you call those tufts your curls? |
12453 | Do you hear that, Claude? 12453 Do you know that gentleman, Marion?" |
12453 | Do you mean to deny it, then, Evelyn Erle? |
12453 | Do you mean to say you confided the secret of the mirror to Morton, and kept it from me? 12453 Do you miss any thing-- what have you lost, Miss Miriam?" |
12453 | Do you never see a newspaper, Mrs. Clayton, and, if so, can you not indulge me with a glimpse of one? 12453 Do you pretend that Bryant is not a poet in the grain, and that the wondrous boy, Willis, was not also''to the manner born?'' |
12453 | Do you pretend to deny it, Evelyn? 12453 Do you pretend to doubt it?" |
12453 | Do you promise this? |
12453 | Do you see that dark object lying beyond( our eyes mechanically followed his),"so still on the water?" |
12453 | Do you still claim forgiveness? 12453 Do you still see an iceberg, Mr. Garth? |
12453 | Do you suppose he is less near to God than you or I-- to Christ the all- merciful? |
12453 | Do you think his bed was soft under the war- horses? |
12453 | Do you think you could get through with a few business details to- morrow? |
12453 | Does he love music-- poetry? |
12453 | Does n''t that describe me as I am, Miriam? |
12453 | Does your own heart acquit you? |
12453 | Evelyn, one word-- let it be sincere: do you hate and scorn me? 12453 Evelyn, with all her arts, is a little faded already; do n''t you see it, Miriam? |
12453 | Evelyn? 12453 Forgive you?" |
12453 | Had we not better wait? 12453 Have I been deceived in believing that you were attached to my son, Miriam Monfort, and that you meant to keep faith with him?" |
12453 | Have we any thing left? |
12453 | Have we not proof to the contrary, Major Favraud? |
12453 | Have you completed your catalogue of insult? 12453 Have you done, Evelyn Erie?" |
12453 | Have you ever known me to play fast and loose, Dr. Pemberton? 12453 Have you ever seen us together, that you pronounce him very much in love?" |
12453 | Have you traitors in your own household, Miriam? |
12453 | Hope? 12453 How could I know, my dear sir, that this erasure had been made?" |
12453 | How did you become possessed of the knowledge that I kept gold there? |
12453 | How long before this ultimatum is proposed to me, which Mr. Gregory seemed to anticipate, and with which you, no doubt, are acquainted? |
12453 | How long did Morton remain absent? |
12453 | How long have I slept? 12453 How much longer will it endure, Evelyn?" |
12453 | How often must I remind you, Caleb Fink,said the owner of the emporium,"that your sphere is circumscribed to your duties? |
12453 | How old did he seem to be, Evelyn? |
12453 | How should I know, my dear? 12453 I am in earnest,"I rejoined, quietly;"what then?" |
12453 | I am sent from home, then, to make acquaintances it seems, and to prepare for my_ dà © but_ into society? 12453 I am sorry to have startled you so,"she said, hurriedly,"but where is Dinah, Miss Monfort, and how did she get out?" |
12453 | I had not suspected you of so much diplomacy,she observed, dryly;"but, after all, Miriam, how does this change the posture of affairs to me? |
12453 | I hope you are not hurt in my service? |
12453 | I think my birthday approaches; can you tell me the day of the month? 12453 I!--why, what on earth can I have to do with Miss Erle and her energies? |
12453 | If I give you this, will you promise to deliver my message to McDermot faithfully? |
12453 | If not, what then, Miriam? 12453 If not, what, Miriam?" |
12453 | Is His Son a little boy, and will he be fond of my mother? |
12453 | Is dat ring of yours good guinea gole, honey? |
12453 | Is it possible,I thought,"that this can be one of Evelyn''s subtle schemes, reacting on Mr. Bainrothe? |
12453 | Is it true vat I hear,he asked, pausing at some distance,"dat you vant to have dat leetle hompback chilt for a companion, Miss Monfort?" |
12453 | Is she not magnificent? |
12453 | Is that the style Major Favraud? |
12453 | Is there a ship in the distance, that you gaze so earnestly? |
12453 | Is your little boy ill, madam? |
12453 | It may be some time, miss; would you like a cup of hot coffee, you and this gentleman? 12453 Lady got cake in pocket, give Ernie some?" |
12453 | Make tea? |
12453 | Might not the term in some way be shortened? 12453 Miriam, what does all this mean?" |
12453 | Miss Harz? |
12453 | Most certainly, and very tenderly too; is he not my sweetest consolation in this dreary life? |
12453 | Mr. Burress,I said( I had retained his name with its remarkable prefix),"will you not lock the gate outside? |
12453 | My poor father is falling into that sear and yellow leaf, his dotage,he said,"that is evident; what could possess him to maunder so? |
12453 | Not even to see her baby? |
12453 | Not if he is a Jackson Democrat? |
12453 | Not taking on about that silly cup, I hope-- no; what can it be then, a megrim? 12453 Now run and tell Mrs. Stanbury every word I have spoken, just as soon as you can, Miriam, do you hear? |
12453 | Now, tell me about McDermot, Dinah, what sort of a look has he? 12453 O Evelyn, Evelyn, did you, do that?" |
12453 | O little sister,I groaned,"was I right, after all, in forsaking you for a season? |
12453 | O sister, can you conceive of no higher happiness than this? |
12453 | Of whom are you afraid, poor young lady? 12453 Old Gerald at the head of them, I suppose?" |
12453 | Pause there, Lieutenant Raymond; of what are you speaking? |
12453 | People trot out horses and negroes when they wish to purchase; why not governesses? |
12453 | Poor child, why should you rejoice so? |
12453 | Sabra,I whispered,"what became of the young girl, Ada Lee, and the deformed child? |
12453 | She has told you so, I suppose? |
12453 | She ought to have been an Irish child and born, in a hovel, do n''t you think so, papa? |
12453 | Since when have you grown so independent, Miriam? |
12453 | Sister, what can this be? 12453 So she assured you we were both prisoners by night, did she? |
12453 | So you will not give me''How shall I woo her?'' 12453 State definitely what you exact from me in return for your forbearance-- your_ honorable_ secrecy?" |
12453 | Still, it_ is_ epilepsy? 12453 Studied poetry? |
12453 | Suppose we dress as sea- nymphs,said Honoria Pyne;"enact a masque for old Neptune''s benefit? |
12453 | Tell me about Angy, Ernie-- had she wings? |
12453 | The baby-- where is he? 12453 Then they are strictly nervous?" |
12453 | Then what does she think of me? |
12453 | Then you are not wholly indifferent to me, Evelyn? |
12453 | There, did you see her smile? |
12453 | To grow old in servitude,he would say,"what sadder fate can befall any being, or more entitle him or her to forbearance and respect? |
12453 | Unable, or unwilling? 12453 Vat ansair shall I bear to Mr. Bainrothe from his vard?" |
12453 | Was it sent from beyond the seas? |
12453 | Was it the lightning? |
12453 | Was not that enough, Evelyn? 12453 Were you rude enough to tell him so, Miriam?" |
12453 | Were you sure that he was not perfidious? |
12453 | What Mirry cry for-- is God mad with Mirry? |
12453 | What ails you, Miss Miriam? 12453 What ails you, Miss Miriam?" |
12453 | What are these people crawling about the deck for? 12453 What are you thinking about, child?" |
12453 | What are you two talking about? |
12453 | What are you waiting for, Captain Van Dorne? |
12453 | What are you whispering about, Miriam? |
12453 | What has Miriam done to deserve such a taunt? 12453 What if they remove him?" |
12453 | What is it you object to, Miriam? |
12453 | What is it you want me to do? |
12453 | What is that, Miriam? |
12453 | What is the use of bewailing the inevitable? |
12453 | What is the use of this mystery with me,I thought,"when I alone am concerned? |
12453 | What is this Claude is talking of, Miriam? |
12453 | What letter, Mabel? |
12453 | What makes you mock Mr. Bainrothe then, and show how he minces at table, and uses his rattan? |
12453 | What makes you suppose Miss Monfort wants to hear your chattering, old magpie that you are? |
12453 | What man, Miss Monfort? 12453 What name shall I give? |
12453 | What poem do you allude to? |
12453 | What proof? 12453 What put it into your head, Evelyn, and what made you so close- mouthed about it? |
12453 | What tribe did her mother belong to, papa? |
12453 | What would you have me say, dear? 12453 What, being natural?" |
12453 | What, indeed? |
12453 | What, that little affair of a philopoena? |
12453 | When shall he come to you, and speak for himself? 12453 Where am I, then?" |
12453 | Where do you leave Mr. Webster, John Quincy Adams, General Jackson himself, in such a category, madame? |
12453 | Who has accused me of these? |
12453 | Who has done this? |
12453 | Who have called, Mrs. Clayton? 12453 Who is it that you call such hard names--''wicked and old''forsooth? |
12453 | Who was it that alleged these things? 12453 Who was that speaking?" |
12453 | Why a necessity, dear Evelyn, why go at all? 12453 Why have you not asked me before, Evelyn?" |
12453 | Why not say a third? |
12453 | Why not? 12453 Why should I suffer him to fill my mind with suspicions that embitter it against all approaches? |
12453 | Why, what possesses you to- day, Miss Miriam? |
12453 | Will Ernie let the wicked man kill Mirry? |
12453 | Will not Bridget Maloney do as well? |
12453 | Will she love him too? 12453 Will you be so good as to apprise him in person of my earnest wish? |
12453 | Wo n''t it do after dinner, sister Evelyn? |
12453 | Wo n''t we be too happy, Mrs. Austin, when our own dear little brother or sister comes? |
12453 | Would she never stop-- never give one loop- hole for doubt to enter? |
12453 | Would you marry for money, Evelyn? |
12453 | Would you not help me to break a loathed chain? |
12453 | Yes, but--with a shrug of his shoulders, worthy of a Frenchman--"_que voulez vous_? |
12453 | Yes, you have a good voice, an impassioned face and manner-- all very suitable, no doubt; but what will it amount to, after all? 12453 Yes-- what is it? |
12453 | Yet that voice-- how could I be mistaken? |
12453 | Yet you will go, Evelyn? |
12453 | You are bettair, then? |
12453 | You are sure he was not here, this morning-- while-- while Morton was absent? |
12453 | You are sure of the truth of what you utter, Miriam? |
12453 | You are very considerate,he said, dryly, after we had gone a few yards in profound silence,"but had I not better return for a lantern?" |
12453 | You do not-- you cannot-- meditate personal violence, self- murder? |
12453 | You has n''t anoder ob dem gole- pieces anywhar, like dat you gib me befo'', has you? 12453 You have European ideas, you tell me,"she said, bitterly;"is this one of them?" |
12453 | You know them, then? |
12453 | You need no more leetle pill? 12453 You remember the French song which I was always fond of humming,''Où est on si bien qu''au sein de sa famille?'' |
12453 | You reside here, then? |
12453 | You would not deceive me? |
12453 | *****"Despair shall give me strength-- where is the door? |
12453 | --"for by this tender title I am permitted to address you at last"( by whom?) |
12453 | --Eh, Clayton?" |
12453 | --Say, how do you like her looks?" |
12453 | --a good deal of waggery about you, I perceive, or had you forgotten my name?" |
12453 | A little alum sprinkled over its red- gold ground would do wonders in the way of effect-- would be gorgeous-- wouldn''t it, now, Miss Harz?" |
12453 | Afraid of an encounter? |
12453 | After all, does Bainrothe mistrust her honesty or mine? |
12453 | After all, is there any despot equal to the stomach and its requisitions? |
12453 | After all, might he not be honest, even if a tool of Bainrothe''s? |
12453 | Alas I who but our Creator can judge of our deserts, or measure our power to bear? |
12453 | All this is shockingly egotistical; but the question is, who that has a spark of individuality is otherwise? |
12453 | Am I deceived in the expression of that beaming eye? |
12453 | And did he lie in wait for me on the way?" |
12453 | And if we discern them, shall we not adore God''s angels? |
12453 | And what are men at such a season? |
12453 | And where is Evelyn?" |
12453 | And, later, had I not pondered over the wisdom of his preservation? |
12453 | Are the women pretty or plain, as a general thing-- and had Hamlet light or dark hair, think you, from present indications in the royal family? |
12453 | Are there not beings who seem, indeed, to lack the great essential for salvation-- a soul to be saved? |
12453 | Are you engaged to any other and more fortunate man than Mr. Bainrothe and myself? |
12453 | Are you implacable then, Miriam?" |
12453 | Are you quite sure of dat?" |
12453 | Are you sincere in such a course? |
12453 | As to that bank, did not my father believe it to be as indestructible as the United States, the government itself? |
12453 | At such an hour as this, what matters the quality of food?" |
12453 | Austin?" |
12453 | Austin?" |
12453 | Austin?" |
12453 | Austin?" |
12453 | Bainrothe?" |
12453 | Bainrothe?" |
12453 | Bainrothe?" |
12453 | Bainrothe?" |
12453 | Beauseincourt, and all its shadows, had I not put behind me? |
12453 | Because she was disappointed once, is that a reason? |
12453 | Besides, why have not the newspapers told us of this?" |
12453 | But am I soundly constituted? |
12453 | But is this just? |
12453 | But shall I tell her I have heard, Though sweet her song may be, A voice where every whispered word_ Was more than song to me_? |
12453 | But shall I tell her eyes more bright, Though bright her own may beam, Will fling a deeper spell to- night_ Upon me in my dream_?''" |
12453 | But what takes the Stanburys abroad? |
12453 | But what, after all, is beauty? |
12453 | But would this be? |
12453 | But, perhaps you had an escort to the corner?" |
12453 | But, perhaps"--lingering a moment--"you would be so good as to suffer Mr. Caleb to show me the short way you spoke of? |
12453 | By- the- by, what name shall we give our''treasure- trove?''" |
12453 | By- the- by, where are they, Miriam? |
12453 | Ca n''t you let her know this? |
12453 | Can I rely on you to support me then?" |
12453 | Can you read''Faust''in the original? |
12453 | Clayton?" |
12453 | Could I doubt for one moment to whom he applied that celestial title? |
12453 | Could I not compel them to concentration? |
12453 | Could I resist this state of things? |
12453 | Could I sustain it and retain my reason? |
12453 | Could I trust Mrs. Austin-- Mabel? |
12453 | Delay, I scarce could hope for, and, even if granted, how could it avail me in the end? |
12453 | Did any one ever see the like before? |
12453 | Did he know of my immurement? |
12453 | Did he never return, and where is he now?" |
12453 | Did he resemble mamma, Evelyn? |
12453 | Did my mother send you here?" |
12453 | Did you ever go to Frankfort? |
12453 | Did you ever hear of the Jews?" |
12453 | Did you ever see it, Miss Lamarque, you who see every thing? |
12453 | Did you never suspect anything of that sort?" |
12453 | Did you see the statue of Goethe there? |
12453 | Do I look like death? |
12453 | Do n''t you hear Mrs. Clayton groaning? |
12453 | Do n''t you mark the flag flying at the mast- head? |
12453 | Do n''t you see the advantage to the ship?" |
12453 | Do n''t you think so, Miriam?" |
12453 | Do we not right, then, to confine and enslave devils while they abide with us, or, if we can, to destroy them utterly? |
12453 | Do you feel better for my laying on of hands? |
12453 | Do you feel light- headed at all after your turn-- maybe you have fever?" |
12453 | Do you hear me, Mamma Constance?" |
12453 | Do you really apprehend danger for us now?" |
12453 | Do you see that unfortunate person there?" |
12453 | Do you suppose he will ever love you as well again-- you or Evelyn? |
12453 | Do you understand me?" |
12453 | Do you understand this, Dinah? |
12453 | Does n''t I know you loss all your trunks on de''Scusco, an''was n''t you a pore gal, teachin''white folks''s chilluns fur a livin''before? |
12453 | Does she never come here? |
12453 | Does the quality called presence of mind find root in the same source that impels us to apt quotation?--"What if the lion in his rage I meet? |
12453 | Does you hear de cherubs squallin''Wat''s settin''on de gate? |
12453 | Does you hear de chickens crowin''? |
12453 | Does you hear de prophets callin''? |
12453 | Does you hear de rain a- fallin''? |
12453 | Does you hear de win''a blowin''? |
12453 | Does you see de niggars hoein''? |
12453 | Does you see it, honey?" |
12453 | Does you think dar is such tings, sure enough, Mirry?" |
12453 | Englehart?" |
12453 | Englehart?" |
12453 | Evelyn Erie is rich, Miriam Monfort is poor; why need I add another word? |
12453 | Garth?" |
12453 | Garth?" |
12453 | Gregory?" |
12453 | Had I not suffered sufficiently? |
12453 | Had Wentworth spoken, then? |
12453 | Had he been there, indeed, in spiritual presence? |
12453 | Had he heard me? |
12453 | Had he her lovely eyes? |
12453 | Had the ship''s doctor no name, then, that they never mentioned it, and that he spoke in a demon''s voice? |
12453 | Had you not better retire now?" |
12453 | Has Captain Falconer declared himself too soon? |
12453 | Has any thing occurred since that time to mar your good understanding?" |
12453 | Has he a false key I wonder, and are we above- stairs, with unlocked doors, subject to his visitations, should it occur to him to make them?" |
12453 | Has he been lecturing you, too? |
12453 | Has he not said the seed of the just man should never know want or beg bread? |
12453 | Have they not told you of me? |
12453 | Have you ever crossed the waters, Miss Miriam? |
12453 | Have you had one of your spells?" |
12453 | Have you no memory of having revived before?" |
12453 | Have you not noticed the irregularity of our Washington papers?" |
12453 | Have you studied him, Miss Monfort?" |
12453 | Have you sufficient light?" |
12453 | He is in love, I believe, but with whom I ca n''t conjecture,"and he glanced askance at Evelyn and me.--"Can you assist me, ladies?" |
12453 | He is sick with a chill, we hear, and his wife is again ill.""Who did the marketing?" |
12453 | Heh? |
12453 | How did you know her first intentions-- have there been other letters?" |
12453 | How far are such responsible? |
12453 | How much would dat watch and chain be worth, honey?" |
12453 | How often must I warn you?" |
12453 | How would you like this, Miriam,"patting my shoulder,"just for a change?" |
12453 | I asked at last, in a voice feeble as an infant''s,"and what are those steps below? |
12453 | I asked, after studying his countenance for a moment;"or, are you again desirous to try the nerves of your female passengers? |
12453 | I asked;"the captain, was he there?" |
12453 | I had thought from your face you were stronger; besides, the pumps are doing good work in the hold: who knows what may come of it, who knows?" |
12453 | I have done nothing so very wicked, I hope, as to exclude me from my Father''s face forever-- have you? |
12453 | I promise you faithfully.--But what is this?" |
12453 | I questioned;"you are at home in this house, whosesoever it may be?" |
12453 | I reiterated louder; and I smiled at the idea that suggested itself--"have reptiles souls?" |
12453 | I saw no more-- I would not witness more-- for had I not learned already all that I asked or ought to know? |
12453 | I should need clothing; and_ how_ secure and convey away my trunk unseen by Evelyn? |
12453 | I tells you all; his bref mos knocked me down, but I did n''t see no pipe?" |
12453 | I think you, too, studied a little Latin, Miriam?" |
12453 | I wonder wat my ole man''ll say ef he ebber sees me comin''back agin wid a bag full ob money? |
12453 | I would have said in the strange, calm bitterness that possessed my soul:"What value has life to you and your deformed one? |
12453 | If He do n''t care, who need care?--An''t I right, old mammy?" |
12453 | If he were sublime, do you suppose all the world would read him or go to see his plays? |
12453 | If not of him, what is it, Evelyn, that makes your face like a stone mask of late-- once all life and joy?" |
12453 | If you prefer courtesy to comfort, you shall be gratified; but what''s the use of ceremony with Gregory? |
12453 | In order to do this, I might have to wait, and in the mean time how should I deport myself, how conceal my change of feeling from his observant eyes? |
12453 | In power of thought, beauty of expression, what comparison is there? |
12453 | In the mean while tell me, has Mr. Bainrothe been here to- day?" |
12453 | Is all hope over, or was it only a dream?" |
12453 | Is he large or small, light or dark, and does he smoke a pipe''?" |
12453 | Is it about my father? |
12453 | Is it for another''s sake you have felt so very indignant? |
12453 | Is it not splendid, Marion?" |
12453 | Is my health to be unconsidered?" |
12453 | Is n''t it bad enough to feel so?" |
12453 | Is n''t it strange, the influence those little cottony women get over their husbands? |
12453 | Is n''t that a great difference?" |
12453 | Is n''t this a strange, quaint volume, to set before a king? |
12453 | Is not that appropriate-- our little link of sisterhood? |
12453 | Is not that right, Miriam?" |
12453 | Is not that word a very comprehensive one? |
12453 | Is she ill or only nervous?" |
12453 | Is that my characteristic? |
12453 | Is that the idea, Evelyn?" |
12453 | It was as if a snake should weep, and what in Nature could be more affecting than such a spectacle? |
12453 | Just from college, and very young; what can he know of life? |
12453 | Love''s toil, I know, is little cost; Love''s perjury is light sin; But souls that lose what I have lost, What have they left to win?''" |
12453 | Mine was in store, but how could he dream of this? |
12453 | Miss Harz?" |
12453 | Miss Miriam, what''s the use of promising for one afternoon, when I have taken the best of care of her all her life? |
12453 | Miss Monfort,"he said;"will you not bid me a kind, a pardoning farewell?" |
12453 | Moreover, what merit would there be in faith or fortitude? |
12453 | Mrs. Austin will be here in a moment now; what will she think of you? |
12453 | My diamonds must be secreted or disposed of-- how should this be done? |
12453 | My trunk-- will you be so kind as to unlock it and give me out the tray-- that picture? |
12453 | Nay, did not Bainrothe himself do all he could to convince him of it, and induce him to invest in its stocks? |
12453 | Nay, what manhood would there have been in consigning you to such a fate as awaited penniless wife of mine? |
12453 | Nice fellows, are they not?" |
12453 | No? |
12453 | Not going to get up, Miss Miriam? |
12453 | Now, how do you like my son?" |
12453 | Now, is not that being literal, Miriam?" |
12453 | Now, tell me candidly-- much depends on the truth-- has any one been unkind?" |
12453 | Now, wo n''t it be a lovely idea? |
12453 | O friends, have you forgotten me?" |
12453 | Of course, I must adopt another name-- what should it be? |
12453 | Or is it the same blood? |
12453 | Or, rather, what_ out_ of Nature? |
12453 | Pemberton?" |
12453 | Pemberton?" |
12453 | Poor, widowed, sickly, and despised, why should you wish to live? |
12453 | Raise those feline eyes to mine, if you dare, and answer me truthfully: What means this mockery? |
12453 | Read''Thanatopsis,''or are you acquainted with it already? |
12453 | Remember Byron and Miss Chaworth-- how was it with them? |
12453 | Say, are you better?" |
12453 | See how skillfully I avoided that fallen branch-- suppose I were to be spiteful, and upset you against this stump?" |
12453 | See, I have brought you von lettair; now vat will you do to reward me?" |
12453 | Shall I keep on with Bertie, now that the theme has possession of me, and go back to the others when she is finally dismissed? |
12453 | She has what they used to call in England''blue blood in her veins;''do you understand, Miriam? |
12453 | She is coming to herself fast, and what will she think of such expressions? |
12453 | She is well, I hope?" |
12453 | Should I not have dared every thing, rather than have so openly yielded my authority?" |
12453 | Since, how heart moves brain, and how both move hand, What mortal ever in entirety saw? |
12453 | So this is where he keeps my gold,"I thought;"but how did he find ingress into our castle, supposed at least to be inaccessible by night? |
12453 | Suppose Miriam Monfort neither comes in person nor sends her order for its restoration-- what, then, is to become of this treasure- chest of hers?" |
12453 | Suppose he were to die suddenly, how does he know that I would ever be the wiser or the better of these deposits? |
12453 | Tell me the truth, Miriam-- who has done this devil''s mischief?" |
12453 | That is n''t exactly Scripture, but near enough, do n''t you think so?" |
12453 | That watch was very little compared to what I possess outside of these prison- walls, and these possessions--""Whar is dey, honey? |
12453 | That''s the idea, is it?" |
12453 | The lady above- stairs is indeed magnificent; but, Miriam, where is Bertie?" |
12453 | The lady of his choice( or heart?) |
12453 | The question is, might they not jar occasionally?" |
12453 | Then, how would it fare with me, beggared indeed? |
12453 | There is such a thing as training one''s features, is n''t there, as well as one''s setters? |
12453 | Three hours-- were they not enough? |
12453 | Unless I could prove that he had removed the treasure for unworthy uses-- why speak of it at all? |
12453 | Very well, I shall not forget that; but pray, what particular advantage in this respect does a country- school present?" |
12453 | Was I betrayed? |
12453 | Was I not on my way to him in whose presence alone I lived my true life? |
12453 | Was he tall or short, fair or dark? |
12453 | Was it his beloved presence, his dear hand, that were to be made the prize of my silence and submission? |
12453 | Was it his hand that had left that band about my brow-- that surging in my brain-- that weight upon my heart? |
12453 | Was it not strange that up to this very moment no suspicion had clouded my horizon since I woke in that sumptuous room? |
12453 | Was the bitter pill of humiliation I was now swallowing to be gilded thus? |
12453 | Was there ever waste like that since Cleopatra dissolved her pearl in vinegar?" |
12453 | Wat does dat mean, honey?" |
12453 | Well, what do you say to Shelley?" |
12453 | Well, whose business was that but God''s? |
12453 | Were such musical bells duplicated in adjacent cities? |
12453 | Were they not, in the fullness of their power, to crush and baffle me? |
12453 | What am I to think of such caprice?" |
12453 | What becomes of his promises? |
12453 | What can have occurred to impress you thus? |
12453 | What children did she leave?" |
12453 | What could I do? |
12453 | What court poet of his day, Major Favraud, compared with Robert Burns for feeling, fire, and pathos? |
12453 | What did that little vigilant creature ever fail to remark? |
12453 | What do you suppose American girls would care for that? |
12453 | What does He make them so sweet for if He does not expect us to love them dearly-- His little angels on earth? |
12453 | What does this tariff promise? |
12453 | What full orchestra surpassed Coleridge for harmony and brilliancy of effect? |
12453 | What has occurred to change you? |
12453 | What has poor Claude been guilty of?" |
12453 | What higher eulogium could I bestow, or"--dropping his voice--"what higher compliment pay you, Miriam?" |
12453 | What house is this in which I find myself a prisoner? |
12453 | What if I were to assure that this plan had been agitated?" |
12453 | What is it? |
12453 | What keeps you there so long?" |
12453 | What life- long hardships does this condition not impose? |
12453 | What mischief are you two hatching?" |
12453 | What more can he do for or against us now? |
12453 | What more has occurred? |
12453 | What more remained? |
12453 | What mortal voice like to Shelley''s? |
12453 | What of the climate-- what of the people-- what of the court? |
12453 | What power had I to execute it, even if uttered? |
12453 | What put that into your head?" |
12453 | What queen, bethink you, whose likeness you have seen? |
12453 | What then, Basil Bainrothe-- what then?" |
12453 | What time is it now?" |
12453 | What was there to be done? |
12453 | What were these circumstances to which she so haughtily referred? |
12453 | What_ was_ the matter, Miriam? |
12453 | When did you see her last? |
12453 | When we reach New York, you shall know every thing: or is it, indeed, to that place this ship is bound?" |
12453 | Where is Captain Van Dorne? |
12453 | Where was Franklin?" |
12453 | Where will the loss fall crushingly? |
12453 | Where will the profit rest? |
12453 | Where, now, is your boasted consistency?" |
12453 | Where, then, was the place of my captivity situated? |
12453 | Which shall it be, a chally or barege?" |
12453 | Which will you have, Bainrothe? |
12453 | Whither? |
12453 | Who and what was she? |
12453 | Who are you, to prevent me? |
12453 | Who carried her note?" |
12453 | Who charms like Wordsworth? |
12453 | Who could prove otherwise?" |
12453 | Who ever sung such siren strains as Moore, a simple Irishman of low degree? |
12453 | Who has dared to delegate to you what has no existence as far as I am concerned?" |
12453 | Who has inspired you with such opinions of me?" |
12453 | Who is she, I wonder, Evelyn; did you ever hear her speak of her kinfolks? |
12453 | Who is this young lady?" |
12453 | Who knows more than I on this subtle subject? |
12453 | Who knows what becomes of the soul when the body is wrapped in stupor or sleep, any more than when it is dead? |
12453 | Who paints panoramas like Southey? |
12453 | Who sent these flowers, by- the- by, Mrs. Clayton? |
12453 | Who shall gainsay me? |
12453 | Who was with you?" |
12453 | Who, then, shall penetrate the mysteries of divine intention? |
12453 | Who_ was_ that man?" |
12453 | Whom does she resemble, Wardour? |
12453 | Why am I so weak, and what are you doing here? |
12453 | Why did I triumph in the strength of guile that desperation gave me, rather than sink abashed and penitent beneath it? |
12453 | Why did he not mention this to me? |
12453 | Why encumber me?" |
12453 | Why have you been forced on me at all? |
12453 | Why is it that, in times like these, such conceits beset us, such comparisons arise? |
12453 | Why not reveal to me at once the secret of the spring and the lock, as I only am to be the beneficiary of all this gold? |
12453 | Why resent this, and scorn me for my humility? |
12453 | Why seek to shake my confidence in the man I love? |
12453 | Why should I hate you, Mrs. Clayton? |
12453 | Why should I seal my soul away in endless gloom, because one man, out of all Adam''s race, was faithless and falsehearted?" |
12453 | Why was not the fate of Ananias or Sapphira mine after that false utterance? |
12453 | Why?" |
12453 | Will he not share with me? |
12453 | Will the raven never come back? |
12453 | Will you have some food now? |
12453 | Would Caleb send them on our track, or would the better part of valor come to his aid and save me from their clutches? |
12453 | Would He forsake us now? |
12453 | Would he come? |
12453 | Would n''t you like one for a pet, Miss Harz?" |
12453 | Yet helping us to all we seem to hear, For, how else know we save by worth of word?" |
12453 | You could not have procured a better watchman, surely; but why have you watched at all?" |
12453 | You dare to hope this?" |
12453 | You do n''t keer nothing about seeing of it, do you, now?" |
12453 | You do n''t think it amounts to that, do you? |
12453 | You have heard of Hercules Prang?" |
12453 | You remember the knights of fable?" |
12453 | You remember the stress I laid on this?" |
12453 | You will sit down again, Miriam, will you not?" |
12453 | a small volcanic island? |
12453 | a whale? |
12453 | a wreck? |
12453 | and Barry Cornwall?" |
12453 | and Leigh Hunt? |
12453 | and Mabel-- do you know my little sister?" |
12453 | and Moore? |
12453 | and Mrs. Hemans? |
12453 | and do you hesitate, on account of Miss Moore? |
12453 | and how do you like my lecture delivered_ extempore?_". |
12453 | and what feeling of his morbid fancy was there that my hand could not smooth away, when once entwined in his? |
12453 | as John Gilpin said, or some one of him-- which was it?" |
12453 | darest thou kill Caius Marius?" |
12453 | did they mean to turn the tables, then, and destroy me by anticipating my evidence? |
12453 | did you think I charged you to watch every one who came, so earnestly, to stay here so constantly, without a good and sufficient reason? |
12453 | had I indeed become the sport of fiends? |
12453 | has it come to this?" |
12453 | have you nothing to say to this strange lady?" |
12453 | he said, in eager tones,"you care for me still-- a little?" |
12453 | how can you treat me with such heartless levity?" |
12453 | king of a neighborhood;--what great difference is there, after all? |
12453 | or do they belong to the magnificence of this idealized hotel?" |
12453 | or do you prefer Rhine wines?" |
12453 | suppose my terrible foe sees fit to interfere,''Epilepsy,''as Evelyn called it, and perhaps with reason-- God alone knows!--what then? |
12453 | there was not even a familiar dog to bark and determine the vexed question,"Is this I?" |
12453 | were you that lady?" |
12453 | what am I talking about? |
12453 | what are you muttering about-- don''t you hear Mrs. Raymond knocking? |
12453 | what can the wretch mean?) |
12453 | what did I tell you, Mrs. Austin? |
12453 | what put such a strange fancy into your head? |
12453 | what will Ernie do for Mirry?" |
12453 | why do you return to a theme so bitter and profitless to both? |
12453 | why was I ever placed in hands like these? |
12453 | you make calembourgs, my good doctor.--What do you call them, Favraud? |
45973 | Ai nt it won- der- ful? |
45973 | Ai nt sech a tough looker as we know he is, eh, ole pal? |
45973 | Any fambly as yeou heard of? |
45973 | Are you through eating? |
45973 | As what? |
45973 | Beat what? |
45973 | Bully boy, Jack; I''m tickled pink to hear such good news; when do we move in, tell me? |
45973 | Could anybody think up a finer and safer location for such an illegal plant than up here, where they could carry on their work without molestation? 45973 Dead certain be yeou, Jack?" |
45973 | Did yeou hear it? |
45973 | Dinner knocking harder than customary; or did you get a letter from your best girl, breaking off the engagement? 45973 Does that mean he might be fetchin''a last hour message, Jack?" |
45973 | First tell me, was the ship okay? |
45973 | Get a bite? |
45973 | Get through with your list, partner? |
45973 | Haow come, buddy? |
45973 | He must a been a fair good chap then, I guess, partner, eh, what? |
45973 | I hope you did what I told you to-- eat a good lunch while you had the opportunity? |
45973 | I notices, Jack, as haow yeou allers say_ down here_ when yeou mentions this cave; haow do yeou make that aout, partner? |
45973 | I reckon you''re referring to our old friend, Cool Slim Garrabrant, eh, Perk? |
45973 | I remember how furious you were, and saying it was a shame to be cheated that way, eh, Perk? |
45973 | If you do n''t expect him to swallow it what then, partner? |
45973 | Jest hear the people a shoutin''will yeou? |
45973 | Jest so, partner,Perk instantly commented;"an''what air yeou agoin''to pass on to me, I wanter know?" |
45973 | Just fishing again, eh, Perk-- want to know what I think covering the game, is n''t that so? 45973 Kin we climb daown outen this tree naow, partner?" |
45973 | Kinder reckon on makin''the jump then, air yeou, boss? |
45973 | Meanin'', I kinder guess, as heow that party might be in the Secret Service like we air-- does that fill the bill, Jack? |
45973 | Meanin''it''s the end o''a perfect day, eh, what? |
45973 | Meaning the earth, I reckon, eh, Perk? |
45973 | More organization stuff, eh? |
45973 | Naow whatever kin yeou mean by that same remark, Jack, ole boy? |
45973 | Not any, partner,he told Perk, resolutely;"what do you take me for, a weakling, or a shirker? |
45973 | Nothing else you noticed, partner? |
45973 | Ready, all? |
45973 | Remember my telling you about that cook chap they''ve got, waiting on them, and all that, Perk? |
45973 | Say, doant tell me yeou run acrost that big hill- billy o''a grizzly, Jack? |
45973 | Say, have heart, wo nt yeou, partner, an''please do n''t aggravate the situation so bad? 45973 Say, what_ would n''t_ I give right naow if on''y I could ketch that confident spirit my best pal''s got mixed up in his mind an''heart?" |
45973 | Seems like there ai nt nawthin''we kin do to make things easier, eh, buddy? |
45973 | Show tonight, Jack? |
45973 | Simeon-- Simeon Balderson? |
45973 | So you reckoned he was some interested in us, did you, Perk? 45973 So, that''s the wonderful Hawk, is it, partner?" |
45973 | Some important, I takes it, buddy? |
45973 | Somethin''o''a mob here tonight, partner? |
45973 | Still o''the opinion the kid might be his''n? |
45973 | Storm agoin''to hold us up, mebbe naow, partner? |
45973 | Sure thing, Jack, but did n''t he manage a wonderful landin'', an''keep from a bad smashup, on''y hurtin''his shoulder in the jam? |
45973 | Sure thing, Jack; then I kinder guess the letter must be from Headquarters? |
45973 | That''s what he''s adoin''then, yeou figger, eh, Jack? |
45973 | The first job we''re going to tackle is along the line of making a safe and sane landing-- you get that of course, Perk? |
45973 | Then do yeou guess they knowed we was ahead on the same track, eh, Jack, ole hoss? |
45973 | Then what_ does_ ail you, boy-- something gone wrong with your plans-- can I do anything to ease the strain? 45973 Then you recognize it from the brief description he gave on the side of his tissue- paper chart, do you, Perk?" |
45973 | Then you say it''s a portrait of Slim Garrabrant? |
45973 | Then-- yeou_ know_ him, I''m understandin''boy? |
45973 | We were talking about a certain scoundrel who''s name we''ve seen so often of late in the papers-- remember, Perk? |
45973 | Well, what''s aour programme agoin''to be? |
45973 | What puts you in the dumps so, Perk? |
45973 | What''s eating you, buddy? |
45973 | What''s happened here? |
45973 | What''s in the wind this time? |
45973 | What''s that, partner? |
45973 | Which tree? |
45973 | Which would mean we got some hours to kill,''fore mornin''comes along to give us a show fur aour money, eh, Jack, ole boy? |
45973 | Why not, when they''ve pulled off some mighty big shake- downs during the last few months, and must have raked in a heap of dough? 45973 Why waste any more time when there''s no need?" |
45973 | Wonder what time it kin be, Jack; caint get a peep at my wrist watch in all this darkness, yeou know? |
45973 | Yeah, yeou said it, partner-- I kinder guess naow it was a ship up here in this same sea we''re buzzin''through, do n''t yeou? |
45973 | Yeou doant kinder guess Simeon he might give us away in his excitement, eh, partner? |
45973 | Yeou says as haow yeou knowed this guy Simeon some, did n''t yeou, partner? |
45973 | Yeou_ would_ do jest that, ole pal, would n''t yeou? 45973 You mean that sound in the fog pack, do n''t you?" |
45973 | You seem to know some one, Perk, from what you''re saying? |
45973 | You''re going to know everything that I do, Perk; that goes without question; for how could we work together as a team if we pulled contrarywise? |
45973 | Ai nt that time come''raound yet, buddy?" |
45973 | And then, when they had a good grist of bogus stuff to scatter over the western country, how easy to send it out aboard that swift airship? |
45973 | But I wonder--""What do you wonder, Perk?" |
45973 | But did yeou happen to hear a ship takin''off jest after we slid aout, boss?" |
45973 | But like as not we orter be makin''up aour plans, had n''t we, Jack?" |
45973 | But the devil of it is, can he ever be retaken? |
45973 | CHAPTER VIII THE WINGED MESSENGER"Coast seems to be clear, eh, Jack?" |
45973 | CHAPTER XXV SQUATTERS''RIGHTS"Yeou doan''t reckon as haow anybody kin see a fire, if so be I started a little blaze back in here, do yeou, partner?" |
45973 | Do we get a move on right away, mate?" |
45973 | Forgive it, Perk, wo nt you?" |
45973 | Get out, and stay out, d''ye hear, boy?" |
45973 | Get that, do you?" |
45973 | Get that, pard?" |
45973 | Goin''doawn, are yeou, Jack?" |
45973 | Haow dye like that swipe, I''m askin''o''yeou,--a sweet upper- cut I got a copyright on? |
45973 | Haow far''bout do yeou figger goin''on this tack, I want to know?" |
45973 | Haow''bout the next move, sense it seems we''ve got this far okay?" |
45973 | Honest Injun, neow, Jack, ai n''t yeou any idea when we''re apt to grab an order to get goin''again?" |
45973 | How about it, Perk?" |
45973 | How yeou gittin''on with things, Jack?" |
45973 | How''bout the kid-- dye kinder guess he''ll have a bad time with that leg?" |
45973 | I get yeou, buddy-- meanin''the queer pass that''s so narrow three hossmen could n''t enter abreast-- is that straight, Jack?" |
45973 | I see you''re trying to keep him from swilling it down, Perk; must have some object in letting the stuff run all over his back as you''re doing?" |
45973 | I wonder neow could it be them gluttonus birds they been pickin''the bones o''thet poor Simeon what disappeared''raound this section o''kentry? |
45973 | I wonder--""What neow, Jack?" |
45973 | If it keeps on we''ll be apt to forget heow to handle a ship, an''get air shy-- neow_ would n''t_ that same be a tough joke on us poor guys?" |
45973 | Lay off, partner, an''gimme a run fur my money, wo n''t yeou?" |
45973 | Naow, what''s next on the programme, tell me?" |
45973 | Put your arms around my neck, and I''ll be able to hold you better-- that''s the way, kiddie; you know I''m a good friend of yours, do n''t you?" |
45973 | Ready to start on aour way, be yeou, partner?" |
45973 | S''pose it does that same, what''s bound to happen to us dicks runnin''wild up here, I want to know?" |
45973 | See anybody yeou happens to know''round here partner?" |
45973 | Some galoots air built that way, yeou savvy? |
45973 | Think that happy day ever will come, Jack?" |
45973 | We could n''t play our hands if the man we want so badly has gone off with his crowd, to hold up some bank, or treasure train, could we? |
45973 | We jest got to do aour best, an''leave the rest-- aint I been adoin''that same mighty near all my whole life? |
45973 | What could it all mean, I wonder?" |
45973 | What in tarnation kin_ he_ be doin''out this way-- yeou do n''t figger he''s goin''to butt in on aour job, do yeou?" |
45973 | What''s the answer, Jack?" |
45973 | Who knows where he lives?" |
45973 | Yeou ai n''t agoin''to stagger me by sayin''that this here cook might be_ him_?" |
45973 | Yeou mean that boob was no other than Slippery Slim hisself, the Ole Scratch we''re runnin''after right at this minute, doant yeou, partner mine? |
45973 | ai nt it awful thick, though?" |
45973 | allers is some kinder drawback to every game I hatch up-- we ai nt got any rope fur a fack; which is too bad, ai nt it? |
45973 | baby, ai nt the fur bound to fly when I get workin''my jaws reg''lar onct again?" |
45973 | boy?" |
45973 | but ai nt this jest grand?" |
45973 | but_ did_ yeou ever hear o''sech great luck in all yeour born days? |
45973 | c''n yeou beat it, partner?" |
45973 | did yeou_ ever_ see sech a buster o''a bar?" |
45973 | do n''t be so het up an''greedy, Mister; I sure ai nt atryin''to get yeou soaked-- seems like he''s quite took to the bottle, do n''t it, Jack?" |
45973 | doant it beat the Dutch, Jack, haow chumps like that kin lick up all the cream on a pan o''milk, leavin''the skim stuff to honest folks? |
45973 | does that mean yeou got a squint o''somethin''worth while, partner?" |
45973 | he muttered, just loud enough for Jack to hear him,"so_ that''s_ what took ole Nat outen San Diego, was it? |
45973 | ole boy, do yeou smell it a''ready, to be makin''sech faces at me? |
45973 | partner, does that same mean we kin get started this very night to make contact with Simeon?" |
45973 | that''s a familiar sound I''m picking up, eh, what, Perk?" |
45973 | then yeou been a nosin''''raound this queer hole back o''the cliff, an''mebbe run acrost somethin''wuth knowin'', eh, what, partner?" |
45973 | things_ do_ seem to be headin''aour way, do n''t they though, Jack? |
45973 | wake me up somebody, wo nt yeou kindly?" |
45973 | what''s in the wind now, I want to know?" |
45973 | why caint a gink do a simple thing like we done without people wantin''to gush over him? |
45973 | why did yeou ever mention sech a thing, Pal Jack? |
48291 | ''Nough? |
48291 | All these of the best, the finest, n''est ce pas? |
48291 | Any jewelry? |
48291 | Any money? |
48291 | Ask whom? |
48291 | But what is his name? |
48291 | Could we signal the stockade? |
48291 | Do n''t wash my face? |
48291 | Do they know he has had the fire- water moved away? |
48291 | Do you know how to spell? |
48291 | Do you mean to tell me that you dressed up in your city wigs and furbelows? 48291 Do you suppose that it will be right for me to keep this knife?" |
48291 | Guilty or not guilty? |
48291 | Hav''n''t you got your knife? |
48291 | How many acres? |
48291 | If we trail alone, do you suppose the Indians will scalp us-- you and me? |
48291 | Is that poetry? |
48291 | Is the defendant ready? |
48291 | May I have it for mine? |
48291 | Out of breath, Doby? |
48291 | Well, then, why did n''t you come this time? |
48291 | What are those long ditches? |
48291 | What became of them? |
48291 | What did they do? |
48291 | What do you mean? |
48291 | What if it gets dangerous? |
48291 | What if the buck chews these trees? |
48291 | What shall I do? |
48291 | When? |
48291 | Who did it? |
48291 | Who has it? |
48291 | Who is this wonderful hunter? |
48291 | Who? |
48291 | Whom have we here, Doby? |
48291 | Why not? |
48291 | Why? |
48291 | Why? |
48291 | Will they believe what he tells them? |
48291 | You fought with the other Long Hunters at New Orleans, did n''t you? |
48291 | You got land, did n''t you? |
48291 | You want to stay with me, do n''t you? |
48291 | Afterward, Doby had asked of his father:"Why did you give Francis Vigo money in such a way that he had to take it? |
48291 | And for whom do more friends rise up than for the persecuted? |
48291 | And you want them to vote for James Monroe for President, do n''t you?" |
48291 | Are you Johnny Appleseed? |
48291 | But what are four miles to a hunter? |
48291 | But where was there not danger? |
48291 | But who could forget the services of these men through that trying time? |
48291 | But why should she be afraid of them? |
48291 | Ca n''t we wait and ask him for it?" |
48291 | Deer? |
48291 | Did he run? |
48291 | Do n''t you know that seedlings can never grow up to be trees and bear fruit if you tear the fence and reach over and bite their heads off?" |
48291 | Doby whispered back,"Has he told them that he took the money and the papers worth money to Fort Wayne?" |
48291 | Doby, close on their heels, heard them ask the same question of each in turn,"Are you going to Cincinnati?" |
48291 | Dog? |
48291 | For two or three hours all he got out of the hole was some scraps of conversation like this:"Any gold?" |
48291 | For what Indian did not know Francis Vigo? |
48291 | Fox? |
48291 | Have you got one?" |
48291 | He asked the boy,"Be ye Obadiah Holman?" |
48291 | How can we thank them more appropriately for the treasures they give us, than by imitating the sincerity of their lives? |
48291 | How could she"give out"words with nothing but moonlight to show her the printed page? |
48291 | How did the Virginia slave happen to be here and not with the wagons? |
48291 | I wonder if they have any partnership rules about bears? |
48291 | If Aaron Burr wished to help free Mexico from the Spanish, why was n''t it right for him to try it? |
48291 | If the safe end of the gun had done this to him, what might not its full cannon force have done to the bear? |
48291 | If this country is so old-- old-- old, why do we call it the new West?" |
48291 | In the wilderness?" |
48291 | Is the State ready?" |
48291 | Next day, the white man, all frowns, says to the Indian,''What d''you mean, making yourself to hum on my ground? |
48291 | Oh, would n''t he? |
48291 | Own one and nine one hundred and seventy- eighth part of the proceeds? |
48291 | Put the money in the bank? |
48291 | Scandalized Doby almost whispered,"Do you mean that he probably has n''t any money except what you gave him?" |
48291 | Starting orchards for settlers? |
48291 | Still, he asked,"How will he know which way to go?" |
48291 | Teaching''em how to make trees grow?" |
48291 | The Indian answered,"How?" |
48291 | The boy looked out on such a curious scene that he asked of himself,"Where am I, Doby?" |
48291 | To give his wife and son a chance to collect their wits, the father queried:"Who were the first white folks to come to this part of the country? |
48291 | Was n''t it lucky there happened to be one over where the Muskingum River comes into the Ohio? |
48291 | Was there any way in which a boy could help her? |
48291 | What are a few scratches and bumps? |
48291 | What are bruises and cuts? |
48291 | What boy could resist such a challenge? |
48291 | What boy has not in fancy joined Daniel Boone when he held in his hand the key to this wondrous portal? |
48291 | What chance had Doby against such skill-- against any grown boy? |
48291 | What difference did it make how many there were of them? |
48291 | What good work had not these uniforms seen? |
48291 | What harm can she do? |
48291 | What if they had failed? |
48291 | What if they should not come down again? |
48291 | What more do you want?" |
48291 | What ought I to do now?" |
48291 | What patriotic duties had not these scouts been in? |
48291 | What was that sound? |
48291 | What were they hunting for? |
48291 | What''s the use of all this talk?" |
48291 | What_ are_ they doing?" |
48291 | When two settlers met, the most important greeting was,"Ketched the agur yit?" |
48291 | Where did you come from?" |
48291 | Who wants copper bracelets?" |
48291 | Why do they call it a''knob,''I wonder? |
48291 | Why not? |
48291 | Why should n''t they man a fleet for him? |
48291 | Why should that note of sadness creep into his sigh? |
48291 | Why was he always so foolish as to set his hopes on the one thing that was beyond reach? |
48291 | Why was he weeping? |
48291 | Why were guns so expensive? |
48291 | Will it save you?" |
48291 | Will this mark save me? |
48291 | [ Illustration: EACH SAVAGE GIBED AT THE BOY''S PAINTED TALISMAN, BUT EACH OBEYED ITS MESSAGE] What was that sound? |
48291 | _ I want my own things!_ Be sensible and sell the fur for money? |
48291 | shouted Doby, not at all surprised to see that his father and the parson had followed him and were now near enough to ask,"What are you up to?" |
59021 | ''Can you talk from my palace to your zeriba?'' 59021 ''How do you know?'' |
59021 | ''If a man is holding a tiger by the tail, which is the best for his personal safety-- to hold on or let go?'' |
59021 | ''What is that?'' 59021 And you say the people at the Cape raise ostriches now as they would raise horses or sheep, do you?" |
59021 | But are there not other tribes of Africans of about the same proportions? |
59021 | But can the zebra be tamed, and made to work, like his long- eared cousin? |
59021 | But how about the rivers that flow into the Victoria N''yanza? |
59021 | But how does the ostrich like to have his feathers taken from him? |
59021 | But how''ll you manage to take your gas from the receiver to the king''s palace? |
59021 | But they still have slavery in Egypt, do they not? |
59021 | Do n''t you remember,said Frank,"that it was so named by Stanley in honor of his boat, the_ Lady Alice_?" |
59021 | Do they have cups and saucers, plates, knives and forks, and other table things, as we do? |
59021 | Does it come from the same basin, or does it have another origin? |
59021 | Has all the baggage been sent to the boat? |
59021 | Have n''t we several imitations of ivory already? 59021 Have n''t you heard,"said Fred,"the rhyme that somebody once made for it? |
59021 | His horn is a powerful weapon, I believe? |
59021 | How about Herodotus and Strabo? |
59021 | How about the Niger? |
59021 | How could that be? |
59021 | How did it happen? |
59021 | How is it made? |
59021 | How is it performed? |
59021 | How is it that men can travel where this fly abounds, if its bite is so deadly? |
59021 | How many boats do you want? |
59021 | How was that? |
59021 | How was that? |
59021 | I intend to go presently to Nice, Cannes, Mentone, Andalusia, or where? 59021 I suppose the small ones are for presents,"said Fred,"and the large one is to be exhibited on great occasions, when we have company?" |
59021 | I suppose you''ve thought of that, and will use charcoal? |
59021 | I suppose,said Frank,"that the gold from this part of Africa is the''Guinea gold''which we often read about?" |
59021 | Is he more dangerous than his black brother? |
59021 | That''s all right,replied his cousin;"but what shall we do with the other two islands? |
59021 | Then if you know Stamlee,said he,"I suppose you will want to do just as he did?" |
59021 | Then the Nile has its beginning at the outlet of the Victoria N''yanza? |
59021 | Then this was the southern limit of his journey, was it not? |
59021 | Was Bruce the first white man who ever saw the head- springs of the Blue Nile? |
59021 | What do you mean by''off color?'' |
59021 | What is that? |
59021 | What is that? |
59021 | What is that? |
59021 | What is that? |
59021 | What is the composition of ivory? |
59021 | What must we carry, then,Frank asked,"if bankers''credits are of no use, and coin does not circulate?" |
59021 | What will we do if he refuses? |
59021 | What would be the use? |
59021 | Where''ll you get it? |
59021 | Who is it? |
59021 | Why does it have the latter name? |
59021 | Why should they,said Fred,"when they live in a country where they do n''t need it? |
59021 | Would n''t it be possible for him to sell them to some of the native chiefs in such an emergency, instead of destroying them? |
59021 | You know what the showman said when the little girl asked which were the monkeys and which the hyenas? |
59021 | You know,said Frank, as soon as they were seated in their zeriba,"how gas is made for illuminating purposes?" |
59021 | You remember the Buck brothers, that spent a summer in our town once, do n''t you? |
59021 | You want boats to go to the end of the N''yanza? |
59021 | And now what do you suppose happened to Frank and Fred? |
59021 | But will the irregular line of the land serve us for a horizon, as the line between sea and sky serves the mariner?" |
59021 | Do you know for what Dahomey is famous?" |
59021 | Have they ever sent missionaries among the people?" |
59021 | Have you ever heard a definition of''gratitude''that is not to be found in any authorized dictionary?" |
59021 | Have you forgotten celluloid?" |
59021 | How are we to''throw the log''when travelling on land?" |
59021 | Is there any reason why they should n''t use him?" |
59021 | Livingstone was convinced that it ran into the Nile, was really the source of the Nile; and who would question even the theory of so great a master? |
59021 | Now, how''ll this do? |
59021 | Perhaps you never heard of a rain- maker? |
59021 | That must be Bumbireh right ahead of us, I suppose?" |
59021 | The natural inquiry that followed this announcement was,"Who are the Shillooks?" |
59021 | WHO WAS PAUL GRAYSON? |
59021 | Was n''t President Buchanan sometimes called''Old Buck,''by way of familiarity?" |
59021 | What do you suppose they were? |
59021 | What wonder is it that a population which can grow the banana is not inclined to industry? |
59021 | Who was she?" |
59021 | Would n''t it be nice if we had a boat like the_ Lady Alice_ for navigating the lake?" |
9805 | Billie, you devil,were his first words to me,"been puttin''the mail in the river, be ye?" |
9805 | For how much are your horses mortgaged? |
9805 | Joe,said I,"will you give me an affidavit of these facts, with the statement of Mr. Haynes to the Lieutenant?" |
9805 | Major,said Mr. Lambert,"will you not let Mr. Macauley state the facts to you again, in my presence, regarding this affair?" |
9805 | Now, Joe, do you think you can discharge a man without paying him off? |
9805 | Now,I said,"in what shape is the money?" |
9805 | So I understand, Mr. Hopkins, but will you tell me how many came in before night-- how many empty beds did you have while I lay ill with smallpox? |
9805 | Very true,said Mr. Service,"you have had use of the farm these long years, and would that compensate you for what you have paid out?" |
9805 | Well,Barnum said,"did n''t you take some pretty risky chances when you did this-- are you sure you wo n''t get us into some serious trouble?" |
9805 | What? |
9805 | After climbing down off of the coach, looking around for an escape(? |
9805 | At this, Major Pendelton suddenly woke up,"what''s that, you fellers are talking about?" |
9805 | Barnum approached me, saying,"Been up to some more of your tricks, have you, Billy?" |
9805 | Finally Joe asked me where I"was holding forth and what I was doing?" |
9805 | Finally he said,"Ho, there, ai n''t your name Billy, the boy who used to get along with the Indians so well, cuss your soul?" |
9805 | His next question was,"Do you know, or have you ever heard of Satanta, the great chief of the Kiowas?" |
9805 | I did not know it at that time, but the Indian afterwards asked me how I made it in? |
9805 | I told him I would take it, but I said,"How much do you want me to take?" |
9805 | If it is not water and a lake those buffalo are standing in, what in the name of sense is it?" |
9805 | Mr. Lambert advanced, with a salute, said:"At your service, Major Anthony, what can I do for you?" |
9805 | Mr. Moore rode on with us for an hour or two, then he asked me quite suddenly,"Are n''t you Billy Ryus?" |
9805 | Pretty soon the major came around and picked up the treasured package and quite sternly asked me,"Are you going to take care of this?" |
9805 | The robber took out the ten dollars and held it up, saying,"Is this what you referred to, conductor?" |
9805 | Then, he added,"Did you say he gave his safe keys to the robbers?" |
9805 | one said,"do our eyes really deceive us out here on these infernal plains? |
36047 | ''Prima- donna-- the principal female singer in an opera;''--and do they make lots of money? |
36047 | Ai n''t ye got no manners? 36047 Ai n''t you asleep yet, Lutts?" |
36047 | Air thet yo''--little Cap? |
36047 | Air yo''a goin''fer off, Lem? |
36047 | Air yo''a goin''t''run away an''marry me? 36047 Air yo''sho''I kin do it, honey?" |
36047 | Air yo''sho''he''s kilt? |
36047 | Air yore pap ready yet? |
36047 | Alone-- by myself? |
36047 | An''I got ole Hank-- Gawd''ll Moughty!--hain''t we''uns in luck? |
36047 | An''did n''t McGill try t''kill me jest yisterday? |
36047 | An''hain''t that the revenuer? |
36047 | An''whut air I heah fer t''-night? 36047 An''yo''''lowed yo''d git Belle- Ann, eh? |
36047 | And is he a very long, narrow gentleman? |
36047 | And now,observed Miss Worth,"is it right for Lem to kill the man?" |
36047 | Are you a cowboy or a preacher? |
36047 | At last-- you understand now, Belle- Ann? |
36047 | Belle- Ann, thet money''is all yo''ren,he blurted out,"an''all I make''s yo''ren, Belle- Ann; an''I want yo''t''run away with me an''marry me, eh? |
36047 | Belle- Ann,he cried hotly,"whut ails yo'', little gal; air hit some tuther bein''yo''love? |
36047 | Belle- Ann,she said,"would a bit of news before breakfast be distasteful?" |
36047 | Blinky,said the guard,"where''s Last Time?" |
36047 | Burton? |
36047 | But am I not at school heah? |
36047 | But can I be worth it-- could I ever-- ever-- be worth it? 36047 Captain,"he asked significantly,"is that fellow, Jutt Orlick, a friend of yours? |
36047 | Come now, little chap-- whut hev I done t''yo''--eh? |
36047 | Ded Sap plug yo'', Buddy? |
36047 | Ded he parley''bout long? |
36047 | Ded pap see Orlick? |
36047 | Ded yo''say yo''d hev a pinch o''breakfast, Buddy? |
36047 | Did n''t I say yo''oughter kilt em-- didn''t I tell yo''? |
36047 | Did you kill him? |
36047 | Do n''t yo''know hit''s the revenoor? |
36047 | Do n''t you know when I first saw you on that rock training that hawk to sit up, you kind of scared me? |
36047 | Ef I air lucky, an''kill em-- will yo''-all promise then, Belle- Ann? |
36047 | Eh? |
36047 | Foller me in, Buddy-- I''m aimin''to kick up some breakfast''bout now-- maybe yo''ll have a snack, eh? |
36047 | Gawd''llmoughty, Belle- Ann, yo''-all hain''t a- lowin''thet I do n''t want t''kill em, air yo''? |
36047 | Hain''t I th''onlyest Lutts? |
36047 | Hain''t yo''ole Cap Lutts''boy? |
36047 | Have a chew? |
36047 | Have ye got any tobacco on ye? |
36047 | Have yo''snooked with the revenuers below? |
36047 | Have you anything to say for yourself? |
36047 | How are you now? |
36047 | Howdy, little Cap-- how''s pickin''s? |
36047 | Howdy? 36047 Hurry up, Lutts-- don''t you hear''em? |
36047 | I air ole Cap Lutts''boy-- hain''t I, Lem? |
36047 | I got th''cart''ages-- we''ll draw-- I know yore a traitor-- but I got t''take a chanct on yo''--we''ll draw-- heer me? 36047 I hain''t fittin''--I hain''t fittin''--be I?" |
36047 | I mean, pal,pursued Lem''s inquisitor,"did ye git a sentence in this jail, er did they bind ye over?" |
36047 | I mought hev, Buddy,--but I wus powerful busy arguing with Orlick-- yo''sho''they got Sap? |
36047 | I said, have you got anything to say? |
36047 | I tol''ye so-- I tol''ye so-- I tol''ye so----"What ails yo''-all? |
36047 | I want yo''t''promise thet when yo''-all cums back t''home thet yo''ll marry me-- eh? |
36047 | I''low he air a hoodoo,observed Belle- Ann:"but he do look soldierfied, do n''t he, Lem?" |
36047 | I''m waiting to git my top- knot clipped-- I reckon ye would n''t want to lose your hair, would ye, pal? |
36047 | I''ve heard that song every night all my life, Grandpa; how did you- all know Slab, Grandpa? |
36047 | Is this the new duck? |
36047 | It do look uncommon extensive, do n''t it? |
36047 | Johnse Hatfield,began Lem solemnly,"could any man thet Gawd''ll Moughty made human lose all thet blood and not stay heah, on thes spot?--eh? |
36047 | Johnse-- Johnse-- air yo''kilt-- air yo''hurted bad----? |
36047 | Kin I have it? |
36047 | Lan''s sake''--what ails yo''--Slab? |
36047 | Lem-- didn''t I cross my heart that day and pledge you that I''d come back? |
36047 | Li''lle Amos-- he want Slab? |
36047 | Li''lle Amos-- li''lle Amos? |
36047 | Little Belle- Ann,he muttered, his joy crowding his words,"little gal, whut I knowed would come back----""Did I not cross my heart, Lem?" |
36047 | Maw loved these best of all, did n''t she, Lem? |
36047 | Maybe yo''rec''lect Buddy, when Don Perry wus laywayed on Pigeon Creek two months arter yo''pap wus kilt? 36047 Maybe-- fifty dollars a month?" |
36047 | My grandfather-- you- all ca n''t mean that Colonel Tennytown is my really grandfather? |
36047 | Not a bein''o''yo''-all darst lift a han''t''harm the revenuer-- not a han'', yo''heer? 36047 Now, looky heah, honey; yo''ai n''t gwine t''take on so, is you? |
36047 | Now, tell me why yo''ax dat-- jist tell Slab what fer yo''ax sich er sorry question noways? |
36047 | Oh, I would love to ride him-- may I ride him some time, Colonel? |
36047 | Oh, Orlick,she reiterated,"is thes all yore money? |
36047 | Oh, air he? |
36047 | Oh, yes-- is this your first pinch? |
36047 | Orlick,she began,"why do yo''-all cum t''see th''boys fo''--when you''re a drinkin''?" |
36047 | Orlick,she said,"how much do yo''''low is heah?" |
36047 | Orlick,she said,"why do n''t yo''-all stop traipsin''round an''snookin''below-- an''cum Sabbath an''jine pap''s church? |
36047 | Pears like yo''hain''t a carin''t''say much-- eh? |
36047 | Sap McGill-- McGill, here? |
36047 | Sap,he began,"how did yo''-all ever git out o''hell in th''first place-- eh? |
36047 | Say, pal, you ai n''t never been in jail before, have ye? |
36047 | Say-- air thet a tame snake yo''-all got thah-- eh? 36047 Say-- skunk-- we''ll draw fo''em both-- heer me?" |
36047 | Say-- when the bull frisked ye-- did he git all your matches-- ain''t ye got no matches either? |
36047 | Sho''--I bin a huntin''yo''--air yo''hit bad, Johnse? |
36047 | Slab, air thes my heart heah-- right heah? |
36047 | Slab, will yo''promise me somethin''? 36047 Slab-- have yo''gone plum offin''yore haid?" |
36047 | So it was left to you, eh? 36047 Surely-- he''s quite tall----""Did you ever hear him sing''Kitty Wells''?" |
36047 | Tell me-- tell me quick, where is McGill now? |
36047 | Then when these guys start in to talk, what do you hear? 36047 Then who air leader by rights-- who air th''head o''th''people-- who air Cap''in heah in Moon?" |
36047 | This is Mr. Lutts, I take it? |
36047 | Traitors like yo''hain''t hardly fittin''fo''hell-- yo he''pt kill Cap Lutts, did n''t yo''--eh?--didn''t yo''--eh? 36047 Wait''til I rest a minute, an''I''ll finish yo'', shore-- leastways, I plugged yo''gud-- eh?" |
36047 | Warn''t he layin''t''kill yo''--hain''t I bin watchin''em fo''mo''n a hour? |
36047 | Warn''t ole Cap Lutts my dad? |
36047 | We''ll all go down to Blue- Grass together now, wo n''t we, Lem? |
36047 | Whar''s yo''gun, pap? 36047 What ails yo'', Belle- Ann-- don''t yo''''low t''go?" |
36047 | What ded yo''leave em fer? |
36047 | What did they give ye, pal? |
36047 | What did you draw, Rox? |
36047 | What else could he be,interposed a new arrival,"but a preacher? |
36047 | What hev I done more''n cum an''go peaceable-- an''make more money than any of''em? 36047 What is it, grandpa?" |
36047 | What time ded Orlick cum? |
36047 | What you fixin''to do, Brizz? |
36047 | What you waitin''on? |
36047 | What''s the matter, Lutts? |
36047 | What''s the matter-- is that you,''20? |
36047 | What''s the rumpus here, Last Time? |
36047 | When-- yo''hain''t meanin''thet yo''talked to that devil? |
36047 | Where yo''-all bin-- hain''t I got ez much right to cum back ez yo''hev? |
36047 | Where''s my pap an''four brothers-- where''s Hank an''Bill an''Tom Orlick, an''Tod an''old Elijah Lutts Orlick? 36047 Who knows hit better''n yo''? |
36047 | Who yo''''low done thet? |
36047 | Who''s us, Miss Virginia? |
36047 | Who-- who, Johnse-- who? |
36047 | Who? |
36047 | Whut ails yo'', Lem? |
36047 | Whut do ail yo''anyways, Buddy-- eh? |
36047 | Whut do yo''-all want me to do? |
36047 | Whut makes yo''look so sorry-- air yo''re gal so powerful ugly? |
36047 | Whut yo''-all a runnin''fo''--eh? |
36047 | Whut yo''a runnin''roun''like a shot deer fo''? |
36047 | Whut, Lem? |
36047 | Whut-- Johnse-- whut? |
36047 | Why did n''t you kill Sap, Lem? |
36047 | Why do n''t yo''-all buy a mountain hoss? 36047 Why do n''t yo''shoot-- skunk-- coward?" |
36047 | Why do n''t yo''shoot? |
36047 | Why, Belle- Ann, yo''kin sho''promise me thes, cyan''t yo''now? |
36047 | Will yo''promise thes, Slab? |
36047 | Will yo''sho''kill th''ghost- man, Lem? |
36047 | Will you get in there? 36047 Wo n''t you put this life behind you, Lem, and come down where God has granted a paradise-- a paradise of peace? |
36047 | Yep-- hit do n''t hurt powerful bad though-- an''our men jest plugged Sap, jest now-- didn''t yo''-all heer th''shoots? |
36047 | Yes, Slab-- you- all did not forget, did you? |
36047 | Yo''-all ai n''t''lowin''to fix nothin''on Jutt Orlick-- on a Orlick, cap''n? |
36047 | Yo''-all do n''t''low I''d be tickled t''lose yo'', do yo''? 36047 Yo''-all heer me? |
36047 | Yo''air a new deputy, I''low-- hain''t yo'', sheriff? |
36047 | Yo''hain''t a gittin''down on me like th''tuther fools, air yo'', Belle- Ann? |
36047 | Yo''hain''t t''open yore haid, Buddy-- nary a word, yo''heah? |
36047 | Yo''know where_ they_ be"He kilt my maw-- he ded-- an''he kilt my pap"Who air th''head o''th''people-- who air Cap''in heah in Moon? |
36047 | Yo''must hev started frum th''ocean, did n''t yo''? |
36047 | Yo''re a meanun''t''go? |
36047 | Yo''re aimin''t''run in an''shet th''door on me, hain''t yo''? |
36047 | Yo''said yo''d show me his daid body, Johnse-- do yo''see hit? |
36047 | Yo''seed thet feller whut went out o''heah? 36047 Yo''wusn''t jest a lookin''fo''me-- eh-- Belle- Ann?" |
36047 | You do n''t doubt that I''ll shoot, do you? |
36047 | You let this new man alone-- do you get me? 36047 You mean-- mean across the ocean?" |
36047 | You old clothes thief,he hissed,"you rod- ridin'', cheap, ugly leather- snatcher-- you forgot the hammerin''I handed you last month, eh?" |
36047 | You sure it''s blood? |
36047 | ''Cose yore beaut''f''l, an''''cose yore mother wus a blue- grasser, an''''cose yore a goin''below t''school? |
36047 | ''Sides, ai n''t Slab heah wif yo'', honey-- ain''t Slab heah?" |
36047 | After a minute''s unbroken silence, Johnse said:"What ded yo''say, Buddy, eh? |
36047 | Air hit em whut yo''love, an''afeerd t''own on hit? |
36047 | Air thet Jutt Orlick bin a pesterin''yo''an''yo''re afeerd t''tell me? |
36047 | Air ye''lowin''t''get shut o''me, Belle- Ann?" |
36047 | Air yo''sorry, Lem?" |
36047 | An''say, boys, mebby yo''pore good Maw hain''t glad like-- eh? |
36047 | An''yo''he''pt kill Mart Harper, did n''t yo''--eh? |
36047 | An''yo''spied fer Sap and them fellers thet kilt Don Perry, did n''t yo''--eh? |
36047 | Are you going to lead me to that liquor hole?" |
36047 | Are you satisfied now, Lem?" |
36047 | Belle- Ann, air yo''''lowin''t''go way in th''mornin''an''never cum back?" |
36047 | Belle- Ann, air yo''down on me''cose I go below t''make money what I ca n''t make th''likes of hyarbouts?" |
36047 | Belle- Ann, little gal, do yo''-all love Orlick? |
36047 | Can I talk with you a bit, captain?" |
36047 | Could even a stoic moon look upon this girl unmoved? |
36047 | Could it be that this was the first bud of a fruit that had already started to thrive in Belle- Ann''s heart, before she had even reached the school? |
36047 | Could you ask a more bitter punishment for the revenuer than what you saw to- night? |
36047 | Ded yo''say yo''d have a hank o''corn bread, an''a slab o''po''k, eh?" |
36047 | Did n''t she run yo''--eh? |
36047 | Did she already regard herself exalted above the things that made up his humble life? |
36047 | Did she run yo''--eh? |
36047 | Did yo''-all ever hern tell on em-- eh? |
36047 | Do n''t I know they kilt Lem-- don''t I know they kilt Lem an''tuk em across Hellsfork an''made a hole fo''em in Southpaw? |
36047 | Do n''t yo''-all want t''be a Christian?" |
36047 | Do yo''''low t''go below an''never cum back, Belle- Ann? |
36047 | Do you remember when that cruel snapping turtle woke you up?" |
36047 | Down where nature has unfurled a grassy, level land and men walk in the open and can see each other''s faces? |
36047 | Eh, Tom?" |
36047 | For the last time-- are you goin''to get in there? |
36047 | Had the years that had unfolded her young life before him, betrayed him and withheld deep things from his understanding? |
36047 | Hain''t I alers fit fo''yo''-all, Belle- Ann? |
36047 | Hain''t I fit for yo''all my life?" |
36047 | Hain''t I honest? |
36047 | Hain''t I knowed yo''all yore little life, Belle- Ann? |
36047 | Hanging to his brother''s arm, Buddy kept crying crazily:"Lem hain''t daid-- Lem hain''t daid-- air yo'', Lem?" |
36047 | Hatfield regarded the end of Buddy''s finger for a moment-- then softly inquired:"How ded I do yo''pesky, Buddy?" |
36047 | Hatfield spoke again between teeth that gritted down upon the agony of his wounds:"Coward-- what yo''a runnin''fo''?" |
36047 | He continued evenly:"Do you see those portraits along the wall? |
36047 | Heah, Belle- Ann, I want yo''t''marry me, eh? |
36047 | Heah, watch me, I cross my heart thesaway, Lem-- see? |
36047 | His voice rang triumphantly as he hurried nearer, and he leered and cried:"Maybe I''ll take you down Blue Grass this time, eh? |
36047 | Hit wus a good dance, wusn''t hit? |
36047 | How could I know about the turtle and old Hickamohawk if I had not seen Colonel Tennytown? |
36047 | I jest axed yo'', have yo''been over in Southpaw?" |
36047 | I plugged yo''gud, eh?" |
36047 | I wo n''t run away-- how can I? |
36047 | I''low she''d jest cry fer gladness, would n''t she?" |
36047 | I''m ashamed of ye-- ain''t ye got no respect for a preacher? |
36047 | Is that evidence that you love me, Lem? |
36047 | Is the lobe of his left ear missing?" |
36047 | Just hark to that swearing and them rabby songs-- sure, that''s all aginst the rules of the prison, but what can they do to stop it? |
36047 | Let''s hurry off now, eh, Belle- Ann?" |
36047 | Let''s see-- you''re Lutts, ai n''t you?" |
36047 | Mebby I wo n''t never see yo''-all agin, deah little gal, eh?" |
36047 | Moreover, was it not unspeakably shameful that this revenuer who took him was the man who had invaded his home and killed his mother? |
36047 | Nevertheless, Lem craned his neck, edging closer to the other two, and whispered portentously:"Ded yo''-all heer anything?" |
36047 | No? |
36047 | Now that Lem was looking straight at them, the man nearest slid along the bench, smiled good- humoredly, then whispered:"What did ye draw, bo?" |
36047 | Orlick rolled out of the Mexican saddle, laughed shortly, and drawled:"Howdy, yo''-all?" |
36047 | Pears like Johnse sort a put a crimp in yore folks down at Junction City thet night-- eh? |
36047 | Say, Buddy-- how is hit a goin''--air th''fellers at em yit?" |
36047 | Say, Monk, do ye remember readin''about that back- track stunt Last Time pulled off five years ago? |
36047 | Say, pal, sneak me th''makin''s, will ye?" |
36047 | Say-- Belle- Ann give yo''the run, did n''t she-- eh? |
36047 | Say-- yo''know a feller in these mountains named Johnse Hatfield-- eh? |
36047 | See them little wooden houses away''cross there up on the wall? |
36047 | Standing motionless and in even tones, to avoid startling the rattler, Lem said:"Well-- so yo''got t''yore jest end at last, did n''t yo''--egg- dog? |
36047 | Tell me, my dear, plainly-- do you love that boy, Lem?" |
36047 | Then the commissioner leaned forward and, taking up his pen, spoke softly:"So you are old Lutts''s boy?" |
36047 | Thet hain''t powerful bad fo''a boy like me-- air hit, Belle- Ann?" |
36047 | Things that would join in the pursuit with other searing grievances to sting and urge his being onward toward desperation? |
36047 | Verily, this Omnipotent Being would not forsake him now? |
36047 | WITH UNUTTERABLE LOVE I DEDICATE THIS VOLUME TO My Mother_ THE AUTHOR_[ Illustration:"... use me as best you can for a grandfather?"] |
36047 | Was it not reasonable to conclude that, in view of the girl''s beauty, it was only a matter of time before Lem would take Belle- Ann for his own? |
36047 | Was this the call of her blue- grass blood asserting itself in this, the hour of parting? |
36047 | Were you- all looking for me, Lem?" |
36047 | Whar''s yo''gun? |
36047 | What do ye think of that? |
36047 | What happens when a guard starts out to catch some of these cursers? |
36047 | What makes the tears roll down his cheek, From early morn till close of day? |
36047 | What strange alien agency had laid hold of her? |
36047 | What you going to do about it?" |
36047 | Whatever prompted you to go in with that vicious horse?" |
36047 | Where did yo''git all thes money, Orlick?" |
36047 | Where is the abode, and what is the origin of this plenipotent conjurer? |
36047 | Where was its equity? |
36047 | Who could go on and live without redress and not strike back? |
36047 | Whut fer air yo''-all so stuck up? |
36047 | Whut fer--''cause I''m a lovin''yo''? |
36047 | Whut mought be yo''-all''s business seein''me?" |
36047 | Whut would maw say, seein''yo''-all driftin''away from me like thes? |
36047 | Will yo''fergit?" |
36047 | Will yo''promise Belle- Ann somethin'', Slab?" |
36047 | Will you adopt us? |
36047 | Will you do me this favor, Belle- Ann?" |
36047 | Will you go, Lem-- come now-- will you go with Belle- Ann?" |
36047 | Will you take me with all my arrant failings and use me as best you can for a grandfather?" |
36047 | Will you try, Lem?" |
36047 | Yo''-all ai n''t''lowin''to fix nothin''on the onlyst Orlick left, cap''n?" |
36047 | Yo''-all heer me?" |
36047 | Yo''mouse- dog-- yo''''lowed Belle- Ann''ud parley with sich as yo''--eh? |
36047 | Yo''shot my boy brother twict an''tried t''kill em-- didn''t yo''--eh? |
36047 | You ai n''t never been in a place like this before, have you? |
36047 | You pulled a swell trick on me that night, did n''t ye? |
36047 | You recall that first visit to Lexington? |
36047 | You see that little brick coop over there, Lutts-- without any windows, and a solid iron door? |
36047 | You thought the bunch that galloped down to your dog- house would get me that night, did n''t ye? |
36047 | [ Illustration:"Who air th''head o''th''people-- who air Cap''in heah in Moon?"] |
36047 | ca n''t we hurry and take it out, Lem?" |
36047 | he cried out in words that tumbled over each other,"Hain''t I fittin''? |
36047 | he whispered, then went on,"Did you hear them slam that first- timer in? |
36047 | placated Johnse,"ded I ever''low yo''warn''t?" |
36047 | she exclaimed regretfully,"how could I ever have thought it right-- how could I? |
36124 | A little girl whom I saw in the churchyard yonder, weeping very bitterly-- is she a relation of yours? 36124 All they say, then, is true?" |
36124 | And how about the champagne? |
36124 | And how did the ball go off? |
36124 | And it is not a very handsome city either, you say? |
36124 | And may I venture to ask your majesty how the works of Etienne, Jay, Jony and company, came hither? |
36124 | And since then? |
36124 | And so this London is very vast?--VERY? |
36124 | And when they race, do the horses run on ground like_ this_? |
36124 | And when? |
36124 | And why? |
36124 | And you have not secured a partner? 36124 And you will not tell me where that exile is, or if his daughter still lives?" |
36124 | Any bad news? |
36124 | Ay, and what? |
36124 | But his little girl surely remembers the name that he did not finish? |
36124 | But there must be parts that are prettier than others? 36124 But what can you do in London-- such a big place, Lenny?" |
36124 | But what is your life, Harley?--the saucer without the storm? |
36124 | But where''s Pelham? 36124 But you have not taken your degree, I think? |
36124 | Can I have accommodation for the night? |
36124 | Curse fatal results,cried John Ayliffe, giving way to a burst of fury;"why the devil do you come back to tell me such things and make me wretched? |
36124 | Curse the brute,he said, in a wandering sort of way,"I wonder, Shanks, you don''t-- damn it, where am I?--what''s the matter? |
36124 | Did you swear she was dead? |
36124 | Do n''t you want some champagne-- veritable Cordon Bleu-- only fourteen dollars a dozen, and a discount if you take six cases? |
36124 | Do they ever have races here? |
36124 | Do you know, that''s very well said, Audley? 36124 Do you mean to say that I am dying?" |
36124 | Do you think she has really told all? |
36124 | Do you wish to know by your own observation who are the conspirators? |
36124 | Does he mean to marry again? |
36124 | Father-- father-- do you hear me_ now_? |
36124 | For good? |
36124 | Go away-- why do you disturb me? 36124 Has his horse come back?" |
36124 | Has the experiment been often tried? |
36124 | Have I given you their secret notes and books? |
36124 | Have I named you the chief Carbonari in Paris? |
36124 | Have you not yet a daughter? |
36124 | How can I see and hear them? |
36124 | How long did he know he was dying? |
36124 | How? 36124 How?" |
36124 | I do,said H...."Do you wish to see-- to hear them?" |
36124 | In the next room? 36124 Indeed,"said the Prince, with delight;"and will your Majesty deign to tell me what this information is?" |
36124 | Is it you? |
36124 | Is that other rich? |
36124 | Is that you, Best? |
36124 | Is this the reason why Mr. Egerton so insultingly warns me against counting on his fortune? |
36124 | It is shameful,cried the Italian with warmth;"what has my brother ever done to him, that he should intrigue against the Count in his own court?" |
36124 | Madame di Negra? 36124 Monsieur,"said the stranger to M. H....,"have I kept my promise?" |
36124 | No relatives? |
36124 | No, no, not exactly dying,said the surgeon, putting his hand upon his pulse,"not dying I trust just yet, but--""But I shall die, you mean?" |
36124 | On whom? |
36124 | Pecuniarily, no doubt; but is it as good for the whole development of the man? 36124 Shall we be as happy when we are_ great_?" |
36124 | Shall you? |
36124 | Tell him, tell him by all means,said Mr. Dixwell,"why should you not tell him?" |
36124 | Tell us,he said,"who were the culprits?" |
36124 | The King,said M. de Maulear,"at least deigns to reckon me among the faithful subjects of whom he spoke just now?" |
36124 | The question in regard to mesmerism is two- fold:_ first_, how is the mesmeric prostration to be accounted for? 36124 Then do you think I am going to die so soon?" |
36124 | Then will you go on time? 36124 Then you would not have me call on him, sir? |
36124 | Think you that a great misfortune? |
36124 | This is terrible,said the Duchess,"are you sure this is so?" |
36124 | Was it? |
36124 | Well but, sir, what is to be done? |
36124 | Well,said the young man,"I''m not sure that would not be best for me-- come,"he continued sharply,"tell me how long I am to lie here on my back?" |
36124 | Well-- but you will write to Mr. Dale, or to me? 36124 What do you say?" |
36124 | What do you want now? |
36124 | What fault? |
36124 | What have you here that''s first rate? 36124 What is the matter my child?" |
36124 | What is the matter? 36124 What other Doctor?" |
36124 | What reason can your_ patron_ have to serve us, if he asks for neither gold, place, nor favor? |
36124 | What say you? |
36124 | What the devil does that signify? |
36124 | What then will you do? |
36124 | What''s that, sir? |
36124 | What''s the matter? 36124 What''s the news this morning?" |
36124 | When did this letter arrive here? |
36124 | Who is that very handsome woman? |
36124 | Who will dare to use such language? |
36124 | Who''s that? 36124 Who''s that?" |
36124 | Why are you so sad? |
36124 | Why not name that man? 36124 Why?" |
36124 | Why? |
36124 | Why? |
36124 | Will Mr. Egerton pay the young gentleman''s debts? 36124 Will his Majesty,"said the usher, who had just arrived,"receive the prime minister?" |
36124 | Will you bet three to five in hundreds on the Lady? |
36124 | Will you bet two to three on her against the field? |
36124 | With me? |
36124 | Yes,said H...."Have I unfolded the plot of Carbonarism?" |
36124 | Yes,said I to myself,"quite true-- why should I be angry?" |
36124 | You are then very fond of Count Monte- Leone? |
36124 | You ca n''t mean Mrs. Warner''s letter? |
36124 | You have not told her? |
36124 | You were a little taken aback, were n''t you? |
36124 | _ Five_ four- mile heats on ground like this? |
36124 | ''Are you Bishop Hughes?'' |
36124 | ''Is there no way at all, Mr. Curtis,''says he,''by which these articles may be passed, free of duty?'' |
36124 | ''Who is that dead man?'' |
36124 | --"Do you believe in Mesmerism?" |
36124 | --"Is it true kindness to bid him exchange manly independence for the protection of an official patron?" |
36124 | A lean man forfeits something in their estimation; for they say,"He must have foolishness; why has he wanted wisdom to eat more?" |
36124 | Am I to cut them out of the tiger''s ribs to- morrow?--or are they idly to be fired away into the trunk of a tree, or drawn again? |
36124 | And I said,''Your little girl, sir?'' |
36124 | And Leonard''s heart rushed to his lips, and he answered to the action as he bent down and kissed her cheek,"Orphan, will you go with me? |
36124 | And had her father no money with him?" |
36124 | And if he had_ not_ discovered it, how could he, Jennings, get at the drawers to examine them? |
36124 | And the poor little girl seems to have no relations-- and where is she to go? |
36124 | And what does the reader suppose is the theme-- the fresh, before unheard- of theme-- of another paper? |
36124 | And what was the host to do with her? |
36124 | And what would he say of her, if he could see her in heaven? |
36124 | And why should splendor prepare for perpetuity when that which supports it is to be shared among half a dozen or a dozen descendants? |
36124 | And without this engine of coercion what prince can be the master of his people? |
36124 | Are they gone?" |
36124 | Are you hurt, sir? |
36124 | At last he said:"I shall take a longer journey to- morrow, Caleb-- much longer: let me see-- where did I say? |
36124 | But he left some of the tiniest little balls you ever see, sir, to give the child; but, bless you, they did her no good-- how should they?" |
36124 | But if I was not your mother, after all, Lenny, and cost you all this-- oh, what would you say of me then?" |
36124 | But was it love that you felt for her? |
36124 | But what is going on at Hartwell?" |
36124 | But what is that? |
36124 | But when did you return?" |
36124 | But while we are talking of him, allow me to ask if Lord L''Estrange is indeed still so bitter against that poor brother of mine?" |
36124 | By Jove, Randall, how pleasant a thing is life in London? |
36124 | Come, big"Sam Nock,"king of two- ouncers, what is to be the fate of these two great plumbs that you are now to swallow? |
36124 | Did I not tell you the story of Fortunio? |
36124 | Did her father leave no directions, or was he in possession of his faculties?" |
36124 | Did she comprehend_ them_? |
36124 | Did you not say yourself laughter is as necessary for digestion as it is to the heart?" |
36124 | Dixwell?" |
36124 | Do n''t you find it rather expensive in the Guards? |
36124 | Do n''t you remember?" |
36124 | Do you go to Almack''s to- night?" |
36124 | Do you hear the monotonous rumble? |
36124 | Do you mean to make this young man your heir?" |
36124 | Do you remember, Alred dear, The peach- tree''s cool and ample shade, Where first our hearts learned love and fear, And vows of constancy were made? |
36124 | Does our friend the Prince de Maulear, contrary to every expectation, become a flatterer in his old age? |
36124 | Dost thou see the procession? |
36124 | Enviable man, have you ever loved?" |
36124 | Every year does not some lad leave our village, and go and seek his fortune, taking with him but health and strong hands? |
36124 | For where is it that we can say London_ bursts_ on the sight? |
36124 | For, after all, what good are academical honors but as the entrance to life? |
36124 | Germain?" |
36124 | God? |
36124 | Going to the trot to- day?" |
36124 | Has any thing gone wrong?" |
36124 | Has not a mother a right to her child?" |
36124 | Has not the King just given you the_ tabouret_ as a fresh proof of his love?" |
36124 | Have you told this youth plainly that he may look to you for influence, but not for wealth?" |
36124 | Have you written to him?" |
36124 | He escaped; and how did he escape? |
36124 | He had satisfied himself by saying, as so many men do,"Every man must die some time or another,"and had never asked his own heart,"What is it to die?" |
36124 | He paused silently for an instant, and then asked almost fiercely,"what brought you back?" |
36124 | He says:"Why should I not express to you, my lord, a desire which I have long had in my heart? |
36124 | How can one speculate on a social state formed under such circumstances? |
36124 | How did all this happen?" |
36124 | How go things in your part of the world? |
36124 | How the devil shall I get out of this scrape? |
36124 | How, then, is the miserable nonsense to be disposed of? |
36124 | Hush what''s that? |
36124 | I am, however, glad he has acted thus, for his conduct will diminish my sorrow at his departure--""His departure?" |
36124 | I think, however, the time is approaching to gather it, and in a month I will--""But,"said H....,"does not this delay endanger all? |
36124 | I wonder if that makes me an Honorable too? |
36124 | If I am to die, why ca n''t you let me die quietly and know nothing about it?" |
36124 | If there were another life, a judgment, an eternity of weal or woe, what was to be his fate? |
36124 | If they were so, how could he have hoped to sway them? |
36124 | If you are a- going back, sir, would you kindly mention it?" |
36124 | In what part of the Tuileries did he contract that disease? |
36124 | Is any one there?" |
36124 | Is he lost? |
36124 | Is her cup of sorrow full? |
36124 | Is that like a man of sense? |
36124 | It was now midday;--how to spend the long hours till sunset? |
36124 | It''s better than being nominal lawyers?" |
36124 | Keep still, ca n''t you?" |
36124 | Laryer Jones says we must pass her to Marybone parish, where her father lived last; and what''s to become of her then? |
36124 | Leslie?" |
36124 | May they not act, while we pause?" |
36124 | Mr. Dixwell laughed--"What, under the seal of confession?" |
36124 | Nevertheless, we can not quite agree with Professor Wilson in all his propositions: WHAT IS MESMERISM? |
36124 | Of what does the Southern summer dream here in the North, amongst pines and fragrant birches? |
36124 | See Savage and Johnson at night in Fleet- street, and who shall doubt the truth of St. Patrick''s Purgatory?" |
36124 | Shall I find you one? |
36124 | Shall she complain now that he is happy, and is master of Dunleath? |
36124 | Shanks,"he said,"what''s the use of three hundred pounds? |
36124 | She is a widow?" |
36124 | She paused in silence, indeed, for a moment or two, and then said in her sweet musical voice,"Well, Sir John, is that all?" |
36124 | Stay, did you see this about Bishop Hughes and Sam Thunderbolt, the Native American member of Congress from Pennsylvania?" |
36124 | Staying in town, Randal?" |
36124 | Tell me wherefore down the valley, ye have traced the turnpike''s way, Far beyond the cattle pasture, and the brick- yard with its clay? |
36124 | The Man in the Grey Coat_--MINERVA,"said the doctor, looking at them;"who dared to bring these books hither?" |
36124 | The howling of the wolf and the bear, dost thou know it? |
36124 | The next moment, however, the young man said,"Then you do promise, do you?" |
36124 | The old Shikaree makes his appearance in the nullah, and wishing me success through the window, asks if"all is right?" |
36124 | The other things I have got: and you, I presume, will let me have the drawers for-- say a pound profit on your bargain?" |
36124 | The poet is young,--he feels, dreams, and sings-- what needs poet more? |
36124 | Tiger gone!--cow dead!--was it a dream? |
36124 | Time enough for that-- eh? |
36124 | Was it you, or your friend Harrison, who instanced Richard Bleecker as a man who had made no progress in any thing manly for fifteen years?" |
36124 | Well, and what said Frank?" |
36124 | Well, why not?" |
36124 | Well-- what then? |
36124 | What blessing can attend the union? |
36124 | What could I do to stop them? |
36124 | What could public life give to one who needs nothing? |
36124 | What could you say worse to an author? |
36124 | What day will you fix?" |
36124 | What did I say, I wonder? |
36124 | What did he think on plucking it?--on preserving it? |
36124 | What did she there? |
36124 | What do you think of that pretty girl in pink?" |
36124 | What does youth care for any thing beyond a year? |
36124 | What girl of eighteen ever deemed herself too young to be wooed and won by a man of twenty- eight? |
36124 | What had he to offer now to Aminta? |
36124 | What has happened?" |
36124 | What has your mother done which seems to have affected you so much? |
36124 | What is the new one?" |
36124 | What is this black thing? |
36124 | What like? |
36124 | What man of twenty- eight ever thought himself old in the presence of a maiden of eighteen? |
36124 | What nation on the continent, mine excepted, can maintain for two years longer its present war establishment? |
36124 | What need to refer to it? |
36124 | What place have we here steaming like a boiler? |
36124 | What withholds them? |
36124 | What wonder that as the flower expands in beauty it gradually unfolds to blissful consciousness? |
36124 | What young man could come into life with brighter auspices? |
36124 | What, though, is come over you? |
36124 | When all passes under the hammer, what becomes of heir- looms, and whatever else in which family life and interest are bound up? |
36124 | When does he come?" |
36124 | Where does he now live? |
36124 | Where should I go now for advice? |
36124 | Where''s Brydges?" |
36124 | Where, then, shall we land? |
36124 | Who are you? |
36124 | Who is the puffer here? |
36124 | Why have you been so long in Italy?" |
36124 | Why should an audience, which has the patience to put up with such spectacles, not be fooled to the top of its bent? |
36124 | Why should they be excluded from a land of wonders which others are permitted to enter? |
36124 | Will you be shaved like a Chinese? |
36124 | You did not know him?" |
36124 | You know him?" |
36124 | You remember drinking that wine at Wilson''s last summer?" |
36124 | You say there are parks; why should not we lodge near them, and look upon the green trees?" |
36124 | You would not let the poor woman die when you can save her?" |
36124 | [ 9] Every man''s brain must be a world in itself, eh? |
36124 | _ Blanche._--"What is that legend? |
36124 | _ Leonard._--"To the perch, sir?" |
36124 | _ Nicholas._--Framed? |
36124 | _ Nicholas._--How did he ever get to Rome at all? |
36124 | _ Nicholas._--How? |
36124 | a spotted deer-- why does she call? |
36124 | and how to turn them from the strait road into his? |
36124 | and what are those people doing? |
36124 | and who is now come to interrupt me?" |
36124 | and_ secondly_, how is it to be disposed of? |
36124 | are you intimately acquainted with this stream, sir?" |
36124 | do you not really hear me? |
36124 | exclaimed John Ayliffe, now nearly driven to frenzy,"what if they convict me of perjury for swearing she was dead?" |
36124 | has she seen any thing? |
36124 | he cried,"what has she done?" |
36124 | how? |
36124 | is it not so? |
36124 | on canvas? |
36124 | on panel? |
36124 | out of humor?" |
36124 | replied John Ayliffe, replenishing his glass,"but the question now is, Shanks, what are we to do? |
36124 | said Aminta, passing her arm around the Prince''s neck;"have you not a daughter who loves you?" |
36124 | said a feeble voice, as he approached; and he ran up, exclaiming,"Gracious me, what is the matter? |
36124 | said he;"surely the child must have some kinsfolk in London? |
36124 | said the Duchess, making Taddeo sit by her;"the Marquise de Maulear has lost her husband? |
36124 | said the King,"speak out my old friend, if the matter depends on me--""Can not the King do any thing?" |
36124 | say,_ I will!_""Think you he will say so?" |
36124 | tell me wherefore do ye gaze On the ground that''s being furrowed for the planting of the maize? |
36124 | these are our men; what should we do without them? |
36124 | under glass? |
36124 | varnisht? |
36124 | what is that down the nullah to the left? |
36124 | what new star, in the heaven of mind, demanded most the exploration and illustration of the_ North American Review_, for this July quarter, in 1851? |
36124 | why does he not name himself?" |
9651 | ''What''s that?'' 9651 And what_ kind_ Of picture?" |
9651 | And who''s''_ Red Riding Hood''?_"W''y, do n''t_ you_ know? |
9651 | And who''s''_ Red Riding Hood''?_"W''y, do n''t_ you_ know? |
9651 | And why''Good Old''? |
9651 | Why? 9651 _ But I ca n''t._""Well, ca n''t you_ try?_""Yes, Mister: he_ kin_ tell_ one_. |
9651 | _ Jack Janitor!_the man said sternly through The Magic Box--"Jack Janitor, did_ you_ Conceal those ribbons anywhere?" |
9651 | _ Well, yes,_The little voice piped--"_but you''d never guess The place I hid''em if you''d guess a year!_""Well, wo n''t you_ tell_ me?" |
9651 | A voice asked,"Where''s that song''_ you''d_ learn to sing Ef I sent you the_ ballat_?'' |
9651 | An''I tiptoed up wite clos''t, an''I says"What''s The matter wiv ye, Squidjicum?" |
9651 | An''he say"_ I''m_ all hunkey, Nibsey; how Is_ your_ folks comin''on?" |
9651 | An''nen I say--"What''s_ your_ name,"nen I say,"afore you bust Yo''-se''f a- laughin''''bout_ my_ name?" |
9651 | An''nen I says--"Who''s''old Miss Hoodjicum''?" |
9651 | An''nen Red Riding Hood''s Dran''ma she says"Who''s there?" |
9651 | An''old Wolf''tend Like_ he''s_ her Dran''ma; an''he say,"Who''s there?" |
9651 | An''what''s_ your_ name?" |
9651 | Did hunger lead thee-- didst thou think to find Some rich old cheese to fill thy hungry maw? |
9651 | Didst thou not know that running midnight races O''er standing types was fraught with imminent danger? |
9651 | Have you got it?" |
9651 | He said,--"''you can read old Aunty''s sign?" |
9651 | Ist like he''uz the boss an''ist got back!--_"Hain''t ye got on them- air dew- dumplin''s yet? |
9651 | Nen old Wolf smile An''say, so kind:"Where air you doin''at?" |
9651 | No companions? |
9651 | Then he tried And rapped the little drawer in the side, And called out sharply"Are you in there, Jack?" |
9651 | Then suddenly He turned and asked, with a curious grin, What were my views on_ Slavery? |
9651 | What led thee hither''mongst the types and cases? |
9651 | Who built it? |
9651 | do n''t you see the stars a- fallin''? |
9651 | he called,--"no impudence to_ me!_-- You''ve swept out clean?" |
9651 | the_ Law_ is on the"Chieftain''s"trail-- Tracked to his very lair!--Well, what avail? |
6808 | And hast thou forgotten, friend John, the ear of Indian corn which my father begged of thee for me? 6808 And what''s her name?" |
6808 | Do you know how many brothers and sisters you had? |
6808 | Have you any? 6808 Have you never been attacked by the Indians?" |
6808 | How came you to lose your thumb- nail? |
6808 | How,some of our readers will exclaim,"can a woman possess such iron nerves as to dare and do such a deed as this?" |
6808 | Is she killed? 6808 No, Pete,"was the reply,"them''s angels; did n''t you hear''em sing to us a spell ago?" |
6808 | Then go,said she,"and look for him in the American army;"adding,"how dare you disturb a family under the protection of both armies?" |
6808 | Was it Frances? |
6808 | What do you remember? |
6808 | What shall I first save? |
6808 | What''s your talk, stranger? |
6808 | Who be those, Jim, walking round that fire; not women? |
6808 | Would you know your name if you should hear it repeated? |
6808 | And shall the servant be greater than his Master?" |
6808 | And who but woman could best display those qualities? |
6808 | But how could a woman be there in the heart of the mountains in the wintry weather, with only the storm to speak to her? |
6808 | But pray,''said he,''how came you here?'' |
6808 | But what God- sent messenger is this coming through the drifts to meet them? |
6808 | But what is that strange light which far to the north gleams on the blackened sky? |
6808 | But what must it be in the rude cabin on the lonely border? |
6808 | But where? |
6808 | Can we doubt that the prayers of these noble patriot women were answered? |
6808 | Did the mother indulge the grief of her spirit, and sit down in despair? |
6808 | How had they existed? |
6808 | How many fevered brows have they cooled, how many gloomy moods have they illumined, how many wavering hearts have they stayed and confirmed? |
6808 | Hugging Frank Cogdell, the greatest reprobate in the army?'' |
6808 | If thou hast no light on the subject, wilt thou gather into the stillness and reverently listen to thy own inward revealings? |
6808 | Inquiries were made as to who had been killed, and one, running up, cried,"Where is the woman that gave us the powder? |
6808 | Relief, she said,_ must_ be before them, and not far away; for her sake, would he not try once more? |
6808 | She questions the Canadian,"Who was this La Bonte who you say was such a brave mountaineer?" |
6808 | Should we have ever established our Independence but for the countless brave, kind, and self- sacrificing acts of woman? |
6808 | The annals of colonial history teem with her deeds of love and heroism, and what are those recorded instances to those which had no chronicler? |
6808 | The following colloquy, conducted through the interpreter, ensued:"What was your name when a child?" |
6808 | There was a keg in a house ten or twelve rods from the gate of the fort, and the question arose, who shall attempt to seize this prize? |
6808 | They have youth, hope, health, occupation, and amusement, and when you have added"meat, clothes, and fire,"what more has England''s queen? |
6808 | They were surrounded by the same malarial influences that had made such havoc among their neighbors, and why should they escape? |
6808 | Was it American cavalry or was it a band of Mexican guerrillas that was galloping so fiercely over that arid plain? |
6808 | Was it friend or foe? |
6808 | Was there no escape? |
6808 | Well, all will be over in a moment; but how will my poor mother feel when she learns my awful fate?" |
6808 | What could he mean? |
6808 | What do I hear?" |
6808 | What do you say, old hos?" |
6808 | What does he want with the great old- fashioned rocking chair? |
6808 | When winter came, and the gleaming snow spread its unbroken silence over hill and plain, was it not dreary then? |
6808 | Which is the stronger, who shall say? |
6808 | Whither should they fly? |
6808 | Who can calculate the sum total of such an influence as this? |
6808 | Why, then, should I hold back, and feel so reluctant to enter the path His wisdom points out? |
6808 | Would you linger here when our Master calls us away, to labor somewhere else in His vineyard? |
6808 | and when your presence, your converse and hands can only beguile the few remaining hours of his existence?" |
6808 | but how?" |
6808 | can it be you, Mary?" |
6808 | could that wretched shelter be a home for the hapless mother and her child? |
6808 | he exclaimed,''what are you doing there? |
6808 | whither shall I go?" |
6077 | Do you promise me,she said,"upon the word of a Mason, that when you arrive at Bear Valley, you will come back and get my children?" |
6077 | What is the use,he would urge,"of my making a statement? |
6077 | After what had recently happened, could anything be more touching than these acts of kindness of the Indians? |
6077 | Are they not strangely pathetic and beautiful? |
6077 | But on one sheet what can I say? |
6077 | But what was one small deer among so many famished people? |
6077 | Can any one imagine the joy these footprints gave us? |
6077 | Christian and Mary Brunner An Enchanting Home"Ca n''t You Keep Both of Us?" |
6077 | Could a situation more desolate or deplorable be imagined? |
6077 | Did all reach the valley? |
6077 | Did you boil the flesh? |
6077 | Did you know that he was a Mason? |
6077 | Do you think a man would be such a miscreant, such a damnable fiend, such a caricature on humanity, as to kill this lone woman? |
6077 | Does the truth require the narration of the sickening minutiae of the terrible transactions of these days? |
6077 | Flying? |
6077 | Had he starved by the way? |
6077 | Had the Indians killed him? |
6077 | How fared it with those left at Donner Lake? |
6077 | I sent him a little more money; I had not much to spare, and in talking the matter over with my wife, she asked,''Why not send him the pin? |
6077 | Is Mr. Glover living? |
6077 | Is Mr. Glover the same sort of Mason we had in Springfield? |
6077 | Is dear mamma living? |
6077 | Is there a mind so narrow, so uncharitable, that it can censure these poor dying people for the acts of this terrible day? |
6077 | Left alone in the snow- mantled forests of the Sierra, what were this man''s emotions? |
6077 | McCutchen might come, because he left dear ones with the train, but would Stanton return? |
6077 | Meantime, how fared it with those who were pressing forward toward the settlements? |
6077 | Mr. or Mrs. Foster, whose baby boy was at the cabin? |
6077 | Mrs. McCutchen, who left one? |
6077 | Or would it be Mary Graves or Mrs. Fosdick, who had left mother and family? |
6077 | She turned suddenly to Mr. Glover, and asked,"Are you a Mason?" |
6077 | Should he see her die the most terrible of deaths without attempting to rescue her? |
6077 | Some one asked,''What kind of tracks human?'' |
6077 | The entire party? |
6077 | Was ever a more generous act recorded? |
6077 | Was he answering her, or the unseen spirits that even then were beckoning him to the unknown world? |
6077 | Was he dead? |
6077 | Was he struggling to relieve his starving family, or lying stark and dead''neath the snows of the Sierra? |
6077 | Was it murder? |
6077 | Was it reality or delusion? |
6077 | Was there not something noble and grand in the dying advice of this father? |
6077 | Were they at length to perish? |
6077 | What if some families had more than their destitute neighbors? |
6077 | What power of language can indicate the struggle which took place in the minds of this stricken family? |
6077 | What was it? |
6077 | What, if there was sometimes a shade of selfishness, or an act of harshness? |
6077 | What, then, did she endure who saw this cruel sight? |
6077 | When his name was called, he made no answer until some one said to him:''Stark, wo n''t you vote?'' |
6077 | Where, one asks in wonder and reverence, did she get the strength and courage for all this? |
6077 | Who can picture the agony, the horror, the dreary desolation of such a death? |
6077 | Who can portray the emotions of this fond mother? |
6077 | Who composed this party? |
6077 | Who shall describe the rejoicings that were held over those biscuits? |
6077 | Who should be sacrificed? |
6077 | Who should take Dolan''s life? |
6077 | Who was this heroic being who left the beautiful valleys of the Sacramento to die for strangers? |
6077 | Who would be the forlorn hope of the perishing emigrants? |
6077 | Why should Keseberg murder Mrs. Donner? |
6077 | With food? |
6077 | Would it be Eddy, whose wife and two children were behind? |
6077 | Would it be Mrs. Pike, who left two babes? |
6077 | Would it find the emigrants? |
6077 | Would n''t it be a blessing if I did?" |
6077 | Would she herself, with all her endurance and resisting love, live to see it? |
6077 | Would they return? |
6077 | Would you know more of the shuddering details? |
6077 | Would you know the name of this man, this hero? |
6077 | should it be permitted that they, who had been preserved through so much, should die at last so miserably? |
42447 | ''What does she say?'' 42447 A story? |
42447 | A woman? |
42447 | Actual men? |
42447 | And how many do you imagine, major, this one has stung to death in the last six years? |
42447 | And the mountains? |
42447 | And where did you drop from--accepting an Havana;"the Blue Grass?" |
42447 | And you say this happened near here? |
42447 | Are you mad? |
42447 | Are you satisfied? |
42447 | But was there no trial? |
42447 | But what are you doing in New England, when you should be in Kentucky? |
42447 | But what proof have I that you can perform what you promise? |
42447 | But what,I insisted,"do you think of your greatest mountain there?" |
42447 | But,I pursued,"has it not an unrepublican sound in a country where titles are regarded with distrust, not to say aversion?" |
42447 | Can I assist you in recovering what you have lost? |
42447 | Come, do we understand each other? 42447 Dew?" |
42447 | Dinner for one? |
42447 | Do you know who first tempted man to go up into a high mountain? |
42447 | Do you mean inhabitants? |
42447 | Does your excellency not find it to his taste? |
42447 | Doing, I? 42447 How know you dat?" |
42447 | How so? |
42447 | If you are afraid,sneered Satan,"why put me to all this trouble?" |
42447 | In that gale? 42447 Is that your opinion, too, George?" |
42447 | Is the route practicable? |
42447 | May not a flower look up at a mountain? |
42447 | Murdered him, and for that? 42447 No, I mean in what battle?" |
42447 | Not for a hundred feet, and in a matter of life and death? |
42447 | Nothing else? |
42447 | Perhaps this is yours? |
42447 | Perhaps, sir,I ventured,"you can inform us where the landlord may be found?" |
42447 | Running after a woman, perhaps? |
42447 | Running away from your creditors? |
42447 | Shall we have an old- fashioned tramp together? |
42447 | Sir,I observed,"seeing you are American- born, I infer your title must have been conferred by some foreign potentate?" |
42447 | Sir,said I,"can you tell us if it is possible to procure a dinner here?" |
42447 | So that you conclude--? |
42447 | So then for all those hours you expected from one moment to another to be swept into eternity? |
42447 | So, the wars over, you emigrated to America? |
42447 | Stop me? |
42447 | Suppose this house had gone, and the hotel stood fast, could you have effected an entrance into the hotel? |
42447 | Tell me about it, will you? |
42447 | Thank you; but the car? |
42447 | That was unlucky; where? |
42447 | This is Oakes''s Gulf-- agreed; but where in perdition is my hat? |
42447 | Trial? 42447 Was that your only encounter with bears?" |
42447 | Well, go on; what has that to do with the bear? |
42447 | Well, then, here we have been zigzagging about for a good hour, have n''t we? |
42447 | Well; but you did propose at last? |
42447 | Well? |
42447 | What did you do? |
42447 | What do you call this? |
42447 | What do you mean? |
42447 | What is it? |
42447 | What is it? |
42447 | What is the matter? |
42447 | What is your philosophy of life? |
42447 | What is your route? |
42447 | What shall I do? |
42447 | What was it? |
42447 | What was our brother saying to you? |
42447 | When do the great freshets usually occur? |
42447 | Where have I heard that man''s voice? |
42447 | Where shall I go? |
42447 | Which of you is named Nathaniel Copp? |
42447 | Why not? |
42447 | Why? |
42447 | Would we like dinner? 42447 You experience no regret, then, at leaving the city?" |
42447 | You hear those men pounding away up the hill? |
42447 | You pretend,he began,"that it''s only a thousand feet from the plateau to the top of this accursed mountain?" |
42447 | You wanted dinner, I believe? |
42447 | You? |
42447 | Your news is not bad? |
42447 | --would I put up with trout? |
42447 | A spectacle that can arouse the emotions of joy, fear, hope, suspense-- nothing? |
42447 | A trifle? |
42447 | Advance or retreat? |
42447 | Are n''t you very, very tired, sitting so long without any support to your back?" |
42447 | Are there anywhere else in the world people who travel two hundred miles for a single day''s recreation? |
42447 | Are we not all children who shrink from entering a haunted chamber, and shudder in the presence of death? |
42447 | As for the cascades, which lulled us to sleep, who shall describe them? |
42447 | Believing I saw a veteran of our great civil war, I asked, with undisguised interest,"Where did you serve? |
42447 | Besides, what air can rival that of winter? |
42447 | Besides, what is the difference? |
42447 | But how came these rocks here? |
42447 | But how long will the mountain resist the denuding process constantly going on, and what repair the gradual but certain disintegration of the peak? |
42447 | But how? |
42447 | But it''s now your turn; where are you going yourself?" |
42447 | But this moss: have you ever looked at it before your heel bruised the perfumed flowers springing from its velvet? |
42447 | But what is the buck- board? |
42447 | But what shall I say of the grand harlequinade of nature which the valley presented to our view? |
42447 | But where and what was the original prototype? |
42447 | But who shall describe all this solitary, this oppressive grandeur? |
42447 | But who shall describe the horse? |
42447 | But why mutilate the tree? |
42447 | By way of breaking the ice, he observed,"Apropos of your title, colonel, I presume you served in the Rebellion?" |
42447 | By- the- way, have you anything to drink in the house?" |
42447 | Come, what takes you from Lexington?" |
42447 | Could you, in the highest flights of fancy, imagine that you would one day sit in the courts of heaven, or feast sumptuously amid the stars? |
42447 | Delve deeper and deeper under the Alleghanies? |
42447 | Did I hear aright? |
42447 | Did you ever try running away from yourself? |
42447 | Do you know that the birch does not renew its bark, and that the tree thus stripped of its natural protection is doomed? |
42447 | Do you want my opinion?" |
42447 | Do you yield or no? |
42447 | Dodge''s fire after such a passive ascension as that just described? |
42447 | Does a traveller contemplate some arduous exploration in an unvisited region? |
42447 | For whom of the fifty or sixty occupants of the car had this flash overtaken the express train? |
42447 | Francis?" |
42447 | Have another bit of devilled ham? |
42447 | Have you seen Frankenstein?" |
42447 | How came it there? |
42447 | How came they there? |
42447 | How do you make that out?" |
42447 | How does it get out?" |
42447 | How does it happen that this catastrophe is still able to awaken the liveliest interest for the fate of the Willey family? |
42447 | How ironically the mountain repeated,"Who are you?" |
42447 | How long is this to continue? |
42447 | How should I know that what I saw were mountains, when the earth itself was not clearly distinguishable? |
42447 | How should she? |
42447 | I asked;"what is there?" |
42447 | I attempted to be cheerful, but how was one to rise above such surroundings? |
42447 | I disposed my ideas to hear my companion ask,"What is the news from the other world?" |
42447 | I exclaimed, in genuine surprise,"is it you, colonel?" |
42447 | I shouted,"what of the mountains?" |
42447 | In the West a man who plants a tree is a public benefactor; is he who saves the life of one in the East less so? |
42447 | Is not this a landscape worth coming ten miles out of one''s way to see? |
42447 | Is this your ordinary fare?" |
42447 | It was one of the last and fairest days of that bright season which made the poet exclaim,"And what is so fair as a day in June?" |
42447 | Let me see, where were you wounded?" |
42447 | May I ask if you inherit the genius of your distinguished namesake?" |
42447 | May we not attribute it to the influence which the actual scene exerts on the imagination? |
42447 | Native caution put the question,"Will you?" |
42447 | No? |
42447 | Others shook their heads, saying,"What does it signify? |
42447 | Paradise seemed to have opened wide its gates to my enraptured gaze; or had I surprised the secrets of the unknown world? |
42447 | Quoth she,"The men folks have all_ et_ their dinners, and there hain''t no more meat; but if you could put up with a few trout?" |
42447 | Sha''n''t I change places with you?" |
42447 | Shall I live long enough to forget this sublime tragedy of nature, enacted Heaven knows when or how? |
42447 | She say''Where I go?'' |
42447 | Should, do I say? |
42447 | Taine asks,"Can anything be sweeter than the certainty of being alone? |
42447 | Tell me, you who have seen it, if the sight has not caused a ripple of pleasurable excitement? |
42447 | The conductor put an end to the suspense by demanding,"Is Mr. George Brentwood in this car?" |
42447 | The mountain labors incessantly to re- create, but what can it do against such fearful odds? |
42447 | The question now merely is, how much power is necessary to overcome gravity and lift the weight of the machine into the air? |
42447 | V._ A SCRAMBLE IN TUCKERMAN''S._ The crag leaps down, and over it the flood: Know''st thou it, then? |
42447 | V._ THE CONNECTICUT OX- BOW._ Say, have the solid rocks Into streams of silver been melted, Flowing over the plains, Spreading to lakes in the fields? |
42447 | Was not the splitting of the mountains an after- thought? |
42447 | What am I saying? |
42447 | What if the same power that commanded these awful mountains to remove should hurl them back to ever- during fixedness? |
42447 | What if we should never wake? |
42447 | What is this youth, which, having it, we are so eager to escape, and, when it is gone, we look back upon with such longing? |
42447 | What is your will? |
42447 | What is yours?" |
42447 | What mysterious chord had the wild, flowing river touched in those savage breasts? |
42447 | What seek ye in the house of God?" |
42447 | What signify those letters, that every idler should gratify his little vanity by giving it a stab? |
42447 | What then? |
42447 | What to do? |
42447 | What would you have? |
42447 | When I rest, do you not behold the mother imaged in the features of the child? |
42447 | When we see mountains crumbling before our very eyes, may we not begin to doubt the stability of things that we are pleased to call eternal? |
42447 | When we were on top of the bowlders, looking down on the water of the two little lakes, we wonderingly ask,"Where does it go? |
42447 | Whence came this colossal débris? |
42447 | Whence comes this horrible, this uncontrollable desire to throw ourselves in? |
42447 | Whence does it come? |
42447 | Where was I? |
42447 | Where were you wounded?" |
42447 | Where would we go?" |
42447 | While he poured out the tea, I asked,"Whom have I the pleasure of addressing?" |
42447 | Who would have thought there was so much life in them? |
42447 | Who would wish to inhabit a treeless heaven? |
42447 | Why is it that the oft- repeated tale seems ever new in the ears of sympathetic listeners? |
42447 | Why, then, did the bird die and the butterfly live? |
42447 | You understand?" |
42447 | You wish to see the two great chains? |
42447 | _ Cui bono?_ When I am happy, shall I make myself miserable searching for the reason? |
42447 | _ Cui bono?_ When I am happy, shall I make myself miserable searching for the reason? |
42447 | and what language portray the awfulness of these untrodden mountains? |
42447 | and what shall we do when it can no longer furnish pine to build our homes, or wood to warm them? |
42447 | and what was the primitive structure, if these fragments we see are its relics? |
42447 | echoed the driver, laughing--"dew?" |
42447 | he slowly inquired;"perhaps, now, you could show us the very house?" |
42447 | here-- in the middle of the river?" |
42447 | is it a bargain or not?" |
42447 | is it so very tough as all that? |
42447 | what signifies a name?" |
42447 | where the deuce is my watch?" |
49291 | All men are equal,where? |
49291 | Dare they do it? |
49291 | Great Spirit,he cried"shall the battle be given, And all but their leader be there? |
49291 | What of Adams? |
49291 | What of Sherman? |
49291 | What''s the news? |
49291 | Where is your liquor? |
49291 | Who is speaking? |
49291 | Will they do it? |
49291 | ( Orig: Whese sons you required, and left not any?) |
49291 | ( Orig: almost pefect organism of the body politic?) |
49291 | A grain of this and a scruple of that!-- Know ye the name of the Medical Rat? |
49291 | A nation speaking another tongue? |
49291 | A people inimical to human freedom? |
49291 | A state abandoned to the caprices of despotism? |
49291 | Against whom are these charges brought? |
49291 | Against whom? |
49291 | And by whom are these charges made? |
49291 | And have we come back sulky and sullen from the very field of honor? |
49291 | And is this aggressive system forever to be adventured by her rulers? |
49291 | And who was that enemy? |
49291 | Are we now unable to do this? |
49291 | Both have a right to_ seek_ for"happiness;"But, with such different chances of success, Where''s the_ equality_? |
49291 | But do we realize that Henry Clay is dead? |
49291 | But the cataract''s roar with the thunder now vied;"Oh, what is the meaning of this?" |
49291 | But, is there not one unquestionable answer? |
49291 | But, what is the higher law? |
49291 | Can there be a law, within these United higher than the Constitution of the United States? |
49291 | Deprived of sunshine, chill''d with vapor- blights, Say what are_ their_"inalienable rights,"Social and civil? |
49291 | Did I not say we need elevation? |
49291 | Did you ever see an eclipse? |
49291 | Do we need health, or genius, or learning, or eloquence, or pleasure, or fame, or power? |
49291 | Do we need wealth, or rank, or office? |
49291 | Do you ever think of the mothers many Whose sons you required, and left not any? |
49291 | Do you think of young limbs bruised and crush''d And laughing voices forever hush''d? |
49291 | Does any one of us need to be chaplain, or clerk, or representative, or senator, or speaker, or vice- president? |
49291 | Had Washington never lived, what would have been the result of our revolutionary struggle? |
49291 | Had he died immediately after the close of the war, what would have been the fate of our governmental experiment? |
49291 | Has any foreign ruler been so foolish as to listen with credulity to the tales of impending disunion? |
49291 | Have we lost this spirit? |
49291 | How can we eat what is not eatable? |
49291 | How can we punish what is not punishable? |
49291 | How could such a secret be kept from the foundation of the world till the end of the fifteenth century? |
49291 | How does it come? |
49291 | How does it come? |
49291 | I stand here the noblest being in the whole creation; may I not be master of that creation? |
49291 | If there can be and is such a law-- what is it? |
49291 | If we knew the clouds above us, Held by gentle blessings there, Would we turn away all trembling, In our blind and weak despair? |
49291 | If we knew the silent story, Quivering through the heart of pain, Would our womanhood dare doom them Back to haunts of guilt again? |
49291 | Is he busily engaged on the deck, is he manfully facing the danger, and skillfully suggesting means to avert it? |
49291 | Is such our need? |
49291 | Is there a physician to be found that can restore my soul to health?" |
49291 | Is there any American who wishes to consult European Powers as to the propriety or policy of our territorial expansion? |
49291 | Is there any one who fears a fatal blow from these Powers? |
49291 | Is this a theme not unworthy of the pen and the mind of Webster? |
49291 | It comes by_ trick_ as well as toil, But how is that? |
49291 | Know ye the names of the Reverend Rats? |
49291 | No? |
49291 | Not,"How did it come into the world?" |
49291 | Not,"How is it that I am sick?" |
49291 | Not,"How is it that fire descended from heaven upon Sodom?" |
49291 | Oh, Truth and Justice, and Common- Sense When will you drive this rat- tribe hence? |
49291 | Or, as the law says, how can we think on what is not thinkable? |
49291 | Or, how can we drink what is not drinkable? |
49291 | Our country is prosperous and powerful; but could it have been quite all it has been, and is, and is to be, without Henry Clay? |
49291 | Proving virtue itself a sin, By a comma left out or a colon left in; Of guesses and glosses the autocrats: Know ye the names of the Learned Rats? |
49291 | Queer John has sung, how money goes, But how it comes, who knows? |
49291 | Shall we not leave them a legacy as great as that our fathers left us? |
49291 | Souls of men are on board; wealth of man in the hold; And the storm- wind Euroclydon sweeps to his prey; And who heeds the bird? |
49291 | Speak out, my friends, would you exchange it for the demon''s drink, alcohol?" |
49291 | Strange to tell, he asks:"Can you inform me with what sword I was wounded, and by what Russian I have been thus grievously mauled? |
49291 | Suppose the glistening dew- drops Upon the grass should say:"What can a little dew- drop do? |
49291 | THE ONE GREAT NEED.--_Ibid._ Tell me, oh, tell me, what is it we need? |
49291 | Tell me wherefore down the valley, ye have traced the turnpike''s way Far beyond the cattle- pasture, and the brick- yard with its clay? |
49291 | The money comes-- how did I say? |
49291 | The war- shout has sounded, the stream must be cross''d Why lingers the leader afar? |
49291 | To whom shall we liken him, or with whom shall he be compared? |
49291 | Totally unused to ardent spirits, with my tongue, throat, and palate as raw as beef, what could I do? |
49291 | Victoria''s children laugh in glee!-- Does she remember mine, or me? |
49291 | Weep? |
49291 | What care I for infirmity? |
49291 | What could equal the faith of Abraham, as he tracked his lonely pilgrimage through the plains of Shinar, seeking a land that he knew not of? |
49291 | What did I say in the beginning? |
49291 | What else was so much good blood shed for, on so many more than classical fields of Revolutionary glory? |
49291 | What is it, then, that causes doubt and mystery to attend the ways of men? |
49291 | What of mere mortality could equal the firmness of Moses, as he came down from Sinai, his face all glowing from the presence of his God? |
49291 | What question does he ask? |
49291 | What so mysterious as the dissociation of the native tribes of this continent from the civilized and civilizable races of man? |
49291 | What so propitious as this long colonial training in the school of chartered government? |
49291 | Where is the captain? |
49291 | Where shall we be thirty years hence, if such prosperity attend us? |
49291 | Which one of them all that has not a record marked by some weakness, or marred by some crime? |
49291 | Who can realize that freedom''s champion-- the champion of a civilized world, and of all tongues and kindred and people, has indeed fallen? |
49291 | Who has not heard how gallantly, forty- seven years ago, the young hero, still weak from a wasting fever, led his squadron to battle? |
49291 | Who knows? |
49291 | Who was it that discovered the Fat Boy, and captured the wild and ferocious_ What Is It?_ An American citizen! |
49291 | Who was it that invented the powder that will kill a cockroach, if you put a little on its tail and then tread on it? |
49291 | Who was it that knocked thunder out of the clouds, and took a streak o''greased lightnin''for a tail to his kite? |
49291 | Who was it that, durin''the great and glorious Revolution, by his eloquence quenched the spirit of Toryism? |
49291 | Why has this association of American women been formed? |
49291 | Will any man, unless an utter infidel, deny this? |
49291 | Would we shrink from little shadows, Lying on the dewy grass, While''tis only birds of Eden, Just in mercy flying past? |
49291 | Your question would be:"How can I get rid of the evil?" |
49291 | _ Leges non curant-- verhum sat!_ Know ye the name of the Legal Rat? |
49291 | a cabinet officer? |
49291 | a foreign minister? |
49291 | a member or head of any department? |
49291 | an officer of the army or navy? |
49291 | but,"Are there medicines that will heal me? |
49291 | but,"How am I to escape from it?" |
49291 | but,"How may I, like Lot, escape out of the city to a Zoar?" |
49291 | has it gone from among us? |
49291 | has it gone from among us?) |
49291 | how shall I tell the sequel? |
49291 | of what is called friendship, love? |
49291 | or even a successor in the line of presidents of the United States? |
49291 | tell me wherefore do ye gaze, On the ground that''s being furrow''d for the planting of the maize? |
6811 | Did you know, Mr. Speaker, I am a military hero? 6811 Does this pay for the book,"the borrower asked,"or only for the damage to the book?" |
6811 | How tedious and tasteless the hours,"There is a fountain filled with blood,and"Alas, and did my Saviour bleed?" |
6811 | McClellan was retired,says the Honorable Hugh McCulloch,"and what happened to the Army of the Potomac? |
6811 | What does the clergyman know of military matters? |
6811 | Why? |
6811 | ''But,''said I,''does Mr. Buchanan know for what purpose you are going to North Carolina?'' |
6811 | ''Where is your room?'' |
6811 | ''Will you take us and our trunks out to the steamer?'' |
6811 | A succeeding question was no less important: Who shall take his place? |
6811 | According to Noah Brooks he said to some friends:"I suppose you have seen this letter or a copy of it?" |
6811 | After adjournment the judge asked him,"What was that story of Lincoln''s?" |
6811 | After another pause:"Does n''t it appear strange that men can ignore the moral aspects of this contest? |
6811 | And if I do my duty and do right, you will sustain me, will you not?" |
6811 | And yet people ask, where did Lincoln get the majesty, the classic simplicity and elegance of his Gettysburg address? |
6811 | As the end came in sight an awkward question arose, What shall we do with Jeff Davis-- if we catch him? |
6811 | At Indianapolis he asked pregnant questions:"What, then, is''coercion''? |
6811 | At Washington that night some one asked,"Who is this man Lincoln, anyhow?" |
6811 | At the conclusion of the ceremony, the President- elect demanded:"What''s your height?" |
6811 | But a far more important question is, What use does he make of his ability to read? |
6811 | But what next? |
6811 | C''est moi!_""The state? |
6811 | Can we not come together for the future? |
6811 | Can you do it?" |
6811 | Concerning the clause above italicised there was a general questioning,--Does he mean what he says? |
6811 | Did Lincoln really think the rebellion could be put down in three months? |
6811 | Did it give him nothing? |
6811 | Does he read"books that are books?" |
6811 | H. W. Beecher: Who shall recount our martyr''s sufferings for this people? |
6811 | Had the question been asked early in 1861, Who will be the real force of the republican administration? |
6811 | He sat with his face in his hands and groaned:"Happy? |
6811 | How does_ demonstration_ differ from any other proof? |
6811 | I said to myself, What do I do when I_ demonstrate_ more than when I_ reason_ or_ prove_? |
6811 | If Abraham Lincoln got his remarkable character from parents or grandparents, from whom did he get his physical stature? |
6811 | Lincoln shouted"Who''s there?" |
6811 | Lincoln?" |
6811 | People have asked, in a puzzled manner, why did he leave the beautiful Shenandoah valley? |
6811 | Somehow, we know not how, the poem"Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?" |
6811 | That raised the inquiry, What was their understanding of the question? |
6811 | The conversation embraced plans of living-- in Chicago? |
6811 | The laconic conversation which took place between the President and the general has been reported about as follows:--"What do you want me to do?" |
6811 | The question will naturally be raised, Why should there be another Life of Lincoln? |
6811 | The question with his opponents then was, Who is most likely to carry these states? |
6811 | This being the case, gentlemen, how would it do for us to agree to a change like this? |
6811 | This comparison with Pericles is certainly high praise, but is it not true? |
6811 | This may be met by a counter question, Will there ever be a time in the near future when there will_ not_ be another Life of Lincoln? |
6811 | Those which are mentioned are,"Am I a soldier of the cross?" |
6811 | To appoint Mr. Chase Secretary of the Treasury, and offer the State department to Mr. Dayton of New Jersey? |
6811 | Undoubtedly; but what of the sixth and seventh generations? |
6811 | Very true; but are there no more Darwins? |
6811 | Was there ever a more thorough student? |
6811 | What is''invasion''?... |
6811 | What mysterious right to play tyrant is conferred on a district of country, with its people, by merely calling it a state? |
6811 | What was going on in congress? |
6811 | What were the defects of this remarkable man? |
6811 | What were the reasons for his apparent carelessness? |
6811 | When one becomes interested in a boy, one is almost certain to ask, Whose son is he? |
6811 | When they reached the street the question arose, Where shall we take him? |
6811 | Where did Mozart get his music? |
6811 | Where did Shakespeare get his genius? |
6811 | Where did he come from? |
6811 | Where did he get his grasp upon affairs and his knowledge of men? |
6811 | Where did he get his style? |
6811 | Whose hand smote the lyre of the Scottish plowman, and stayed the life of the German priest? |
6811 | Why did he not save infinite trouble by calling for five- year enlistments at the beginning? |
6811 | Will you not, for me, take that place?" |
6811 | what will the country say?" |
6811 | where did they come from? |
6811 | who exclaimed,"_ L''etat? |
6811 | who were his parents? |
37244 | Ai n''t gone far, I reckon; did n''t take no rations, did he? |
37244 | And do you mean to tell me, Frank Amory, that you could be led into a snare by such a transparent piece of rascality as that? |
37244 | And has Miss Carrington heard of our Bella? |
37244 | And that was the service your people rendered him, was it? 37244 And we may look for two weddings in the--th Cavalry, then?" |
37244 | And what now? |
37244 | And you, little lady? 37244 And_ why_ should she be bright as a button this afternoon?" |
37244 | Are there no trains coming south, not even freight? |
37244 | At the corner? 37244 Brandon, did you notice anything wrong with Amory to- night?" |
37244 | But did n''t you go down towards the lake,--to the right hand, I mean? |
37244 | But do you suppose that General Emory will stand by and allow such a thing to go on under his very nose? |
37244 | But it''s due how soon? |
37244 | But suppose they get wind of it and call upon him to station his men to meet the move? |
37244 | But what good would that have done? 37244 But wo n''t this do?" |
37244 | Ca n''t you understand? 37244 Can you come down to the office, sir? |
37244 | Can you spare me a moment? |
37244 | Could you see nothing of their faces? |
37244 | Did the lieutenant appear to be under any strong excitement? |
37244 | Did you ever see anything prettier? |
37244 | Did you see him? |
37244 | Did you see the lieutenant? |
37244 | Did you see-- did you happen to hear of any letter for me at Sandbrook before you came away? 37244 Do Yankees habitually say''I reckon''?" |
37244 | Do you mean that he has been at other mischief than this mysterious attempt at Amory? |
37244 | Got to New Orleans all right? |
37244 | Had Amory any money, do you know? |
37244 | Harrod, what is it? |
37244 | Have we time to send a despatch to New Orleans? |
37244 | Have you been long in the South? |
37244 | Have you heard anything further? |
37244 | Have you told your mother of this misunderstanding? |
37244 | He ai n''t got back, has he? 37244 He was excited, perhaps upset, at seeing Turpin where he was; but why do you ask?" |
37244 | How is that, Paulie? |
37244 | How long ago? |
37244 | How much do you claim, Smith? |
37244 | How should I know? |
37244 | How''s Vinton? |
37244 | I knew that, of course; but why should that bring Peyton here? |
37244 | I suppose you see poor Turpin''s woe? |
37244 | I? 37244 Is n''t she exquisite?" |
37244 | Major Vinton, say you? 37244 May I take your horse, Billy?" |
37244 | Money, sir? 37244 No major, then?" |
37244 | No man passed Gaston''s on horseback, I can swear to that; and if he came at all as far as the bridge, why did n''t he come the rest of the way? 37244 No; where is he?" |
37244 | Now, my lad,thought I,"what have you done to put your foot in it?" |
37244 | Oh, Mr. Turpin, would you please bring me our lunch- basket? |
37244 | Pauline, did the major tell you in his letter? |
37244 | Shall I pour for you? |
37244 | Shall I read it? |
37244 | Sheep, old man, how are you? |
37244 | Tell me what? |
37244 | That coffee ready? |
37244 | That freight gone by yet, Billy? |
37244 | That their orders had come? |
37244 | The major says I may go,he spoke blithely;"but is not Amory coming?" |
37244 | Then it took half an hour to buy half a dozen oranges of that old Dago at the fruit- stand, did it? 37244 Then where''d he go to?" |
37244 | They? 37244 To the right? |
37244 | Train coming? |
37244 | Well, if all should be quiet to- morrow, come and dine with us at Moreau''s at six, will you? |
37244 | Whar am I most like to catch the boys by dinner- time? |
37244 | Whar''s he gone to? |
37244 | What answer did you give him? |
37244 | What boat will he be looking at? 37244 What chance by going to Grand Junction?" |
37244 | What did Bella say? |
37244 | What do you think it is? |
37244 | What has been the matter, orderly? |
37244 | What have you seen? |
37244 | What is it all, colonel? |
37244 | What is it? |
37244 | What on earth could she find to do down on Royal Street for nearly half an hour without going out of sight? |
37244 | What on earth could take the regiment to Dakota? |
37244 | What other places are there near here that would be open now, Gaston? |
37244 | What say you, Brandon? 37244 What''s up now?" |
37244 | What? |
37244 | When are you coming to see us? |
37244 | When did you come? 37244 Where is Major Vinton, father?" |
37244 | Where''s that flask of yours? |
37244 | Which way did he go? |
37244 | Which way did they go? |
37244 | Who comes there? |
37244 | Who is Major Vinton? |
37244 | Why did you not make him pay you yesterday? |
37244 | Why not with the Summers''at Colonel Newhall''s place? 37244 Why should he hate me?" |
37244 | Why so? |
37244 | Why so? |
37244 | Why, Sheep, did you know Colonel Summers and Miss Carrington? |
37244 | Wo n''t you come in? |
37244 | Would you like to look in at your Legislature? |
37244 | Ye- e- es? |
37244 | Yes; but had n''t we better wait until we get back on Canal Street before lighting them? 37244 Yesterday?" |
37244 | You can go? |
37244 | You mean he''s gone to the left-- past here? |
37244 | You saw Major Vinton? |
37244 | You say you thought he looked ill? |
37244 | _ Do_ you understand? 37244 _ Find_ him? |
37244 | _ How_ did you know? |
37244 | _ You_ sent those violets of course, Miss Summers? |
37244 | ''Are you responsible for this gentleman''s language?'' |
37244 | A gurgle and a long- drawn"ah- h- h"followed, then,--"Got a cigar?" |
37244 | A moment''s silence, then,--"Well,_ why_ should she not want to come and meet the judge?" |
37244 | Agent,"broke in Harrod, impatiently;"when are they due?" |
37244 | Ah, Miss Kitty, you must, indeed, be very young, thought I, and so asked,--"Have you been long in the South since the war, Miss Carrington?" |
37244 | Ai n''t we, gen''lemen?" |
37244 | All that snoring was a counterfeit for_ my_ benefit, was it? |
37244 | Almost the first question was,"Can we not move Frank over with me?" |
37244 | Amory?" |
37244 | And now, how can I dispel your perplexity? |
37244 | Anything wrong?" |
37244 | Are you already falling into the cavalry groove? |
37244 | Are you armed?" |
37244 | Are you aware that you have not even remarked upon the beauty of the weather this afternoon?" |
37244 | Are you sure he is ill? |
37244 | Are you sure you wrote plain directions?" |
37244 | At last there came a bubble of soft, silvery laughter and the mischievous inquiry,--"And how should a lady answer? |
37244 | Brandon?" |
37244 | Brandon?" |
37244 | Brandon?" |
37244 | Brandon?" |
37244 | But how could I face Kitty Carrington with that undelivered note? |
37244 | But just about eleven a man came in, who looked closely at me, said''Captain Amory?'' |
37244 | But where was Amory? |
37244 | But, Brandon, had not I better go with you? |
37244 | Can I serve you in any way?" |
37244 | Can he have been seized as Vinton was?" |
37244 | Can you send this to him?" |
37244 | Can you spare him that long?" |
37244 | Can you suggest any way of helping me? |
37244 | Colonel, you''re not going to take Miss Summers that way?" |
37244 | Could he give any clue by which we could find them? |
37244 | Could it be that the order had already come? |
37244 | Could it have been from Mr. Parker? |
37244 | Could you not even resent_ that_, Kitty Carrington? |
37244 | Did he go back with the battalion?" |
37244 | Did you feel his hand?" |
37244 | Did you note anything out of the way?" |
37244 | Did you notice his eyes, his color? |
37244 | Do n''t you remember father''s anxiety at Sandbrook before we came away? |
37244 | Do you suppose he knew his way back by Washington Avenue, and had turned to the left instead of this way?" |
37244 | Do you think Amory can see us this evening and tell us what he knows of this affair?" |
37244 | Do you think he is well?" |
37244 | Do you want to see him?" |
37244 | Does that young officer owe you any money?" |
37244 | Does_ that_ look as though I thought them susceptible? |
37244 | Had he hoped to reserve that happiness to himself; or was there some deeper reason to account for his avoidance of her? |
37244 | Had he seen or heard anything of Mr. Amory? |
37244 | Has that young cub Peyton been at the bottom of this?" |
37244 | Have you any idea where he is to- day, or who the other man is?" |
37244 | He is awfully proud, is n''t he, Paulie?" |
37244 | How did he get back? |
37244 | How do you do, Miss Carrington?" |
37244 | How do you suppose you were so fortunate as to escape missing him and the other blackguard? |
37244 | How is he to- day?" |
37244 | How soon can you get through your talk with father?" |
37244 | How soon must we start? |
37244 | How was he to know where the lake lay?" |
37244 | How was he to know?" |
37244 | How-- Miss Grayson, for instance?" |
37244 | I was nothing to her, why should she be such a torment to me? |
37244 | If C. K., what did it stand for? |
37244 | If Mars were really smitten with my fascinating niece, how far had it gone? |
37244 | If he should come here, get him into your room and make him lie down, will you?" |
37244 | If he''s lied to me again, I''ll----Say,_ is_ he back?" |
37244 | If so, what did it mean? |
37244 | Is she pretty? |
37244 | It was at the tip of my tongue to make some genial, off- hand, matter- of- fact inquiry, such as"Heard from Bella, lately?" |
37244 | Kitty started from her dream; flashed one quick glance at me, as she answered,--"Mrs. Amory? |
37244 | May I ask where your mother is living now?" |
37244 | May I offer you a toddy? |
37244 | Mr. Brandon, can you make_ any_ conjecture as to the nature of his illness?" |
37244 | Now that''s very unusual in a young man under the circumstances, is n''t it? |
37244 | Now the question that was agitating my mind was, how was Mars to get out of that entanglement if it really existed? |
37244 | Now, Uncle Georgy, is n''t that circumlocution itself? |
37244 | Now, had Parker heard it coming? |
37244 | Now, supposing you are released to- night, how soon can you find him?" |
37244 | Now, was Frank Amory a victim in good earnest, or only a narrow escape from being one? |
37244 | Now, what could have brought him here, and what connection had his wanderings with Peyton''s? |
37244 | Now, what in the world was I to do? |
37244 | Now, what is it? |
37244 | Now, what on earth could I do? |
37244 | Oh, Paulie,_ what_ has happened?" |
37244 | Peyton?" |
37244 | Presently I met Colonel Newhall, and his first question was,--"How is Vinton to- night?" |
37244 | Shall I ever forget that almost breathless ride? |
37244 | Shall I send, sir?" |
37244 | Shall we try it?" |
37244 | That charming little friend of Major Vinton''s? |
37244 | That whistle_ must_ have been a signal of some kind, and, if so, what did it portend? |
37244 | Then I suppose I, too, am horribly at fault,"said I, laughing,"for I''ve done pretty much the same thing?" |
37244 | There could be no doubt of the situation, for had we not gathered in honor of the major and his gallant young adjutant? |
37244 | There they were, two gracefully intertwining letters; a"C"and a"K."Now was it C. K. or K. C.? |
37244 | There was so much anxiety in Amory''s face that it suddenly occurred to me to ask,"Your mother is not ill, I hope? |
37244 | Turpin?" |
37244 | Vinton might be found down along the levee, but what good would that do? |
37244 | Was any sudden move probable? |
37244 | Was he"miffed"because he had found Turpin in happy_ tête- à -tête_ with her? |
37244 | Was it from that source he now looked for another? |
37244 | Was it possible that he thought I might be some staff- officer? |
37244 | Was there_ ever_ such a colossal ass? |
37244 | Were we not there to break bread once more before parting,--to wish them_ bon voyage_ with our stirrup- cups? |
37244 | Were you already so abject that a newly- won lover dare tell you that after his horses were seen to he would look after you? |
37244 | Were you ill then?" |
37244 | What better chance do you want?'' |
37244 | What could I ever have said to give you such an impression? |
37244 | What could he mean by saying that he was glad Vinton had secured his leave of absence? |
37244 | What could we prove? |
37244 | What do you know? |
37244 | What do you suppose is wrong?" |
37244 | What do you think?" |
37244 | What had he been doing to set the marshal on his track?" |
37244 | What has taken all the color from those round, velvety cheeks? |
37244 | What is this?" |
37244 | What man, raised in a large family of sisters, does n''t grow up as I was raised,--a tease? |
37244 | What more natural, therefore, than that Mr. Amory should turn to her for conversation and entertainment on his arrival? |
37244 | What was there about the whole proceeding to upset any one''s equanimity? |
37244 | What would you want him secured for now that we have Amory safe and warned against him in the future? |
37244 | What young girl was there to whom he was devoted? |
37244 | What_ could_ be wrong with him? |
37244 | What_ will_ Major Vinton say?" |
37244 | Where can we put her? |
37244 | Where could Amory have gone? |
37244 | Where did he go? |
37244 | Where had I seen that superscription before? |
37244 | Where have they gone?" |
37244 | Where was he, and how had he escaped the trap? |
37244 | Who could be there? |
37244 | Who that ever saw it could forget it? |
37244 | Who was it who first said that the gist of a woman''s letter would always be found in the postscript? |
37244 | Who-- who else came?" |
37244 | Why did n''t I wear my hat?" |
37244 | Why did n''t you say turn to the right instead of south? |
37244 | Why did they leap back as you came out?" |
37244 | Why need I apologize further? |
37244 | Why should Kitty look ill at ease, nervous, distressed? |
37244 | Why should Mars be so unusually excited and flighty? |
37244 | Why should there be any cause for embarrassment? |
37244 | Why, Uncle George,_ how_ should I know whether they are susceptible or not? |
37244 | Why?" |
37244 | Will you come into father''s library and let me explain?" |
37244 | Would I join them? |
37244 | Would I see them? |
37244 | Would Monsieur step up to the room and wait their coming? |
37244 | Would he show me to Lieutenant Amory''s room? |
37244 | Would you be willing to tell me how she came to know anything about Bella Grayson?" |
37244 | Yet you know they do not sail until to- morrow, do you not?" |
37244 | You have heard from her?" |
37244 | You see how it is, do n''t you?" |
37244 | You see there is abundant room, little lady, so why not come?" |
37244 | You would not care to have the thing made public, would you?" |
37244 | You_ will_ be true to me, as, God knows, I will be to you?" |
37244 | _ Did n''t_ you, then?" |
37244 | _ Sure_ you understand?" |
37244 | a special with troops, do you mean?" |
37244 | and what he said about its perhaps being too late for any effort on his part? |
37244 | had I seen him? |
37244 | he muttered; then turned suddenly to me:"Mr. Brandon, when we get back to Gaston''s let me have your hat, will you? |
37244 | learning that unwritten creed that puts the care of his mount as the corner- stone of a trooper''s temple? |
37244 | little girl, what is it that has made those soft eyes so heavy, so sad? |
37244 | of course that is the first question; is she-- anything, everything, in fact? |
37244 | or, do you-- is it possible that you mean-- you too are interested in her? |
37244 | what note or message will you intrust to me?" |
37244 | what_ could_ such an old idiot do? |
37244 | when did you get here?" |
37244 | you, Brandon? |
42923 | Ah yes, but in the old story when St. Nicholas arrived, an angel came with him: are you right sure there''s not an angel in the room with you now? |
42923 | Alone? 42923 And after the third Father-- who gets me next? |
42923 | And have n''t you any cousins who give picnics? |
42923 | And how many do_ you_ send? |
42923 | And what about a girl with your cousins? |
42923 | And what are_ you_ going to do? |
42923 | And what can you possibly be going to do at the circus? 42923 Another for you, Downs?" |
42923 | Anyhow, I have learned that cows have the new American way of chewing; so they never get indigestion, do they? |
42923 | Are n''t you their doctor? |
42923 | As it is or as it might be? |
42923 | Ask her_ what_? |
42923 | Before you are grown? |
42923 | Bring a chair, Downs, will you? |
42923 | But forever while you live-- do you love as long as that? |
42923 | But who got all the things? |
42923 | Ca n''t you find enough in the world to fight without going away back to fight William the Conqueror? 42923 Could I speak to the doctor a moment? |
42923 | Did you find the key? |
42923 | Do I cast a light on him? 42923 Do n''t they ever get sick there?" |
42923 | Do n''t they look as though they liked to dance and to eat and to manage everything and everybody? |
42923 | Do you ever send yours? |
42923 | How could they feed five thousand people on five loaves and two fishes? 42923 How do you do, Downs?" |
42923 | How is the children''s epidemic to- day? |
42923 | I ca n''t stop thinking, can I? 42923 I think candy eggs would make a very good lining, better than real eggs; and about half the time you''re trying to line me with them, are n''t you? |
42923 | If I went into the army, would n''t I have to leave the farm here? |
42923 | Is n''t there a single minute when everybody is well everywhere? |
42923 | Is not that a strange question? |
42923 | Is somebody very sick? |
42923 | Is yours sour enough, Aleck? |
42923 | Is yours sweet enough, Downs? |
42923 | It sounds like nonsense: what''s the matter with_ your_ mind''s eye, I beg to inquire? |
42923 | It''s sad being a doctor, is n''t it? |
42923 | More lemonade, Aleck? |
42923 | Not all over the world? |
42923 | Not all the time? |
42923 | Now then, while I wait, what shall we do? |
42923 | Now, what are you trying to talk about? |
42923 | Oh, then our family did n''t want any rest,exclaimed Harold;"for grandfather had a child when he was ninety- one: is n''t that so, Elizabeth?" |
42923 | On_ both_ arms, did you say? |
42923 | Oratory-- where would I get my gas? |
42923 | Suppose I studied law and then some day I were called to the Supreme Bench: would n''t that take me away? |
42923 | Tell me about the professions in the War: what did they do about it; how did they act? |
42923 | Texas would hold them, would n''t it? 42923 Then do you or do n''t you?" |
42923 | Then, how old must he be? |
42923 | Well, after the animals bellow and roar and make all kinds of noise, then what? |
42923 | Well, then, if you love, do you love forever? |
42923 | Well, while you''re talking, what about your sons and their cousins? 42923 What about going into the army?" |
42923 | What do_ you_ know about sad? 42923 What else is there to do?" |
42923 | What right have you to defraud a girl out of all that happiness? |
42923 | Where could I fight if I did n''t fight in my own house? |
42923 | Where did you pick it up when you were a boy? |
42923 | Where did you pick up that notion? |
42923 | Where is Fred Ousley? |
42923 | Where was I? |
42923 | Which? |
42923 | Who won the last race? |
42923 | Why did n''t you go to the picnic? |
42923 | Why do n''t you doctors send your patients to that country? |
42923 | Why ninety? |
42923 | Will you come with us, Downs? |
42923 | Yes; but when are you going to have a Christmas Tree of our own? |
42923 | You do n''t have to confess what you''d like to do, do you? 42923 You mean_ tell_ her, do n''t you? |
42923 | _ Which mint?_said the minister, who kept his worldly wits about him. |
42923 | Æsculapius-- who was he? 42923 A bolder voice broke in:--You''re a very mysterious person, are you not?" |
42923 | A tender voice put forth an unexpected question:--"Are you sure that there is not some one with you?" |
42923 | All alone? |
42923 | And then what?" |
42923 | And then? |
42923 | And what woman fails to espouse any wife''s dignity except the woman who supplants the wife? |
42923 | Are n''t there questions a boy ca n''t ask his father? |
42923 | As he sees into me, does what he sees strengthen? |
42923 | As soon as you begin to talk, do n''t you get into trouble-- with somebody? |
42923 | As the vehicles drew alongside, he looked at them rather absent- mindedly:--"Where are you running off to?" |
42923 | At the gate it was barely heard and then it was not heard: was it gone or was it waiting there? |
42923 | At this point the uncle turned unexpectedly toward his nephew:--"Does this bore you, Downs?" |
42923 | Birney?" |
42923 | But he was n''t a better doctor than_ you_ are, was he? |
42923 | But then is not the natural in such a case miraculous enough? |
42923 | But wait-- lemonade?" |
42923 | But what effect have years upon the master passions? |
42923 | But what were the students up to among themselves at nights? |
42923 | But where were the gifts? |
42923 | But would n''t salve be better-- salve for old wounds?" |
42923 | Ca n''t we make anything in our country that we want?" |
42923 | Cake_ is_ a kind of sacred thing at home even yet, is n''t it? |
42923 | Can you understand that?" |
42923 | Children_ do_ dwindle nowadays, do n''t they?" |
42923 | Could n''t we have them if we wanted them? |
42923 | Did you ever think of that?" |
42923 | Do I cast a shadow? |
42923 | Do children contrive their picture- frames by glueing October acorns and pine- cones to ovals of boards and giving the mass a thick coat of varnish? |
42923 | Do country children do such things and have such notions now? |
42923 | Do country children in that part of the world make such playthings now? |
42923 | Do n''t you know that a child as instinctively imitates its grandmother?" |
42923 | Do n''t you know that a child as instinctively imitates its stepmother-- if it loves her? |
42923 | Do n''t you know that a foundling in a foundling asylum as instinctively imitates its nurse? |
42923 | Do n''t you suppose there''ll be any supper?" |
42923 | Do n''t you think Texas could contain them all and contain them forever?" |
42923 | Do n''t you_ know_, Aleck, that the disobedience of children may be one of their natural rights?" |
42923 | Do they slit the stems and cast them into the near brook and watch them form into ringlets and floating hair-- as of a water spirit? |
42923 | Do they still look to wild life and not wholly to the shops of cities for the satisfying of their instincts for toys and games and fancies? |
42923 | Do you love a girl longer if you tell her or if you do n''t tell her?" |
42923 | Do you notice any dwindling anywhere about me? |
42923 | Do you see any angel?" |
42923 | Do you suppose I try to keep one of my cows from kicking over the bucket of milk by tying her hind legs? |
42923 | Does any little rustic instrument- maker now draw melodies from a homegrown corn- stalk? |
42923 | Does my presence here by him bring tranquillity, rest, sound sleep? |
42923 | Does n''t it? |
42923 | Does that sound hard?" |
42923 | Every summer do n''t you disguise yourself and drive over the same track in an old cart and gather them up again? |
42923 | Far back when his character was being moulded, had not Nature seen to it that wrong suggestions were sown in him? |
42923 | Gratitude rendered him ill at ease: who can thank Science? |
42923 | Had not all his trouble started there? |
42923 | Has not that hour always been the natural locality and resort for the supernatural? |
42923 | Have n''t they always said that a house with a secret in it was n''t a good home for children? |
42923 | Have n''t they always taught us not to have secrets? |
42923 | Have n''t they always told us never to pretend? |
42923 | Herbert and Elizabeth will have to be looked out for in the future: Elizabeth may refuse to leave the neighborhood, who knows?" |
42923 | How could Shakespeare have written certain dramas without the mere aid of twelve o''clock? |
42923 | How do you straighten that out?_""_ I ca n''t straighten that out._""_ Then I ca n''t straighten it out, either._"*****"So young-- so young!" |
42923 | How is that? |
42923 | How many great men in history have begun their growth by attaching themselves to the great traits of their mothers? |
42923 | How_ could_ they? |
42923 | How_ did_ you ever get to be a member of_ this_ dull family?" |
42923 | I should like to have his private ear professionally: could you pass one of his ears out?" |
42923 | If he''d come into this neighborhood and tried to practise, you''d soon have ousted him, would n''t you, with your doses and soups and jellies?" |
42923 | If people must hunt for miracles and must have them, can they not find all they want in the natural? |
42923 | Is n''t that the United States? |
42923 | Is n''t that what they call being American-- to be as open as all out of doors? |
42923 | Is that it?" |
42923 | Is there any wonder that, nobody though he insisted upon being, his appearance in public always attracted a crowd? |
42923 | Is there anything more mysterious than one of you children?" |
42923 | It will be a long time before I see you again; have you thought of that?" |
42923 | Little children of the Dark Ages!--does any one now ever try to enter into their terrors and troubles and warped souls? |
42923 | Not all alone?" |
42923 | Now does n''t it?" |
42923 | Now what will I give her?" |
42923 | Now, Melissa, make me one, will you?" |
42923 | PART II PART II I TWO OTHER WINTER SNOWBIRDS AT A WINDOW"Do you see them coming, Elizabeth?" |
42923 | She spoke caustically:--"No intimate sacred bond between mother and child which guides it to imitate her?" |
42923 | That would be at least a million to every hair on my head: do n''t you think that would make any head a little heavy? |
42923 | The chill in the house all these years-- had that been vital warmth to him?" |
42923 | The old question now rang out:"What do_ you_ think of the immigrants?" |
42923 | Then he inquired:--"How old must a boy be to ask a girl?" |
42923 | Then in the same spirit in which the group of them had carried on their drama of the night they now asked him:--"Where will_ you_ be?" |
42923 | There were poker chips, showing that the doctor had poker neighbors( where else if not there? |
42923 | They do n''t have to do_ that_, do they?" |
42923 | Trotter, runner, or pacer?" |
42923 | Was his chastisement that morning a sunbeam? |
42923 | Was n''t it a woman in the Old Testament-- Sarah-- or Hagar-- or maybe Rebecca?" |
42923 | Was n''t that Kentucky country school- house the United States? |
42923 | Was not_ he_ harvesting what he had not scattered? |
42923 | Well, after the darling has had her fatal supper? |
42923 | Well, then? |
42923 | Were not children heard whispering on the other side of a door, and was not the door unlocked and thrown open? |
42923 | What are five years to a master Hatred? |
42923 | What are immigrants to me? |
42923 | What are ten years to Revenge? |
42923 | What are twenty to Malice? |
42923 | What are you going to do at the party?" |
42923 | What else are you going to do over there? |
42923 | What is it? |
42923 | What next?" |
42923 | What then?" |
42923 | What things merry or sorry could ever have come to pass but for the stroke of midnight? |
42923 | When He is done with me, then what?" |
42923 | Where did you get that idea-- if sanity can call it an idea?" |
42923 | Where were we?" |
42923 | Where will all the children of the earth be then?" |
42923 | Who can thank a man for doing his duty and his best? |
42923 | Who told_ you_ anything about sad?" |
42923 | Why awaken? |
42923 | Why ca n''t Christmas be as open as all out of doors? |
42923 | Why he should come near midnight-- who ever asked such a question? |
42923 | Why should not wives be commanded not to covet their neighbors''husbands? |
42923 | Why was the other half of the Commandment suppressed? |
42923 | Will you come to him...?" |
42923 | Will you sit down, please? |
42923 | With bread for thousands everywhere, why pick up crumbs?" |
42923 | Would you have told your father?" |
42923 | You ca n''t say that I did n''t take your nasty old doses, can you?" |
42923 | You do n''t expect me to stop thinking, do you, when I''m just beginning really to think?" |
42923 | the long expected Devil come at last( as a pumpkin carved and candle- lighted) for his own particular urchin? |
33091 | A conquest? |
33091 | A revolution? 33091 Afoot? |
33091 | Alisanda,I pleaded,"is not our love true love? |
33091 | Alisanda,I said,"has it been nothing to you, all these golden days since we met on the Monongahela?" |
33091 | Am Oi a black traitor to sell a fellay Christian to a heretic? |
33091 | An article-- my property? |
33091 | An hour? |
33091 | And if I admit the risk? |
33091 | And if so, what then? 33091 And if your guess is right?" |
33091 | And you are yourself skilled as a riverman, señor? |
33091 | And you found the former subjects of Spain and France well disposed toward the Republic? |
33091 | And you would tell me a man of Señor Vallois''s intelligence invites the entrance of that wave? |
33091 | And you? |
33091 | And your opinion of the Spanish boundaries? |
33091 | Are there not others? |
33091 | Are they? |
33091 | Are you and the men also prisoners in the hands of that capricious Governor? |
33091 | Are you blind drunk? |
33091 | Are your friends so soon forgot? |
33091 | As to that, would not the opinions of Señor Vallois and Colonel Burr be more authoritative? |
33091 | As yet? |
33091 | Bateau?--flat? |
33091 | Be ye buyin''fer him? |
33091 | Become a nun? |
33091 | Better late than never, eh? |
33091 | But Salcedo--? |
33091 | But a fair field--? |
33091 | But a second for yourself? |
33091 | But a stockade on Spanish territory? |
33091 | But how as to savages? |
33091 | But how do you find the window of the fair one? |
33091 | But what if the señorita''s chamber is located in a remote part of the house? |
33091 | But when shall I see her again, padre? |
33091 | But where?--what place, señora? 33091 But with regard to the other Spanish line-- the Texas boundary?" |
33091 | But, sir, should we fall in with the Spaniards? |
33091 | But, sir,I protested,"what has Colonel Burr to do with a military expedition planned by the Commander- in- Chief of the Army?" |
33091 | But-- the-- body? |
33091 | By marrying the Viceroy? |
33091 | Can anything be more desperate than our present situation? |
33091 | Can he shoot? |
33091 | Can it be Don Nimesio Salcedo does not admire our teeth? |
33091 | Can not? 33091 Can there be such?" |
33091 | Can you never be prudent? 33091 Chihuahua?" |
33091 | Could I prevent if you wished to try? |
33091 | Could you not take it upon yourself to hurry me south at once? |
33091 | Did he tell you the cause of that meeting-- and the outcome? |
33091 | Dissuade me?--now? 33091 Do you then believe I can look upon her grief and yours without sorrow?" |
33091 | Do you, who voluntarily joined the cavalry of New Spain, complain of the Government to which you owe allegiance? |
33091 | Does this look like it? 33091 Dr. Cuthbert,"I replied,"may I ask you to remove the rosary from about my neck?" |
33091 | Embroidered banners? |
33091 | For my sake, Alisanda? |
33091 | From Philadelphia? |
33091 | Gentleman?--Torture? |
33091 | Gone? |
33091 | Had you in mind, señor, to take a bateau or a flat? |
33091 | Has he gone? |
33091 | Has the prisoner anything to say? |
33091 | Has your ambition so narrow a range, doctor? |
33091 | Have I said that I have found you dull? |
33091 | Have you never thought that the Spanish colonies may be as desirous of achieving independence from foreign oppression as were our own? |
33091 | Have you not heard? |
33091 | Have you not yourself said that the way of the gulf is impassable for me? |
33091 | Have you then taken the warpath, my brother? 33091 He has gone west?" |
33091 | Her uncle-- Don Pedro? |
33091 | Her uncle--? |
33091 | Him-- Salcedo?--that old tyrant? |
33091 | How about it, Don Faciendo? |
33091 | How as to the children? |
33091 | How can I answer you? 33091 How can I, dear? |
33091 | How dare you, who call yourself an officer and a Christian, torture so hideously this gentleman? |
33091 | How is this, Don Juan? |
33091 | How much? |
33091 | How of my name? |
33091 | How was he to foresee whether or not war had been declared? |
33091 | How?--What is this, señor? 33091 Hungry, are they?" |
33091 | If I cross the barrier, may I hope? |
33091 | Indians? |
33091 | Is an incursion into the territories of a neighboring Government necessarily an act of war? |
33091 | Is it also displeasing to you? |
33091 | Is it not the question of the Texas line which most threatens to terminate our fair relations with your Government? |
33091 | Is it so long ago as that? |
33091 | Is it so you republican heretics meet the words of a most venerable prelate? |
33091 | Is it then religion that is the insurmountable barrier-- the impassable gulf? 33091 Is not your business with him the affair of others no less than your own?" |
33091 | Is that the flag of your father in Washington, from whose people you receive in barter all your guns and powder and lead, your strouding and beads? 33091 Is the_ Siren_, then, his vessel?" |
33091 | Is this the manner of the coming generation? 33091 Juan, can you not look at the matter through my eyes?" |
33091 | Lafitte? |
33091 | Love?--love? |
33091 | Lumber cordelled by keelboat from New Orleans? |
33091 | Marry!--Him? |
33091 | May I inquire the purpose of our distinguished guest''s presence with us? |
33091 | May I request you to name your business with Captain Lafitte? |
33091 | Medina? |
33091 | Men of the Pawnee nation, how comes that flag here? |
33091 | Mistook me? |
33091 | My ambition? |
33091 | No need? |
33091 | No?--Then whom? |
33091 | Not to make war? |
33091 | Now?--so soon? |
33091 | Pawnee? 33091 Pitt!--Pitt dead?" |
33091 | Ready? |
33091 | Royal court? |
33091 | Sets me free? 33091 Señor?" |
33091 | Señorita Vallois--? |
33091 | Señorita Vallois?--You know her? |
33091 | Señorita, will you not forgive me? 33091 She? |
33091 | Sir, may I suggest the doubt of the prisoner''s sanity, in mitigation of his crime? |
33091 | Sir,he asked, in a low and eager voice,"may I indeed count you among my Western friends?" |
33091 | So Señor Vallois was so ill advised as to take with him his niece?--or was she not his daughter? |
33091 | So large a boat-- for two men? 33091 So?" |
33091 | So? |
33091 | Spy? |
33091 | Suppose, then, that I part company from you here, and strike out to cross my barrier alone? |
33091 | Tell me, Alisanda, may I come? |
33091 | That? |
33091 | That? |
33091 | The West? |
33091 | The gazette? |
33091 | Then Your Excellency gives me leave to join as a volunteer? |
33091 | Then how should you know that she is not here? |
33091 | Then they are not at the fort? |
33091 | Then what prevents my appointment, Your Excellency? 33091 Then what?" |
33091 | Then you do not care to venture it? |
33091 | Then you insist? |
33091 | Then you will not come back even if they rebuff you at the upper settlements? |
33091 | They did turn? |
33091 | They flew the black flag? |
33091 | Third mate? 33091 To me, or to such a man as Medina,"I argued--"which would be the greater sin?" |
33091 | True, but the children? |
33091 | Two days!--Where? |
33091 | Vallois? |
33091 | Vera Cruz? |
33091 | Was it not a happy surprise? 33091 What am I to do? |
33091 | What do_ you_ mean? 33091 What does all this mean? |
33091 | What is a little risk, Alisanda, to one who has crossed the barrier to reach you? |
33091 | What is death to men?--even this hideous agony of hunger? 33091 What is that?" |
33091 | What is this, padre? |
33091 | What is your opinion of that craft? |
33091 | What now? |
33091 | What odds of the danger, if I have your love-- Alisanda? |
33091 | What of the ovations given to Mr. Aaron Burr during his trip this past season? |
33091 | What time? |
33091 | What''s this? |
33091 | What, then? 33091 What?" |
33091 | When am I to hear about your heroic journey, Señor Robinson? |
33091 | When will you we d me, dearest one? |
33091 | Where, señor? 33091 Who are you, sir? |
33091 | Who are you? 33091 Who is not eager to get at the secrets of El Dorado?" |
33091 | Who, Juan? |
33091 | Whom have we here? |
33091 | Whom they term the Governor- General of the Internal Provinces? |
33091 | Why ask me that? |
33091 | Why did you not tell me that at the first, sir? |
33091 | Why do they rub their faces? |
33091 | Why do you bring him in--_imbecil_? 33091 Why in the West Indian trade?" |
33091 | Why not put it, a master there and an overseer here? 33091 Why not, Your Excellency?" |
33091 | Why not? |
33091 | Why not? |
33091 | Why should you wish to go to Vera Cruz? |
33091 | Will that jog your memory, mistress? |
33091 | With the Spanish Minister? |
33091 | Would you have me murder the man? |
33091 | Yet Salcedo has not incarcerated you? 33091 Yet if I succeed beyond reason--?" |
33091 | Yet the horses? |
33091 | Yet what if I am discovered to be a stranger? |
33091 | Yet what of that other barrier? |
33091 | Yet would it not be as well to consult with our friends? 33091 You are acquainted in Chihuahua?" |
33091 | You are not pleased at General Wilkinson? |
33091 | You are willing to do all within your power to further the success of the expedition? |
33091 | You are with us?--you cast in your fortune with the future Empire of the West? |
33091 | You bring me letters? |
33091 | You dare name the great Kingdom of Spain as not among the first of the powers? |
33091 | You deny it-- in the face of this positive testimony? |
33091 | You do not acknowledge God''s vicar? |
33091 | You go within the week? |
33091 | You have asked the favor, and-- he has refused it? |
33091 | You have heard that she is ill? |
33091 | You have made sure of Señor Vallois? |
33091 | You here? |
33091 | You hold to it? 33091 You know her?" |
33091 | You mean, sir, as a spy? |
33091 | You mean--? |
33091 | You mean--? |
33091 | You pardon my stupid error? 33091 You ran out!--you took the scalp of the chief under the eyes of his followers?" |
33091 | You saw it? |
33091 | You say they lured you into Santa Fe? |
33091 | You speak of the Indian savages? |
33091 | You spoke to me, sir? |
33091 | You support her statement, sir? |
33091 | You think to go south to New Orleans? |
33091 | You were walking toward the Capitol? |
33091 | You will remain in Natchez a day or two? |
33091 | You would be willing to give your services as surgeon? |
33091 | You would give her to another!--as a bribe to win the support of another!--when you know she loves me? |
33091 | Your Excellency will then permit me to go to Chihuahua? |
33091 | Your Excellency, may I ask you to read what Colonel Burr has written with regard to myself? |
33091 | Your countrymen? 33091 Your fate?" |
33091 | Your mother? 33091 Your papers?" |
33091 | Your pardon, doctor, but the terms--? |
33091 | Your party? |
33091 | Your proof? |
33091 | Your reasons? |
33091 | _ Madre de Dios!_ You would go to Chihuahua? |
33091 | _ Poder de Dios!_ I, a soldier, to march without orders? 33091 _ Por Dios!_ Do I deny it? |
33091 | _ Por Dios!_ You dared send such a message to Salcedo? |
33091 | _ Quien sabe?_I muttered, affecting a doleful tone. |
33091 | _ Quien sabe?_he smiled. |
33091 | _ Sabe Dios!--Quien sabe?_he returned. |
33091 | _ Sabe Dios!--Quien sabe?_he said. |
33091 | _ Sabe Dios-- Quien sabe?_he repeated, as I set off. |
33091 | _ Santa Maria!_ but you do not leave us, señor? 33091 A señorita from Old Spain? 33091 After all, what proof had I of Wilkinson''s connivance in the plans of Colonel Burr? 33091 All is arranged? |
33091 | And what if that man should sell himself for your beauty? |
33091 | And what of ourselves?" |
33091 | And yours, señor?" |
33091 | Are you in funds?" |
33091 | At last,"Has it occurred to you, John, that this expedition may have other object than the exploration of our Western boundaries?" |
33091 | At what, sir, do you appraise my worth?" |
33091 | Back so soon, señor?" |
33091 | But can I then leave New Spain? |
33091 | But if you insist upon your suspicions, why not include Baptiste Le Lande with us in a trio of spies?" |
33091 | But one man or a mere handful, however brave--_Santisima Virgen!_""Malgares?" |
33091 | But the veil-- the nun''s veil?" |
33091 | But this Monsieur Lafitte-- he sails for Vera Cruz?" |
33091 | But this menace by the Governor- General?" |
33091 | But what is all this to you now?" |
33091 | But who does not fear a life-- or death-- of disgrace?" |
33091 | But you?" |
33091 | Can I we d you while I still think of it as a sin-- a marriage against God''s will?" |
33091 | Can it not give me one word of hope?" |
33091 | Can such love be wrong in the sight of God?" |
33091 | Can you doubt it? |
33091 | Can you name a single reason why I should not shoot you?" |
33091 | Can you submit to such an outrage?" |
33091 | Comprenez- vous?_""That''s to be seen!" |
33091 | Could such a man be trusted? |
33091 | Could we ask more?" |
33091 | Could you have doubted it from the first-- the very first? |
33091 | Did I not mock you and scorn you and look coldly upon you? |
33091 | Did you not meet her at the table of our Jacobin philosopher? |
33091 | Did you then cross the mountains?" |
33091 | Do you admit that you struck your superior officer?" |
33091 | Do you not think such love God''s will?" |
33091 | Do you then marvel that my wife is desirous of meeting two such heroes?" |
33091 | Do you think I fear the danger?" |
33091 | Do you wonder that I should have made the venture?" |
33091 | Even were the fact which you so abhor true as to yourself, would your eyes be any the less wondrously glorious? |
33091 | From what she said, I was led to infer--""What she said?" |
33091 | Gentlemen, are you ready?" |
33091 | Had I not had the forethought to procure the chair for her? |
33091 | Had we at last sighted the snowy crest of their nearest peak? |
33091 | Has he challenged you?" |
33091 | Have romance and gallantry fled with the peruke?" |
33091 | Have you met the General''s son, Lieutenant James Wilkinson?" |
33091 | Have you received no message from her?" |
33091 | He answered with a question:"Do I understand you to say that with my help one man could guide so clumsy a craft?" |
33091 | He continued with polite hesitancy:"Would you, then, think it odd, Dr. Robinson, if I requested you to make the river journey with me?" |
33091 | His voice shook:"You-- you-- Do you know what is in these letters?" |
33091 | How dare you interfere with the discipline of my ship?" |
33091 | How did you come? |
33091 | How many in ten generations? |
33091 | How was it possible that there could have been so large a party of white men traversing this remote wilderness? |
33091 | I appealed to her,"is it for this I have come to you all these many leagues? |
33091 | I exclaimed,"can you not pardon this blunder-- my deplorable ignorance of your customs? |
33091 | I inquired,"all those invaluable charts and journals?" |
33091 | I inquired--"an extension of the vast westward boundaries of Louisiana Territory? |
33091 | I know; for did he not enter into negotiations with Marquis de Casa Yrujo?" |
33091 | I murmured,"you leave?" |
33091 | I questioned, my astonishment as great as my delight--"then, dearest heart? |
33091 | I repeated;--"Vallois? |
33091 | I say nothing of our hostess,--not that she lacked in beauty or charm; but who looks at the moon when the sun is in the sky? |
33091 | If I come to you there-- if I cross that barrier? |
33091 | If not Doña Marguerite, who then? |
33091 | If señor, why not señorita? |
33091 | If that parting took place without the knitting of new ties for the future, what hope had I of ever again looking into the depths of her dark eyes? |
33091 | If you choose to pay compliments to my companion, and I am too deaf to hear anything that is said, who can blame me? |
33091 | In midwinter?" |
33091 | Is it not so?" |
33091 | Is it that you wish further recommendations? |
33091 | Is it your intention to hire passage, or to purchase your own boat?" |
33091 | Is that why you came out against us in war paint?" |
33091 | Is there then no hope that I may win you? |
33091 | Is this a time for jests?" |
33091 | Louis?" |
33091 | Louis?" |
33091 | May I ask if His Excellency, the Governor- General, is the father of one of your charming señoritas?" |
33091 | May I beg the honor of your first dance?" |
33091 | My son, did the ball strike you?" |
33091 | None too soon I heard behind me the sharp call of Don Pedro:"_ Hola, amigo!_ Have you gone deaf, that you do not answer?" |
33091 | Not a few moments to greet your lady after an absence of almost a year?" |
33091 | Now what is to be done?" |
33091 | Perhaps you are intimate?" |
33091 | Robinson?" |
33091 | Señor, do you comprehend?" |
33091 | Shall not they who brave death in our cause look for glorious reward in the hour of victory?" |
33091 | She is not married?" |
33091 | Supposing it successful, is it not Your Excellency''s opinion that a recommendation to a commission might be in order?" |
33091 | The point is, if an expedition to South America, why not one to Mexico?" |
33091 | The question is, would you, under the supposition I have stated, be willing to risk yourself among the Spaniards?" |
33091 | The question was how and where? |
33091 | The_ Parroquia_?--at nine in the evening? |
33091 | There in the midst of that miry avenue, when I looked out the coach window into the windows of your soul,--then it was, my knight--""Then?" |
33091 | There is no longer need for such slight service as I was able to render--""Service?" |
33091 | They have gone to the Arkansas?" |
33091 | They struck you?" |
33091 | Was it not far more than I had expected-- than had been my right to expect? |
33091 | Was it possible that after all I still had cause for hope? |
33091 | Was this one of that sierra of which Alisanda had spoken, my Barrier of Rock, the Sangre de Cristo? |
33091 | What could I hope from one who doubtless regarded me as our Western girls regard the red Indian? |
33091 | What could be the meaning of this visit of the Governor- General to one who I knew had reason to detest and fear him? |
33091 | What did she call this gift-- the exact words?" |
33091 | What ever else can that mean than Alisanda Vallois, in August?" |
33091 | What greater shame to them than for a boy of twelve to kill two of their most famous warriors,--to taunt them with the bloody scalp of their chief?" |
33091 | What hope had I of a word apart with Alisanda if she came in company with Doña Marguerite? |
33091 | What is the date?" |
33091 | What more can you ask? |
33091 | What proof had I that even Burr''s plans were treasonable? |
33091 | What wonder if for the moment I forgot the worth of republican citizenship in the glittering dream of titled office? |
33091 | What, then, if occasionally a native American was impressed? |
33091 | When shall we be married?" |
33091 | Where am I?" |
33091 | Who among us can swear that yonder stream is not the Red?" |
33091 | Who are they?--and where?" |
33091 | Who but the ignorant believes in signs and omens? |
33091 | Who can say he is of this blood or that?" |
33091 | Who can tell?" |
33091 | Why not follow their trace, and join their party in the Pawnee country? |
33091 | Why not march on down the Rio Grande without delay?" |
33091 | Why not strike first for Santa Fe?" |
33091 | Why poison his mind against one who had shown him great favors and was in a position as Commander- in- Chief to show him even greater favors? |
33091 | Why should I accept the sympathy of these brutes? |
33091 | Why should I set a mere fanciful sentiment against the lulling of his suspicions? |
33091 | Why, then, should we not discuss topics of world- wide interest with the same freedom we should enjoy in our own country?" |
33091 | Would he be so eager were it explained to him that the object of the invasion went no further than the freeing of the people of that remote land? |
33091 | Would this wretched land be less oppressed under Salcedo the King than under Salcedo the Governor- General? |
33091 | Would you keep the ladies waiting for their serenade?" |
33091 | Yet have I not shown you the prospect?" |
33091 | Yet how could he watch both Pike and myself if we separated? |
33091 | Yet how could she escape the watchful eyes of Doña Marguerite and Don Pedro, even should they, as was most improbable, take her out to the promenade? |
33091 | Yet how was I to endure a week without so much as a glimpse of her? |
33091 | Yet suppose he held true to his pledge to lead the revolution, and suppose the revolution should triumph, would it not be the triumph of Salcedo? |
33091 | Yet was not this enough? |
33091 | Yet what of all that? |
33091 | You accepted the challenge? |
33091 | You are also acquainted in St. Louis-- with General Wilkinson? |
33091 | You ask that? |
33091 | You came in yesterday?" |
33091 | You have planned for a meeting in August?" |
33091 | You propose to go into winter quarters?" |
33091 | You speak French and some Spanish?" |
33091 | You talked with her?" |
33091 | You will choose pistols?" |
33091 | You will deliver the letters for me?" |
33091 | You will join me in a cup of coffee and a roll?" |
33091 | Your chests are all aboard?" |
33091 | Your lodging?" |
33091 | Your name?" |
33091 | Your people? |
33091 | _ Carrajo!_ How then of the packet in your bosom?" |
33091 | _ Quien sabe?_"I replied, without looking about, and bore up on the rail. |
33091 | and, what was far more, had I not exercised sufficient courage to retain it for her, despite the other ladies? |
33091 | can you doubt it? |
33091 | do you not know whether it is time to take me in?" |
33091 | is my love of no worth to you? |
33091 | why not? |
26905 | ''_ Is not the life more than meat?_''he asked them. |
26905 | Ah, you will not see him die? |
26905 | Alive or dead? |
26905 | Am I not a white man''s wife? |
26905 | And did you expect to get any pay, with or without interest? |
26905 | And his schooling, and his clothing, and everything; and you have to pay for it all? |
26905 | And so you put your hand in the railway company''s money- chest? |
26905 | And stake what''s left on the last throw? |
26905 | And the old folks? |
26905 | And you are going away at sunrise to- morrow? |
26905 | Are n''t you going to kiss me? |
26905 | Are the Lumleys all right? 26905 Are we children, that the Great Chief sends a child as messenger?" |
26905 | Are you a giant? |
26905 | Are you comin''with me, Nance, dear? |
26905 | Are you hurt bad? 26905 Are you sure I was n''t calling you, and you had to come?" |
26905 | Are you sure it was n''t me? |
26905 | Are you watching the rise of Orion? |
26905 | Been celebrating the pigeons? |
26905 | Bignold-- where does he come from?--What is he? |
26905 | Blackmail-- you think I''ll stand it? |
26905 | But I mus''to get there, an''you-- you will to help me, eh? |
26905 | But if the white man''s Medicine fail? |
26905 | But if there were the Sun Medicine also, the Medicine of the days long ago? |
26905 | But now? |
26905 | But what about our wedding to- day? |
26905 | But you kept thinking in the grass- country of what you''d felt and said and done-- and willed, in the desert, I suppose? |
26905 | But you will not see a man die, if you can save him? |
26905 | Ca n''t have a fire, I suppose? |
26905 | Ca n''t you hide me down by the river till we start? |
26905 | Ca n''t you leave the dead alone? |
26905 | Ca n''t you let them rest? 26905 Ca n''t you see? |
26905 | Ca n''t you talk sense and leave my clothes alone? 26905 Can it be done?" |
26905 | Clint right or wrong? 26905 Come now, how much?" |
26905 | Dear old man, did you have a wife and child, and were they both called Alice-- do you remember? 26905 Dear old man,"he said, his voice shaking,"do you know what I''m thinking? |
26905 | Did I say that? 26905 Did he do that, Jo?" |
26905 | Did you ever save anybody''s life? |
26905 | Did you want to see me? |
26905 | Do n''t you know me? |
26905 | Do what? |
26905 | Do you see him up here ever? |
26905 | Do you think you could stand a little parting? |
26905 | Do you want to risk all and lose? |
26905 | Does any one know his real history? 26905 Excommunication?" |
26905 | Five-- million-- what--? |
26905 | For small stakes? |
26905 | Glad to see you? 26905 Goin''on by stage?" |
26905 | Have I changed so much? 26905 Have all your dreams come true, my mother?" |
26905 | Have you been steeping them some days? |
26905 | Have you come for absolution, also? |
26905 | Have you got it? |
26905 | Have you nothing else, sir? |
26905 | Have you seen her husband-- Meydon-- this year? 26905 Have you told her you''ve got a wife-- down East? |
26905 | He does n''t look rich, does he? |
26905 | He was married, was n''t he? |
26905 | He-- your uncle, Tom Sanger? 26905 Hello, Jinny, fixin''up for to- morrow?" |
26905 | Hiding him away here--"Hiding? 26905 His name-- his real name?" |
26905 | Hold you-- does he need a Sheriff to tell him when to spik? |
26905 | How d''ye cook without fire? |
26905 | How did you come to start it? |
26905 | How did you know he was up here? |
26905 | How long have you come to stay here-- out West? |
26905 | How long were you in the desert? |
26905 | How long? |
26905 | How long? |
26905 | How old are you? |
26905 | How? 26905 I am to go alone-- eh?" |
26905 | I do n''t call her''mummy''because you do, and you must n''t call me_ Jim_ because she does-- do you hear? |
26905 | I said the Beast of Revelations-- don''t you know the Scriptures? |
26905 | I''d like to have gone to Lumley''s, but that''s not possible, is it? 26905 I''ve got to see if he''ll take you first?" |
26905 | If I had to go to prison-- or swing, as you say-- do you think I''d go with my mouth shut? 26905 In Heaven''s name, why did you talk to that man?" |
26905 | Is he as rich an old miser as they say? |
26905 | Is he so bad? |
26905 | Is it a difficult case? |
26905 | Is my cold bad-- so bad that I need boneset? |
26905 | Is that your shack-- that where you shake down? |
26905 | Is your life all your own, mother? |
26905 | It has n''t spoiled you-- being converted-- has it? |
26905 | It is Medicine for a white man, will it be Medicine for an Indian? |
26905 | It is so? 26905 Jim, and Lance, and Jerry, and Abner?" |
26905 | Long way, I no can get dere in time? |
26905 | M''sieu''Varley? |
26905 | Makes you seem pretty small, does n''t it? 26905 Man, dear man, if you belong to her-- if you do, ca n''t you see what it will mean to me? |
26905 | Manette, she will live with you? |
26905 | Marcile-- where is Marcile? |
26905 | May I come in? |
26905 | My name''s Buckmaster, ai n''t it-- Jim Buckmaster? 26905 No chance to get him at the Fort?" |
26905 | Oh, it''s Meydon, is it, that bad case I heard of to- day? |
26905 | One of the local doctors could n''t do it, I suppose? |
26905 | Or you''ll set the law on him? |
26905 | Orion is the name-- a beauty, ai n''t it? |
26905 | Perhaps Orion will rise again-- you think so? |
26905 | Queeck-- queeck, where is Marcile? |
26905 | Racing?--cards? |
26905 | Reprieve? |
26905 | Say, ai n''t he pretty? |
26905 | Say, how dare you call your father_ Jim_--eh, tell me that? |
26905 | Shall I do it? |
26905 | She here-- out here? |
26905 | Show you what? |
26905 | So you t''ink it better Meydon should die, as Hadley is away and Brydon is sick--_hein_? |
26905 | Take me with you-- me-- where? |
26905 | Tell me again-- is it so at last? |
26905 | Tell me,she said, quietly--"tell me how you are able to save Haman?" |
26905 | That is it, is it not? |
26905 | The river? |
26905 | The spring? |
26905 | The story is told in many ways; which is right? 26905 Then the moon''s up almost?" |
26905 | Then the play is n''t finished? |
26905 | Then what''s the matter? 26905 Then, as you say, she will not marry M''sieu''Varley--_hein_?" |
26905 | There is a way-- have you never thought of it? 26905 There is another act? |
26905 | There-- rock? |
26905 | They have found it-- gold? |
26905 | They know-- the railway people-- Shaughnessy knows? |
26905 | Thief?--thief? |
26905 | Tim,she said, and slipped a hand in his,"would you mind the religion-- if you had me?" |
26905 | To go free--_altogether_? |
26905 | Two thousand dollars-- nothing less? |
26905 | Was it any of your business, Abe? |
26905 | Was it near the other entrance? |
26905 | Was it so selfish in Madame to refuse the name of Finden--_n''est- ce pas_? |
26905 | Was that all Ricketts told you, Buck? |
26905 | Water? |
26905 | Well, Andy, have you been here ever since? |
26905 | Well, but if your life is saved, Grassette? |
26905 | Well, what is all this, Grassette? |
26905 | Well? |
26905 | What are you doing here? 26905 What are you doing out there, Mitiahwe?" |
26905 | What are you doing with your life? |
26905 | What brings you out here, Jo? |
26905 | What did I say? |
26905 | What did Orion do, and why does he rise? 26905 What did he do? |
26905 | What did she come here for? |
26905 | What difference does it make? 26905 What do you mean?" |
26905 | What do you want for your shack and the lake? |
26905 | What do you want with him-- not medicine of that old quack, that dreadful man? |
26905 | What do you want with me, then? |
26905 | What do you want-- medicine? |
26905 | What do you want? 26905 What do you want?" |
26905 | What do you want? |
26905 | What does he know about the business? 26905 What for, Jo? |
26905 | What for? |
26905 | What has happened? 26905 What has he done?" |
26905 | What have you done? 26905 What have you to do with Haman?" |
26905 | What is his name? 26905 What is his name?" |
26905 | What is it, Mitiahwe? |
26905 | What is it-- quick? |
26905 | What is it? 26905 What is it?" |
26905 | What is it? |
26905 | What is it? |
26905 | What is that to you? |
26905 | What is the gutter, dadsie? |
26905 | What is the lodge of a chief? 26905 What is the matter, Flood?" |
26905 | What is_ that_? |
26905 | What manner of Great Spirit is it who lets the food of his chief Oshondonto fall into the hands of the Blackfeet? |
26905 | What right had I to risk his life for theirs? 26905 What the devil''s all this? |
26905 | What time is it? |
26905 | What time is it? |
26905 | What time, if please? |
26905 | What was it you were saying? 26905 What was you doing here, and not at Selby, Jake?" |
26905 | What will happen? 26905 What will you do, Grassette?" |
26905 | What would she have said to what you did to Jim? |
26905 | What you talkin''about, Jinny? 26905 What''s his price in the open market?" |
26905 | What''s it all about, Jinny? 26905 What''s that clump together on the right-- what are they called in astronomy?" |
26905 | What''s that scar on your forehead, Jo? 26905 What''s that-- what''s that you say? |
26905 | What''s the use of my hearin''? 26905 What''s to that? |
26905 | What''s up? 26905 What''s your game? |
26905 | What''ve I got to do with it? |
26905 | When be you goin''back East? 26905 When did you eat last?" |
26905 | When was that? |
26905 | Where am I going, then? |
26905 | Where did you think of livin''out here? |
26905 | Where do you come from? |
26905 | Who is Dupont? |
26905 | Who is this man? 26905 Who knows-- who knows the truth?" |
26905 | Who told you that? |
26905 | Who told you-- the truth? |
26905 | Who was it come? |
26905 | Who you firin''at? |
26905 | Who you got in that room, Jinny? 26905 Why are you so dreadfully poor-- and everything?" |
26905 | Why did I do it? 26905 Why did I never notice the likeness before?" |
26905 | Why did n''t Ricketts tell it right out at once? |
26905 | Why did n''t you tell me he was here? |
26905 | Why did you come, m''sieu''? |
26905 | Why did you never write and tell me that, Jo? 26905 Why do n''t you hit out, sergeant?" |
26905 | Why do n''t you sleep? |
26905 | Why do you do this kind of thing? 26905 Why do you want to go the''quick''way to Askatoon?" |
26905 | Why do you want to go the''quick''way to Askatoon? |
26905 | Why have you done it? |
26905 | Why should you ruin your life for him? |
26905 | Why, gol darn it, Nance, what''s got into you? 26905 Will he ever stop rising?" |
26905 | Will you come back, darlin''? 26905 Will you do it?" |
26905 | Will you do it? |
26905 | Will you not help to clear your conscience by doing this thing? 26905 Will you not to show me?" |
26905 | Would n''t it be better for the law to hang him if you''ve got the proof, Buck? 26905 Would n''t you have come if you knew I was here?" |
26905 | Yes, excommunication,she replied;"but why an enemy? |
26905 | You ca n''t save life without running some risk yourself, not as a rule, can you? |
26905 | You call me a beast? |
26905 | You can show me dat way? |
26905 | You go on-- how can you go on? |
26905 | You got the ten t''ousan''each-- in cash or check, eh? 26905 You have not tell any one-- never?" |
26905 | You never told him, then-- you never told him that? |
26905 | You not happy-- you not like me here? |
26905 | You said it was for Dan,he said--"Dan Welldon?" |
26905 | You want me to go to prison, then? |
26905 | You want me to run things-- your colossal schemes? 26905 You want me to see the man at once?" |
26905 | You want to board here? |
26905 | You were never bad,she added; then, with an arm sweeping the universe,"Oh, is n''t it all good, and is n''t it all worth living?" |
26905 | You wonder if he''s worth saving? |
26905 | You''ll do what''s right-- by Bobby? |
26905 | You''ll want some money for your journey? |
26905 | You''re Jenny Long, ai n''t you? |
26905 | You''re sure Greevy killed your boy, Buck? |
26905 | You''re sure he did it? |
26905 | You''ve got it-- sure? |
26905 | You_ felt_ good in the desert? |
26905 | Your old home was in Nova Scotia, was n''t it, Dingan? |
26905 | _ Ben_, you will do it to- night-- then? |
26905 | _ Eh_,_ ben_, it is all right-- yes? |
26905 | _ Qu''appelle? 26905 _ Qui reste là _--Lygon?" |
26905 | _ Qui va là ?_ Who is it? 26905 _ Qui va là ?_ Who is it? |
26905 | _ Qui va là ?_ Who is it? |
26905 | _ Qui va là ?_ Who is it? |
26905 | ''Tincture of Lebanon Leaves''you called the medicine, did n''t you? |
26905 | ***** In the little waiting- room, Finden said to Varley,"What happened?" |
26905 | *****"Who told you? |
26905 | A chance of life-- what did it mean? |
26905 | A moment, then he added,"The letter was n''t to be sent here in his own name, was it?" |
26905 | A nice, quiet time coming on the border Abe, eh?" |
26905 | A year or so in jail, an''a long time to think over what''s going round his neck on the scaffold-- wouldn''t that suit you, if you''ve got the proof?" |
26905 | AS DEEP AS THE SEA"What can I do, Dan? |
26905 | After which the quick tongue of Nicolle Terasse:"You want know? |
26905 | Ai n''t I no rights? |
26905 | Ai n''t it enough to quarrel about the living? |
26905 | Alive or dead? |
26905 | And if I would n''t have him with you, do you think I''ll have you without him? |
26905 | And if he was outside these prison walls, and in the Gulch, and the man was there alive before him, what would he do? |
26905 | And now that Mitiahwe had been told that he would go, what would she do? |
26905 | And the dead boy there, Wingo, who had risked his life, also dead-- how long? |
26905 | And you''ve kept Dorl''s child with your own money all these years?" |
26905 | Anne_?" |
26905 | Are n''t you glad to see me?" |
26905 | Are they still there, at the Forks?" |
26905 | Are you a colonel, or a captain, or only a principal private?" |
26905 | Are you afeard to take the risk?" |
26905 | Are you bleeding much?" |
26905 | Are you comin''?" |
26905 | Are you one that has lived to tell the tale? |
26905 | As he handed the pipe to Knife- in- the- Wind, an Indian called Silver Tassel, with a cruel face, said, grimly:"Why does Oshondonto travel to us?" |
26905 | As they passed the house where Miss Mackinder lived, some one shouted:"Are you watching the rise of Orion?" |
26905 | At length he spoke, looking into Buckmaster''s face:"What was the story Ricketts told you? |
26905 | At length the tense silence was broken:"Was n''t the old game good enough? |
26905 | Before the knock came to the door Jim had just said,"Why do your eyes shine so, Sally? |
26905 | Boys, what is he-- what-- is-- he? |
26905 | But do you not think how sudden it was? |
26905 | But do you think that I could have lived my life out, feeling that I might have saved Jim and did n''t try? |
26905 | But if there were the red man''s Medicine too--""What is the red man''s Medicine?" |
26905 | But is there no one that you care for or that cares for you, that you remember, or that remembers you?" |
26905 | But perhaps it is your mind is not so big enough to see--_hien_?" |
26905 | By speaking to your sister?" |
26905 | Ca n''t you see what a swab he is, Laura?" |
26905 | Can I bind it up or wash it for you? |
26905 | Catch it? |
26905 | Could n''t you see what the end would be if your plunging did n''t come off? |
26905 | D''ye see?" |
26905 | Dear old man, say you remember Franklin?" |
26905 | Debilitated, demoralized, how could he, even if he wished, struggle against this powerful confederate, as powerful in will as in body? |
26905 | Did I not see it all in my dream, and follow after them to take them to my heart? |
26905 | Did I? |
26905 | Did he ever laugh in his life?" |
26905 | Did n''t he go by that name when you saw him?" |
26905 | Did not the distant West know Father Bourassa''s gift, and did not Protestants attend Mass to hear him play the organ afterward? |
26905 | Did she fear that-- she knew not quite what, but it had to do with a long ago? |
26905 | Did this Caliban have some understanding of what was at stake in his heart and soul? |
26905 | Did you come to see me?" |
26905 | Did you know Sir John Franklin?--is it true, dear old boy?--is it true? |
26905 | Did you know Sir John Franklin?--is it-- tell me, is it true?" |
26905 | Do n''t I know my own name? |
26905 | Do n''t you know better than that? |
26905 | Do n''t you think of that? |
26905 | Do we not need to excommunicate our friends sometimes?" |
26905 | Do you remember?" |
26905 | Do you sometimes, even in your dreams, speak to me? |
26905 | Do you think she''ll git well?" |
26905 | Do you think you are in no way responsible?" |
26905 | Does any one know him here? |
26905 | Does it look so bad?" |
26905 | Far beneath unconsciousness is there the summons of your spirit to me?... |
26905 | For me-- ah, if I can save him-- and I mean to do so!--do you think that I would not then have my heaven on earth? |
26905 | Had n''t we best make sure?" |
26905 | Had she not longed for a little home with a great love, and a strong, true man? |
26905 | Has any one seen him?" |
26905 | Has he got to rise? |
26905 | Have you forgotten God, Grassette? |
26905 | Have you forgotten me?" |
26905 | Have you told her that you''ve got a wife you married when you were at college-- and as good a girl as ever lived?" |
26905 | He had brought him out of the wilds, out of the unknown-- was he only taking him into the unknown again? |
26905 | He is a great man-- I dunno not; but he spik at me like dis,''Is dere sick, and cripple, and stay- in- bed people here dat ca n''t get up?'' |
26905 | He was silent for a moment, but then said, stubbornly:"Why-- why have you done it? |
26905 | He was sure to do it; and, when he had done it, and found her gone on this errand, what would he do? |
26905 | He''s stored up a lot of things to say, and he''ll say them; but you''ll keep the boy in your mind, and be patient, wo n''t you, Cassy? |
26905 | He, John Bickersteth, was going into a world again where-- as he believed-- a happy fate awaited him; but what of this old man? |
26905 | Her heart beat hard, and she raised her head and called-- why was it she should call out in a language not her own?--"_Qu''appelle? |
26905 | Her-- what''ll it matter to her? |
26905 | Herself!--to leave her here, who had been so much to him? |
26905 | His principle was embodied in certain words which he quoted once to Sally from the prophet Amos--"_And the Lord said unto me, Amos, what seest thou? |
26905 | His return? |
26905 | How did you come to speak to him, Grace?" |
26905 | How did you guess I knew-- everything, father?" |
26905 | How far is it, and can we do it in time?" |
26905 | How goes it-- all right?" |
26905 | How long had he lain there? |
26905 | How long have I slept?" |
26905 | How many years had gone since he had heard church- bells? |
26905 | How much did you figure you could get out of me, if I let you bleed me?" |
26905 | How shall I do it?'' |
26905 | How would he be able to make the_ amende honorable_ to La Touche? |
26905 | I ai n''t so young as I used to be, and, anyhow, what''s the good? |
26905 | I am your daughter, and I am here, good or bad-- is your life all your own?" |
26905 | I saved his life right enough, and he came to me a year after and said,''You saved my life, now what are you going to do with it? |
26905 | I''m a bit of hickory, I''m not a prairie- flower--""Who said you was a prairie- flower? |
26905 | If Jake comes here to- morrow, and you ai n''t here, what do you think he''ll do? |
26905 | If it was Jake''s life in danger, what''d I think of a woman that could save him, and did n''t?" |
26905 | If she could feel so much for a"casual,"why not a little more feeling for him? |
26905 | Is all ready for the start?" |
26905 | Is he pretty sick, father?" |
26905 | Is it because o''him that you bin talkin''about no weddin''to- morrow? |
26905 | Is it not so? |
26905 | Is it one o''the others come back, puttin''you off Jake again?" |
26905 | Is it so secret?" |
26905 | Is it so, ma''m''selle?" |
26905 | Is it--_is_ it you that calls? |
26905 | Is the house warm enough for you?" |
26905 | Is there no one of you--?" |
26905 | It did all right before, did n''t it?" |
26905 | It is a fool''s journey-- does the wolverine walk into an empty trap?" |
26905 | It is n''t the importance of a life that''s at stake; it''s the importance of living; and we do not live alone, do we?" |
26905 | It is so-- eh? |
26905 | It looks as if the police''ll never get him, eh?" |
26905 | It was a wild thought, but yet why not?--why not? |
26905 | It''s eight years old now, is n''t it?" |
26905 | Jake-- what Jake? |
26905 | Listen-- where is Marcile?" |
26905 | Marcile-- where was Marcile now? |
26905 | Must the world stand still because a handful of Crees need a hunting- ground? |
26905 | Never-- wronged-- a-- woman? |
26905 | Now is n''t that so, father?" |
26905 | Now we want another ten t''ousan''to us each, to forget we do it for him--_hein_?" |
26905 | Of whom? |
26905 | Or was it a fine spirit of adventure with a good heart behind it? |
26905 | Presently he said, holding out his pipe,"You not like smoke, mebbe?" |
26905 | Presently he steadied to the ordeal of suspense, while he kept saying to himself,"What does he know-- what-- which?" |
26905 | QU''APPELLE(_ Who calls?_)"But I''m white; I''m not an Indian. |
26905 | Qu''appelle?_"And once again on the still night air came the trembling appeal,"Pauline!" |
26905 | Qu''appelle_?" |
26905 | Railway construction? |
26905 | Remember the desert, and Mary Jewell, and your mother-- did you have a mother, Scranton?--say, did you have a mother, lad?" |
26905 | Right enough, is n''t it?" |
26905 | Say, you''ll do it, wo n''t you? |
26905 | See-- Pauline?" |
26905 | Shall the crow nest with the oriole?" |
26905 | Shall the white man''s Medicine fail? |
26905 | She called into the icy void,"_ Qui va là ?_ Who goes?" |
26905 | She called into the icy void,"_ Qui va là ?_ Who goes?" |
26905 | Some one getting married-- or a legacy, or a saw- off? |
26905 | That was the feelin''among''em: What was the good of making things worse? |
26905 | The check or the money--_hein_?" |
26905 | Then I waked with a cry, but my man was beside me, and his arm was round my neck; and this dream, is it not a foolish dream, my mother?" |
26905 | There was old Lamson-- fifteen hundred for the goitre on his neck; and Mrs. Gilligan for the cancer-- two thousand, was n''t it? |
26905 | They ai n''t going to look for him in my bedroom, be they?" |
26905 | This rough, white plainsman was come to make love to her, and to say-- what? |
26905 | Walk into the parlor?" |
26905 | Was he going? |
26905 | Was he to commit a new crime? |
26905 | Was it a whim, or the excited imagination of youth, or that prompting which the young often have to make the world better? |
26905 | Was it all bad, and only that which belonged to white life good? |
26905 | Was it her duty to pay the"little gal''s debt,"to save the man at Bindon? |
26905 | Was it played out? |
26905 | Was it to go on? |
26905 | Was not she herself the descendant of Blackfoot and Piegan chiefs through generations of rulers and warriors? |
26905 | Was she afraid of something? |
26905 | Was she to feel that Jansen did not price her high? |
26905 | Was there anything more than that? |
26905 | Was there not Piegan and Blackfoot blood in the girl''s veins? |
26905 | Well, Jo?" |
26905 | Well, about the snakes?" |
26905 | Well, was it in the desert you got your taste for honey, too, same as John the Baptist-- that was his name, if I recomember?" |
26905 | Were there friends, any friends anywhere in the world, waiting for him? |
26905 | Were they both thinking of the same thing now? |
26905 | What are they after you for?" |
26905 | What brings you here? |
26905 | What brought you, Flood?" |
26905 | What did Jim''s life mean? |
26905 | What did he ever do but what was right? |
26905 | What did your boy tell Ricketts? |
26905 | What do I care for life? |
26905 | What do I care? |
26905 | What do you see ahead of you?" |
26905 | What do you want with Dorl?" |
26905 | What do you want with me?" |
26905 | What do you want?" |
26905 | What had it to do with the face of this outcast she had just left? |
26905 | What had made her fall in love with George Baragar? |
26905 | What had she said to the prisoner? |
26905 | What has the Great Spirit to say? |
26905 | What interests you in him?" |
26905 | What is his name? |
26905 | What is it?" |
26905 | What is the good? |
26905 | What is the matter with him-- with Meydon?" |
26905 | What is your business with him? |
26905 | What man you got in that room? |
26905 | What sort of life had it been? |
26905 | What time did you fix for goin''?" |
26905 | What time was it? |
26905 | What was Ba''tiste to her? |
26905 | What was you doing, if it ai n''t cheek to ask?" |
26905 | What were they to me? |
26905 | What would Grassette do? |
26905 | What would he do? |
26905 | What would she herself do if she were in Mitiahwe''s place? |
26905 | What would the man do? |
26905 | What''s ahead of me? |
26905 | What''s got into you, Abe?" |
26905 | What''s he doing out here? |
26905 | What''s his name?" |
26905 | What''s in your mind?" |
26905 | What''s she to me?" |
26905 | What''s that about my canoeing a man down to Bindon?" |
26905 | What, then, held her back? |
26905 | What-- is-- Sergeant Foyle-- boys?" |
26905 | When Long Hand comes, what will Mitiahwe say to him?" |
26905 | When was it that he had fought his way to the nets and back again-- hours, maybe? |
26905 | When you threatened others as you did me, and life seemed such a little thing in others-- can''t you think?" |
26905 | Whence came he? |
26905 | Where was Marcile? |
26905 | Where were you going when you came across me here?" |
26905 | Where?" |
26905 | Which is the greater thing, to get what pleases one, or to work for something which is more to one than all else in the world? |
26905 | Which one did he take?" |
26905 | Whither was he wending now? |
26905 | Who are you? |
26905 | Who are you? |
26905 | Who are you?" |
26905 | Who do you think''d be postman from Selby here? |
26905 | Who is he?" |
26905 | Who were you speaking to?" |
26905 | Who will be in it?" |
26905 | Who''s been hiding him? |
26905 | Who''s going to take him down the river to- night? |
26905 | Why are you off the trail?" |
26905 | Why did Ba''tiste haunt her so? |
26905 | Why did he do it? |
26905 | Why did you do it, Scranton?" |
26905 | Why did you take to this? |
26905 | Why do you smuggle?" |
26905 | Why does he rise? |
26905 | Why had she not gone with him and attempted the shorter way-- the quick way, he had called it? |
26905 | Why had she not gone with him? |
26905 | Why should she be sacrificed? |
26905 | Why should she cramp her soul to this one issue, when the same soul could spend itself upon the greater motives and in the larger circle? |
26905 | Why was the gent called Orion in them far- off days?" |
26905 | Why will your friend lose his life if you do n''t get to Bindon?" |
26905 | Why, do you know where you are? |
26905 | Will that satisfy you? |
26905 | Will you not take the chance? |
26905 | With a smile which showed her fine, white teeth, she said,"Is that for me?" |
26905 | With no eye upon him? |
26905 | Wo n''t you tell me? |
26905 | Would he go? |
26905 | Would he last out the course? |
26905 | Would he reach Askatoon in time? |
26905 | Would it never end? |
26905 | You ai n''t broke it off at the last moment, same as before? |
26905 | You ai n''t had a letter from Jake?" |
26905 | You comin''with me, Nance?" |
26905 | You do n''t mean you''re trying to arrest me again, after letting me go?" |
26905 | You got a temper, Jinny; and you got a pistol, too, eh?" |
26905 | You hear? |
26905 | You remember how Clint used to laugh, sort of low and teasin''like-- you remember that laugh o''Clint''s, do n''t you?" |
26905 | You remember the ship-- the Arctic Sea-- the ice- fields, and Franklin-- you remember him? |
26905 | You think--?" |
26905 | You was a tough, but who''s goin''to judge you? |
26905 | You will do it?" |
26905 | You will leave him to me?" |
26905 | You''re Jenny Long, ai n''t you?" |
26905 | You''re ready to step in when he steps out, ai n''t you, Lablache?" |
26905 | You''ve been married, and have children, have n''t you?" |
26905 | [ Illustration:"OH, ISN''T IT ALL WORTH LIVING?" |
26905 | _ Bagosh_, you not t''ink dat true? |
26905 | he asked, with a smile;"or is it to get a bill of excommunication against your only enemy-- there could n''t be more than one?" |
26905 | you and Jake ai n''t quarrelled again? |
34843 | ''Are you a Christian Commission man?'' 34843 ''Are you married?'' |
34843 | ''But what''s all dis here talking''bout? 34843 ''It is n''t Sunday, is it? |
34843 | ''My boys, you do n''t play cards on Sunday, do you?'' 34843 ''O Missis,''says I,''how could you do it?'' |
34843 | ''Wo n''t you try to leave it off?'' 34843 ''_ You_ will, you nigger? |
34843 | Absurd? 34843 An''says I to her,--"''Who is God, anyhow, mammy?'' |
34843 | And leave your old home, your old master, and the place where you have lived all your days? |
34843 | Are they driving us? |
34843 | Are we to understand that in this age a captain can not afford to equal a negro in politeness? |
34843 | Are you a Union man? |
34843 | Are you a slave, Dick? |
34843 | Are you all ready there? |
34843 | Are you going to move? |
34843 | Are you going to pay me for it? |
34843 | Are you not afraid of us Yankees? |
34843 | Are you not afraid of us? |
34843 | Are you not afraid that the Rebels will catch you? |
34843 | Are you not afraid that we shall sell you? |
34843 | Are you not too much extended? 34843 But did you not wish to be free?" |
34843 | But how could you fight against the old flag? |
34843 | But how will he get his supplies? |
34843 | But if two individuals can live peacefully, why not ten,--or a hundred,--a thousand,--all? |
34843 | But, Sojourner, had you never been told about Jesus Christ? |
34843 | But, my friend, if it had not been for the Union troops would n''t you have lost everything, if you are a Union man? |
34843 | By whose authority do you take my property? |
34843 | Ca n''t you trust the President who gave you your freedom? |
34843 | Can I do anything for you? |
34843 | Can you accommodate me with a room? |
34843 | Can you favor me with an account of the affair? |
34843 | Can you read and write? |
34843 | Can you retake that battery? |
34843 | Dat President Linkum? |
34843 | Did not I tell you that I would take you away? |
34843 | Did you bring your''stificate with you? |
34843 | Did you ever see an Abolitionist? |
34843 | Did you ever try to escape? |
34843 | Did you get it for me? 34843 Did you have any desire to stay North?" |
34843 | Did you not feel sometimes like rising against your masters? |
34843 | Did you not sometimes despair? |
34843 | Did you pray, my son? |
34843 | Did your people understand the points at issue between the South and the North, when the war begun? |
34843 | Do I look as though I should like to kill your little ones? |
34843 | Do n''t you think the war is almost over,--that it is useless for Lee to contend further? |
34843 | Do they believe it? |
34843 | Do you mean the Union soldiers? |
34843 | Do you preach from the Bible? |
34843 | Do you think it right, auntie, to leave your mistress, who has taken care of you so long? |
34843 | Do you think that I am to be intimidated by a pack of blackguards from northern Ohio? |
34843 | Do you think that Lee can get across the Potomac? |
34843 | Do you think that men can live in the mountains? |
34843 | Do you think that the men will permit me to take him? |
34843 | Do you think you can take care of yourself? |
34843 | Do you want to be buried with a nigger, and have your bones touch his in the grave? |
34843 | Does any one here know anything about Jonas? |
34843 | For who that leans on His right arm Was ever yet forsaken? 34843 From Rosa? |
34843 | From Rosa? |
34843 | Has Lee licked the Yankees? |
34843 | Has he always treated you well? |
34843 | Have n''t any to sell? 34843 Have not I always treated you well?" |
34843 | Have they been in battle? |
34843 | Have you found him? |
34843 | Have you seen any Rebels this morning? |
34843 | How came you here? |
34843 | How compelled? |
34843 | How did the negroes stand fire? |
34843 | How do the Yankees behave? |
34843 | How do you do, Aunty? |
34843 | How far is it to Savannah? |
34843 | How large a force is it supposed the Rebels have in Maryland? |
34843 | How many colored men enlisted? |
34843 | How so? |
34843 | How so? |
34843 | How so? |
34843 | I asked one noble- looking soldier if he loved Jesus? 34843 I suppose you did n''t expect Grant to get this side of the Wilderness?" |
34843 | I suppose you have heard many prayers here for Jeff Davis? |
34843 | I wonder if we shall have McClellan back? |
34843 | I would like to know what title we shall have to our lands, or to the improvements we shall make? |
34843 | If I were to reside here, you of course would treat me courteously so long as I was a gentleman in my deportment? |
34843 | In what way would you have our generals act to carry out what you conceive to be such principles? |
34843 | Is General Grant in? |
34843 | Is not this your home? |
34843 | Is your master a Secessionist? |
34843 | Joe,said the Colonel,"are you willing to go home with your master?" |
34843 | Let''em burn: who cares? |
34843 | Mr. Brown, did you ever hear about the Abolitionists? |
34843 | O my God, what will become of us? 34843 O, is n''t it too bad that Zollicoffer is killed? |
34843 | Say, General, ai n''t you going to pay me for my property which your soldiers destroyed? |
34843 | See here, old fellow, wo n''t ye sell me a hunk of your gingerbread? |
34843 | Shall I take a look at the church? |
34843 | Stranger,said he,"have you got a sweet tooth?" |
34843 | Thank you,"God bless the Commission,"I say, Bill, are n''t they bully? |
34843 | The Christian Commission? 34843 The soldiers steal your chickens, you say?" |
34843 | Then the women were as eager as the men for the war? |
34843 | Then you are glad the Yankees are here? |
34843 | Then you have a wife? |
34843 | Then you look upon us as your friends? |
34843 | Then you were at Bull Run? 34843 Then you would not have a majority of the people elect their officers in the constituted way?" |
34843 | Was not the first gun fired by the Rebels upon Fort Sumter? |
34843 | Was you a member of the church there, my son? |
34843 | Was your master kind to you? |
34843 | Well, I wonder what he was thinking of when he carried out those forty thousand handcuffs? |
34843 | Well, Uncle Jacob, which would you rather be, a freeman or a slave? |
34843 | Well, my boy, what is your name? |
34843 | Well, my son, where are you from? |
34843 | Were you not afraid, Aunty, when the shells fell into the town? |
34843 | Were you not frightened when you saw the Yankees? |
34843 | What can be done for the poor whites? |
34843 | What can you do? |
34843 | What did you hear about them? |
34843 | What did you think when we were defeated at Manassas? 34843 What do the women think now?" |
34843 | What do you ask for a loaf? |
34843 | What do you call us? |
34843 | What do you charge for a glass? |
34843 | What do you think of it? |
34843 | What does this mean? |
34843 | What for? 34843 What gives the wheat- field blades of steel? |
34843 | What have ye got to sell, old fellow? 34843 What is the matter?" |
34843 | What is your name? |
34843 | What kind of people do you think they are? |
34843 | What makes you so happy? |
34843 | What pleases you, Aunty? |
34843 | What regiment do you belong to? |
34843 | What right have your men to stop us, sir? 34843 What shall I do?" |
34843 | What though the cast- out spirit tear The nation in his going? 34843 What will Grant do?" |
34843 | What, massa? |
34843 | When did you come from there? |
34843 | When do you think the war would end if such a plan was adopted? |
34843 | When will you evacuate? |
34843 | Where are you going? 34843 Where are you going?" |
34843 | Where are you going? |
34843 | Where are you going? |
34843 | Where did this come from? |
34843 | Where did you come from? |
34843 | Where do you hail from, soldier? |
34843 | Where do you live? |
34843 | Where is your captain? |
34843 | Where is your master? |
34843 | Where were you when the fight was going on at Fort Donelson? |
34843 | Where, I should like to know? |
34843 | Which way? |
34843 | Who are you, sir? |
34843 | Who do you belong to? |
34843 | Who has the most reason to be ashamed, you of us, or we of you? |
34843 | Who will convey news to Hooker of our success? |
34843 | Why do n''t Buell move? 34843 Why do n''t you fall into line?" |
34843 | Why do you keep your slaves? 34843 Why do you not go to Illinois?" |
34843 | Why do you think so? |
34843 | Why not, sir? |
34843 | Why so? 34843 Why so?" |
34843 | Why, Sojourner, what do you preach from, then? |
34843 | Why,he asked,"does Louisville write on an hundred of her stores''To let,''while Cincinnati advertises''Wanted''? |
34843 | Why? |
34843 | Will it disturb you if we have a little singing? 34843 Will you send the boy into some other regiment?" |
34843 | Would you have fought against the Yankees? |
34843 | Would you like an orange, sir? |
34843 | Would you like an orange? |
34843 | You are? |
34843 | You did n''t expect to buy them here, did you? |
34843 | You have seen people sold in the market, I suppose? |
34843 | You live in this old house down here? |
34843 | You mean one of your slaves, I presume? |
34843 | You own some slaves? |
34843 | Your own father? |
34843 | _ Is_ he? |
34843 | ''Are you to have it finished before the world ends?'' |
34843 | ''Fixing up to leave?'' |
34843 | ''How does your saloon get on?'' |
34843 | ''I have ploughed, and planted, and gathered into barns, and no man could head me; and arn''t I a woman? |
34843 | ''Please, sir, can you spare me one?'' |
34843 | ''Who wants meetings?'' |
34843 | *****"And is it Christian England cheers The bruiser, not the bruised? |
34843 | An''says I,''Laws, you did n''t think o''sech a thing as my sleepin''in dat''ar''_ bed_, did you? |
34843 | An''then says I,''_ Who_ is this?'' |
34843 | And must she run, despite the tears And prayers of eighteen hundred years, A- muck in Slavery''s crusade? |
34843 | And union find in freedom? |
34843 | And will not evening call another star Out of the infinite regions of the night To mark this day in Heaven? |
34843 | Are n''t you willing to trust him now?" |
34843 | Are you afraid that the negro will push you from your position? |
34843 | Are you willing that I should go and get my boy?" |
34843 | Bread, eh?" |
34843 | Brothers, wo n''t you follow?" |
34843 | But has not the free American laborer been forced to compete through all the years of the past with unrequited slave labor? |
34843 | But what made you become a Christian?" |
34843 | But where did they place themselves? |
34843 | But where were the Union people? |
34843 | Can any of you tell me how you voted?" |
34843 | Can we expect him to be our equal in acquisition of knowledge? |
34843 | Can you hold your front?" |
34843 | Certainly it was beneficial to the master; why should it not be to the slave? |
34843 | Could we dance? |
34843 | Did you not despair?" |
34843 | From Rosa? |
34843 | General Baird saw the negroes on the steamer, and approaching Colonel Utley, said,--"Why, Colonel, how is this? |
34843 | Had Stuart suddenly gained our rear? |
34843 | Had anything happened to them? |
34843 | Had the fuse failed? |
34843 | Have all of these negroes free papers?" |
34843 | Have n''t I been her cook for more than thirty years? |
34843 | Have n''t I cooked every meal she ever ate in that house? |
34843 | Have you written to your mother since the battle?" |
34843 | He knew it would endanger the lives of thousands; but what cared he? |
34843 | He thus addressed the unconverted:--"O, my poor, impenitent fellow- sinner, what you think you are doing? |
34843 | He was a pious old preacher; but then I seemed to see Cato in the light, an''he was all polluted an''vile, like me; an''I said,''Is it old Sally?'' |
34843 | How did they live? |
34843 | How does he know dey go out? |
34843 | How lie down in death in that loathsome place, when, by taking the oath of allegiance to the Southern Confederacy, he could obtain freedom? |
34843 | How long, O Lord? |
34843 | How much do you love your country if you thus make conditions of loyalty?" |
34843 | How shall we reward them? |
34843 | How shall we thank them? |
34843 | How you goin''to do it? |
34843 | I asked one athletic man what he thought of it? |
34843 | I have prayed for you to come; and do you think that I would have prayed one way and fit de other?" |
34843 | I looked into the first cabin, and seeing an old man sitting before the fire, greeted him with"How do you do, Uncle?" |
34843 | I met a young colored man, with features more Anglo- Saxon than African, who asked,--"Do you think, sir, that I could obtain employment in the North?" |
34843 | I often think of the language of our Saviour:''Eloi, Eloi, lama sabacthani,''--My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? |
34843 | I take it that you belong to the army?" |
34843 | I was a stranger to them all, but I ventured to make this inquiry,--"Did you ever see an Abolitionist?" |
34843 | If Secession could cut loose from the Union, why not from the Confederacy? |
34843 | If my cup wo n''t hold but a pint, and yours holds a quart, would n''t you be mean not to let me have my little half measure full?'' |
34843 | If the sword cut in one direction, why not in another? |
34843 | Is it a wonder that the recollection of that scene sometimes fills my eyes with tears? |
34843 | Is it a wonder that they exhibited extravagant joy? |
34843 | Is it old Cato?'' |
34843 | Is n''t it strange?" |
34843 | On what page of Confederate history shall we read the remonstrance of Lee, Davis, Stephens, Toombs, or Breckenridge? |
34843 | Once they asked questions of Yankees:"What is your occupation? |
34843 | Or would he move his right flank along the Blue Ridge, crowding Lee to the seaboard? |
34843 | Raising her voice she repeated,''Whar did your Christ come from? |
34843 | Raising herself to her full height, and her voice to a pitch like rolling thunder, she asked,''And arn''t I a woman? |
34843 | Said a friend to me one morning,"Are you aware that the Washington jail is full of slaves?" |
34843 | Shall not this act of two unknown colored soldiers also have a place in history? |
34843 | She''d groan an''groan, an''says I to her,--"''Mammy, what makes you groan so?'' |
34843 | Should we steam down to them, and ask them what they thought of the Rebellion? |
34843 | Sisters, wo n''t you follow? |
34843 | So great was the danger which he ran, that one of his staff said,''General, do n''t you think this is the wrong place for you?'' |
34843 | So prevailing was the excitement that the common mode of salutation on Main Street was,''When do you think the Federals will be here?'' |
34843 | The Yankees coming? |
34843 | The following conversation passed between them:--_ Colonel W._"Whom have I the pleasure of addressing?" |
34843 | There was''already an order out to move; what''s the use?'' |
34843 | They are arrant cowards, those dear dark friends of ours.[?] |
34843 | They hail me from a distance:''Are you coming down this way, chaplain?'' |
34843 | To what end? |
34843 | W._"Shall I also trouble you for a pen and ink?" |
34843 | W._"Will you do me the favor to loan me a piece of paper?" |
34843 | Was such destruction warranted? |
34843 | Was the arrival of the Monitor in Hampton Roads on that morning, after the havoc made by the Merrimac, accidental? |
34843 | Was there any respect shown by the Rebel authorities? |
34843 | Were the Rebels retreating, or were they receiving reinforcements? |
34843 | Were the workingmen of Old England any more worthy than they of New England to associate with the slave- masters of the South? |
34843 | Were they assembling to welcome us? |
34843 | What action was taken by the Rebel Congress? |
34843 | What are ye here for?" |
34843 | What are you doing here? |
34843 | What breaks the oath Of the men o''the South? |
34843 | What brought you to the South? |
34843 | What can we do with''em? |
34843 | What cared those freedmen, fresh from the house of bondage, for floating timber or military commands? |
34843 | What could I do with my three little children there? |
34843 | What could it be? |
34843 | What did she ever do for me? |
34843 | What did they do? |
34843 | What dis dey call it?'' |
34843 | What drama surpasses it in interest? |
34843 | What estimate shall we place upon their work? |
34843 | What had caused this alienation? |
34843 | What had produced this bitterness? |
34843 | What had transpired to produce this white heat of passion? |
34843 | What has she done for me in return? |
34843 | What if our horses had started? |
34843 | What is your shame worth? |
34843 | What period of the world''s history is more replete with great events affecting the welfare of the human race? |
34843 | What points the rebel cannon? |
34843 | What restraint was ever laid upon him? |
34843 | What righteous cause can suffer harm If He its part has taken? |
34843 | What say you? |
34843 | What sets the roaring rabble''s heel On the old star- spangled pennon? |
34843 | What shall I do?" |
34843 | What shall I do?" |
34843 | What shall I get?" |
34843 | What was gained by it? |
34843 | What will be the verdict of history? |
34843 | What wonder that hunger, despair, and death, and the example of some of his comrades, made him weakly hesitate? |
34843 | What would become of them? |
34843 | What''s dat got to do wid woman''s rights or niggers''rights? |
34843 | Whate''er the loss, Whate''er the cross, Shall they complain Of present pain Who trust in God''s hereafter? |
34843 | When were his acts disavowed by the Rebel government? |
34843 | When will this terrible war come to an end?" |
34843 | Where is the protest of the"chivalrous"gentlemen of the South? |
34843 | Where is your sense of fair play? |
34843 | Where will you go?" |
34843 | Where you think you are going? |
34843 | Who attempt the hazardous enterprise? |
34843 | Who gave them authority? |
34843 | Who would go? |
34843 | Why do n''t Halleck move? |
34843 | Why do the Abolitionists oppose colonization? |
34843 | Why not place them in the category with gunpowder, horses, and cattle? |
34843 | Why? |
34843 | Will it withstand the shock? |
34843 | Will not history hold him accountable? |
34843 | Will the tree of Liberty prematurely decay, if nourished by such life- giving blood? |
34843 | Would Meade move directly across the Rapidan and attack Lee in front, with every passage, every hill and ravine enfiladed by Rebel cannon? |
34843 | Would an abject, servile race, kept in chains four thousand years, assert their manhood? |
34843 | Would he not aim directly toward the cradle of Secession? |
34843 | Would he not make, rather, a sudden change of base to Fredericksburg? |
34843 | Would they falter? |
34843 | Would they fight? |
34843 | Yet who can restrain grief to see them fall in such a way as this,--not by the fortunes of war, but by the hand of an assassin?" |
34843 | You do n''t hate me individually?" |
34843 | You go about lecturing, do you not?" |
34843 | You say that the negro is an inferior being; what do you say of Frederick Douglass, who has raised himself from slavery to a high position? |
34843 | You''s heerd o''me, I reckon?" |
34843 | how did they die?" |
34843 | in''63,"Where shall we hide our goods?" |
34843 | or what if in the darkness a soldier, grieving over his imaginary wrong, and reckless of life, had misunderstood us? |
34843 | or where do you expect to go?" |
34843 | said he;"you who condemn the government? |
34843 | shall I ever forget that sight, when the boat went down?" |
36282 | ''Tis only a round, bright ball, Ellen; why gaze at it so long and fixedly? |
36282 | A Tory? 36282 Am I walking too fast for you, Ellen?" |
36282 | And does little Jean believe that I am dead? |
36282 | And give up her Tory principles, and her Episcopal faith? 36282 And if Captain Buford gets well, Donald, will they hang him because he is a Tory?" |
36282 | And mother has stood it bravely? |
36282 | And no parole asked? 36282 And she never asks you to go to church?" |
36282 | And they thought me dead, Elder? |
36282 | And this statute will be enacted? |
36282 | And what may that be? 36282 And what says Aunt Martha?" |
36282 | And what troubles you noo, daughter? |
36282 | And what will you do with him? |
36282 | And when is that? |
36282 | And who, General Gates, may be that soldierly and magnificent looking colonel? |
36282 | And why do you think so? |
36282 | And why not, mother? 36282 And why not?" |
36282 | And why? |
36282 | And you can do these things? |
36282 | And you could give yourself to a traitor,I said, at last--"or would you play Delilah to my Samson, Jael to my Sisera, Judith to my Holofernes? |
36282 | And you have not heard, Donald? 36282 And you like not that fascinating rake, Charles Surface, nor delicious Lady Teazle, with her boisterous snobbery, and her irrepressible good nature? |
36282 | And you will go home with Thomas and me when this business is ended? |
36282 | And you will wait for priest''s blessing on our union, before you claim me, Donald-- you have thought fully about it? |
36282 | Are all well at home? 36282 Are they all well at home?" |
36282 | Are you hiding from Aunt Martha, Ellen? |
36282 | But how? |
36282 | But not your happiness, Ellen? |
36282 | But what of the cold, hunger and fatigue? 36282 But whatever may be your religious views, sir, you wish surely to know something of life?" |
36282 | Can a man ever measure the influence of a woman''s beauty and fascination upon him? 36282 Can any one who has ever known her exonerate her from the charge?" |
36282 | Can it be Captain Donald McElroy, of Virginia? |
36282 | Can it be Donald McElroy? |
36282 | Can she? |
36282 | Could she not have found refuge somewhere in the neighborhood? |
36282 | Could you lend me the book to read while you are here, Ellen? 36282 Did not I tell you, Cousin, that I had set before myself a high and holy purpose? |
36282 | Did you ever think Nelly Buford a coquette? |
36282 | Did you not promise, the night we said good night at the spring, to be my friend and comrade always? |
36282 | Do we not provide better accommodations than this for wounded officers? |
36282 | Do you believe thet thar''tale, Capt''n? |
36282 | Do you hear that, mother? |
36282 | Do you know, Donald,he said almost in a whisper,"I am convinced the scout, Givens, knows something about Ellen?" |
36282 | Do you not know how to spin and weave, Ellen? 36282 Do you not see that if once it were said, it could never again be unsaid?" |
36282 | Do you suppose, innocent one, that we but fatten him for the halter? 36282 Eh? |
36282 | Eleven o''clock, shall we say? 36282 Ellen gone? |
36282 | General Lafayette? |
36282 | Grandmother,I said, joining her as soon as they were out of hearing,"who is this Ellen O''Niel who is niece to Uncle Thomas?" |
36282 | Has it made you very happy-- the hope? |
36282 | Have I been very ill? |
36282 | Have father and mother already been won over to Buford''s cause? 36282 Have you been on duty all this time, lad, with no furlough, no rest? |
36282 | Have you lost the bear''s track, Don? |
36282 | Have you not guessed that I love my Cousin Ellen, that I wish her for my wife? 36282 Have you read of King Arthur''s knights, and how they dared mighty deeds of prowess for the damsels they loved?" |
36282 | He pretends to wish that he were going to be Charles Surface in our comedy, didst ever hear of such shameless deceit? |
36282 | Here, in Kaskaskia? 36282 His mother and sister nursed you?" |
36282 | How came she with you, Givens? 36282 How did she know they were not fit reading for you?" |
36282 | I believe you could do it, Colonel,answered I,"but your health, sir? |
36282 | I''ll ask for your immediate exchange, but, meantime, why not make yourself comfortable? 36282 I-- and what could you say upon so meager a topic?" |
36282 | Is Ellen below? |
36282 | Is he very genial with them, Captain McElroy? |
36282 | Is my judgment upon coquettes so valuable? |
36282 | Is n''t she queer, Don? |
36282 | Is n''t that like music? 36282 Is the reading as good as your telling of the stories, Ellen?" |
36282 | Is this really Ellen O''Niel? |
36282 | It was most kind of you, General, but for this find of Buford it would have been my choice-- could the place be held for me? |
36282 | Like you the part of Sir Peter? |
36282 | Make him_ my_ prisoner, General? |
36282 | May I ask, Captain Morgan, whither we are to march after our quota has been recruited? |
36282 | May I go hunting with you, now? |
36282 | May I go, Aunt Rachael? |
36282 | Meager? 36282 Meantime I may feed on hope, may I not, mavourneen?" |
36282 | Never marry, Ellen, and why? |
36282 | Oh, brother, were you as ill as this, when he took you from the Philadelphia prison? |
36282 | Once when you were a lad I dined at your house; you scarcely remember the occasion, I suppose? |
36282 | One of Morgan''s Riflemen, said you, Miss Margaret? |
36282 | Ought to be,--why? |
36282 | Pray, how do you suppose Clark would get his men here through these floods? |
36282 | Shall I feel as lonely, and as friendless when you are gone, I wonder, as I did the first time you left the valley with Morgan? |
36282 | She is almost grown now? |
36282 | She is fair and very winsome, did you say? |
36282 | Spend you all your spare time polishing firearms, molding bullets, and shooting animals? |
36282 | Suppose Ellen should be angry? |
36282 | Surely she is not, McElroy; could she be happy, think you, shut out from a world which interests her so fully? 36282 The one I must call Aunt Martha; do_ you_ like her?" |
36282 | Then I infer you do not find the other characters to your liking? |
36282 | Then do you not think we have good prospect of finding her, and will not the Indians be glad to take a big ransom for her? |
36282 | Then he''ll go back to fight more against us? 36282 Then what can I do, Captain Clark, to forward your bold enterprise?" |
36282 | Then what sort of play do you like? |
36282 | Then will you not tell them so in the valley? |
36282 | Then you do not love Nelly, Donald? 36282 Then you loved Ellen O''Niel, Thomas?" |
36282 | Then you will decline Greene''s offer of a place on his staff? 36282 Then you will grant my request, Ellen?" |
36282 | Then, sir, you give no credence to the charge of the English critics, that there was never any other Ossian than his pretended translator? |
36282 | They moved from Pennsylvania to Baltimore? |
36282 | Thomas and Nelly Buford to be married? |
36282 | Thomas? |
36282 | To- morrow, Donald? |
36282 | Tom,I asked abruptly,"what is the matter? |
36282 | Uncle Thomas has searched the neighborhood thoroughly you think? |
36282 | Visiting,I answered, rather curtly;"do you come from Vincennes?" |
36282 | Well, Martha, who writ the letter, an''what was''t writ aboot? |
36282 | Were not all my prayers heard and answered? 36282 What are you looking at, Ellen?" |
36282 | What book are you reading? |
36282 | What do you surmise has been her fate, father? |
36282 | What expedition, son? 36282 What service can a nun render to God that a consecrated wife and mother may not offer Him? |
36282 | What snare, Colonel Morgan? |
36282 | What trouble? 36282 What woman was ever made angry by the daring determination of the man she loves, to win her at all hazards? |
36282 | What would then become of Captain Buford? |
36282 | When may I hope to see you again? |
36282 | Where are we? |
36282 | Where are you, Donald? |
36282 | Where is our new cousin, Thomas? |
36282 | Where shall I rejoin you, General? |
36282 | Where''s the bear, Donald? |
36282 | Where''s your foster son this afternoon, Givens? 36282 Which of these shall I read from?" |
36282 | Who? |
36282 | Whom, in heaven''s name, think you I found this morning among our prisoners, McElroy? 36282 Why did God leave me alone in the world with no one to love me?" |
36282 | Why, Donald, you are not thinking of taking Ellen bear hunting with you? |
36282 | Will she recover? |
36282 | Will you be very lonely and unhappy in the valley, Ellen? 36282 Will you sit down here before me, and give me your serious attention for a brief while?" |
36282 | Will you take down their names, Là © gère, and organize your company? |
36282 | Will you think me presumptuous, brother, if I ask you a personal question? |
36282 | Will''t say you''re glad I''m a Tory-- and that even a Tory may be honest and a Christian? 36282 Wish any of you to enlist with us?" |
36282 | With such leaders as Washington, Arnold and Morgan,I thought, with fervid enthusiasm and pride,"how can we fail to win?" |
36282 | Would she not resume her sway over you were you to see her again? |
36282 | Yes, and why not? |
36282 | You are the son of Justice McElroy, of the Stone Church neighborhood, I suppose, Captain? 36282 You are then in command of the militia which is to convey us to Virginia? |
36282 | You are_ very_ sure that you will always be entirely content with me? 36282 You do not think it likely the Indians have killed her?" |
36282 | You have been watching me, my Colonel? |
36282 | You leave for Virginia at once, Captain McElroy? |
36282 | You make the journey by water? |
36282 | Your dear self, Nelly, your love? |
36282 | A girl''s superstition to come between Ellen and her life''s fulfillment? |
36282 | Accept divine deliverance, and repay with broken promises, violated oaths? |
36282 | And after all what is man''s puny strength against the dangers of this life? |
36282 | And was na''the great, great grandmaither of yourself an O''Niel and a Catholic? |
36282 | And what need we most in this new world? |
36282 | And why did you let her come all this way from her friends-- and dressed, too, in men''s clothes?" |
36282 | Are there many more like you in this valley? |
36282 | Are you not the one bit of home, and comfort, and cheer we soldiers have in this wilderness? |
36282 | Are you of Quaker faith, Captain McElroy?" |
36282 | Are you quite strong again?" |
36282 | Are you willing, my men, to sacrifice still further, to risk still more for the cause? |
36282 | But could he be a hypocrite posing for sympathy? |
36282 | But oh, Ellen, will you not tell me once, just once, that you do love me, and would give yourself to me if you were free?" |
36282 | But tell me more of Ellen-- she is, you think, really happy to be Aunt Martha''s nurse?" |
36282 | But why rejoice, little sister? |
36282 | But you came avisiting full early-- what''s to pay?" |
36282 | CHAPTER XVII"Comrades,"said Clark the next morning, just as we were falling into line of march,"have you remembered the day? |
36282 | CHAPTER XXIV What if Father Gibault''s priestly zeal should prove stronger than the common sense, and sound humanity, I credited him with? |
36282 | Can not you foresee that she will live a long life of regret, and unavailing struggle against natural inclinations? |
36282 | Can you not guess what proof of your sincerity I would claim?" |
36282 | Can you not trust yourself with me for one brief ride after all our journeying together?" |
36282 | Can you shoot, lad?" |
36282 | Captain McElroy, whom family and friends have mourned as dead these six months past? |
36282 | Could he be a Catholic? |
36282 | Could you enlist forty or fifty volunteers in your valley, think you?" |
36282 | Could you love and trust a wife who would come to you with a sacrilege upon her conscience?" |
36282 | Dare I then break my vows-- lie to the holy Virgin and her sacred Son? |
36282 | Deeds of unselfish charity? |
36282 | Did I see a ghost at last-- after all my jeering unbelief? |
36282 | Did Mr. Henry ur Clark tell yer the old scout''s story, Capt''n?" |
36282 | Did any suspicion of our real object seem to occur to any one in your neighborhood?" |
36282 | Did it not suggest a twinge of jealousy in Ellen''s heart? |
36282 | Did she believe that I was yet a captive to her charms? |
36282 | Do n''t women ever go to war?" |
36282 | Do not I owe my life to you, and have you not made my very captivity a time of delight? |
36282 | Do they treat you well, poor captive?" |
36282 | Do you disapprove of too close family entanglements?" |
36282 | Do you remember, Cousin, that night before you left the valley-- when you found me star- gazing on the rock overhanging the spring?" |
36282 | Do you wonder I run away, and talk with the flower- fairies, or the stars, whenever I get the chance?" |
36282 | Do you wonder that I''m half Tory, and whole heretic, Donald?--at war with my race, my religion, and my family?" |
36282 | Does Aunt Martha know?" |
36282 | Does Ellen know of this?" |
36282 | Does a man ever quite forget his first love? |
36282 | Does not this alliance absolve the citizens of Kaskaskia from all allegiance to England? |
36282 | Does the place hurt you much?" |
36282 | Does the plan to meet them more than half way, to do ourselves the surprise act, appeal to you, Captain McElroy? |
36282 | Father Gibault, will you stay with Colonel Clark and soothe his anger? |
36282 | Had she not shown plainly enough her preference for me? |
36282 | Had you to bring me home, and were you too drunk to go farther?" |
36282 | Has its remembrance always power to thrill him, even though the once lively sentiment be supplanted, or outlived? |
36282 | Have we not already more land than we can protect, and properly cultivate? |
36282 | Have you a fleet mount, Colonel McElroy?" |
36282 | Have you ever chanced to meet George Rogers Clark, one of the pathfinders in the Kentucky wilderness, a friend of Daniel Boone?" |
36282 | Have you not heard her say that she intends to take the veil, to be a nun?" |
36282 | Have you spoken to Ellen?" |
36282 | Have you thought of anything else that should be done?" |
36282 | He led me aside, and asked abruptly,"You he d er cousin by ther name uv Ellen O''Niel?" |
36282 | He will gladly welcome my friends, and since you can not hope to reach home before midnight, McElroy, why not come with me? |
36282 | How can you say I do not love you?" |
36282 | How learned you such arts of the world, thou whilom backwoodsman?" |
36282 | How much, think you, does Captain Bowman know?" |
36282 | How old are you, Ellen?" |
36282 | How old is your son, Justice McElroy?" |
36282 | How to descant upon charms and graces he sees limned in beauty before his eyes? |
36282 | I answered,"and have not friends and comrades the right to speak the truth to one another? |
36282 | I called,"and what means this cowardly attack upon a lady''s traveling carriage?" |
36282 | I had heard no rumor of it-- and do you mean George Rogers Clark, the Kentucky pioneer and friend of Daniel Boone?" |
36282 | If General Washington had done so after Long Island, General Greene after Guilford; where would be to- day the cause of American liberty? |
36282 | If I might read to you an hour each morning, would that help you to pass less irksomely the tedious days of your captivity?" |
36282 | If he had nothing, she argued, why should they not settle down on the home place? |
36282 | If it is I, can you agree to do the same?" |
36282 | Is he, though, really a Tory? |
36282 | Is it high treason in his eyes for his prospective wife to harbor such suspicions?" |
36282 | Is it likely to appeal to your neighbors in the valley?" |
36282 | Is it not consecrated men and women to spend all the powers of their being for peace, purity and enlightenment? |
36282 | Is it proper to tell me our final destination?" |
36282 | Is it that you have surrendered? |
36282 | Is not blood thicker than treaties forced upon a people at the point of the sword? |
36282 | Is she not your wife''s cousin?" |
36282 | Is there no other life of consecration to God''s service for a woman than that to be found behind convent walls? |
36282 | It was opened somewhat cautiously, and Elder Walker''s voice enquired peremptorily,"Who''s without?" |
36282 | My lad, you should marry-- how old are you, sir?" |
36282 | Needs a man ever to learn how to tell a woman he loves her? |
36282 | Oh, Donald, what must I do?" |
36282 | Oh, why did we let her come-- what shall we do?" |
36282 | Others go with you?" |
36282 | Prayer? |
36282 | Shall I tell you more? |
36282 | Shall we go now to see her, and bid her choose between us?" |
36282 | Shall we press onward?" |
36282 | Shall we say Thursday afternoon, McElroy? |
36282 | She has suffered much, then?" |
36282 | Should strengthen Ellen''s superstition as to the sacred obligation of her impulsive vow? |
36282 | So then I am a cousin of Ellen O''Niel''s as well as Thomas Mitchell?" |
36282 | Suppose she should absolutely refuse both of us? |
36282 | Then I kissed softly the blue- veined wrists, where her heart''s blood pulsed warmest, and asked once more,"May I hope, mavourneen?" |
36282 | Think you I have nothing else to do than to ride all over the State reading the marriage ceremony for dissenters? |
36282 | Think you the life of wife and mother less holy, less self- sacrificing, of less savory incense to God than that of a nun? |
36282 | Tom?" |
36282 | Was I always to be answered in this absurd, illogical way, with platitudes of holy vows, and sacred consecration? |
36282 | Was I to wait forever for my long withheld happiness? |
36282 | What do you like to do, Cousin Ellen?" |
36282 | What if he should conclude that the immolation of two lives was necessary to the saving of one soul? |
36282 | What mean you, Thomas? |
36282 | What right had he to fall in love with Ellen O''Niel in my absence? |
36282 | What''ll we do erbout et?" |
36282 | When do we start and by what route?" |
36282 | When was this vow you speak of made?" |
36282 | When would it end? |
36282 | Where had the Indian come from? |
36282 | Where would she go? |
36282 | Which shall it be this morning?" |
36282 | Who can gauge the value of woman''s social tact and sympathy? |
36282 | Who can set bounds to a lover''s tongue, or demand of the eye of love that it express only what cold reason bids it say? |
36282 | Who had shot him? |
36282 | Why must I wear skirts and live in the house just because I''m a girl, Cousin Donald?" |
36282 | Why not Ellen and I go with them, stop in Baltimore to be married, and then go on to Philadelphia to help him? |
36282 | Why should Virginia voluntarily weaken herself in order to strengthen a union which would control all her resources?" |
36282 | Why should they not make peace, and live in harmony with the allies of their father land? |
36282 | Will not you, Cousin Donald, my only friend and protector, my one source of human strength, help me to keep my vow to God?" |
36282 | Will you accept my apology?" |
36282 | Will you be so good as to consider me your prisoner, and to send me under guard to your most comfortable resort for the enemy? |
36282 | Will you be so good as to leave your address with me?" |
36282 | Will you grant me a few moments of your time while the camp is getting ready to march?" |
36282 | Will you not forgive me, since the speech was prompted by the stupidity of a blunt soldier, and not by any doubt of you or your friends?" |
36282 | Will you tell Colonel Clark this for me? |
36282 | Wo n''t you let me thank you?" |
36282 | Would it be ours after all, so long as Aunt Martha set herself, in her narrow bigotry, to persecute Ellen? |
36282 | Would you have been far better contented had I left you in Kaskaskia?" |
36282 | Would you not like to have great wings, Cousin Donald, and fly and fly through the soft blue air, till you reached the moon?" |
36282 | Yet how can I find fault with you for having thought so, since my life has so belied my words? |
36282 | Yet why admit failure? |
36282 | You have already warned Colonel Clark?" |
36282 | You plead for it as if''twere a rare favor, and one most difficult to obtain;--am I so seldom serious?" |
36282 | You will allow this girl to feel herself doomed to self- immolation because of an irresponsible promise to her own excited conscience? |
36282 | You would kill each other and bring destruction upon your patriotic enterprise, and death to these men, whose lives are in your keeping? |
36282 | Your mother and sister are well, I hope, and in safety?" |
36282 | Your quiet valley, with its dull routine of duty and religion made her rebellious, then how would she endure life in a convent? |
36282 | between me and lifelong happiness? |
36282 | interrupted Thomas;"if not, what are you stopping for?" |
36282 | of wounds and capture and the sights and sounds after a battle? |
36282 | or, was it but the natural overflowing of grateful, friendly affection? |
36282 | pleaded Ellen;"can not you, with good conscience, speak a kind word for a misunderstood and reviled sect?" |
36282 | she questioned, with more of curiosity than anger or even surprise;"how could that be? |
36282 | so long as there was estrangement between husband and wife, mother and son in my uncle''s family? |
36282 | what good fortune brought you back so soon? |
46796 | A litter is it that yees would be afther makin'',he remarked, quickly;"and to kerry me to camp like I was a dead soldier, so it be? |
46796 | After we''ve tied our guns, and part of our clothes, to the log, what do we expect to do then, Bob-- fly away to the shore away over yonder? 46796 And I hope you held on to your gun?" |
46796 | And has he given up ranging the woods with young Simon Kenton? |
46796 | And that other rascal, Henri Lacroix-- the brother of the dead Armand? |
46796 | And the two others? |
46796 | And this flood, does it come from the last rain, or has there been what I heard my father call a cloud- burst? |
46796 | And you mean to go away up into Canada to hunt for one of these moose, as they call them? |
46796 | And, come to think of it, did any of you bring it out of the cabin? 46796 And, when that brush was piled up against our cabin, that dark night, and fired, did we not find tracks that were never made by Indian feet? |
46796 | And,continued the other,"even if they had guessed that the cries came from down the river, what could they have done to help us? |
46796 | Are they going to let us pass on, or do they mean to start a fight? |
46796 | Arrah, now, listen to me, wud yees? |
46796 | But how does it come, do you think,Sandy went on,"that, after carrying the box all this distance, they threw it away here?" |
46796 | But is there any chance at all that it may pass by without striking? |
46796 | But surely the precious belt is safe with all your things in the blockhouse? |
46796 | But they would not know we were coming along here,interposed Bob;"and so, you see, how could they think to lay a plan like that? |
46796 | But what are a few inches, when we will have to wait until it goes down six or more feet? |
46796 | But what if his story should be true? |
46796 | But what if those at the boat should n''t hear our signal, Pat? |
46796 | But what of them? |
46796 | But what will he do with all that meat; just eat the tongues? |
46796 | But when will the water go down enough for us to cross over and find out the truth? 46796 But why did he not tell this before?" |
46796 | But why should they be around here at all, when they know the hostility of the English settlers toward the French? |
46796 | But, Bob, we must be very near the place where we always land when we come over to look after our traps? |
46796 | But, Bob, what if we keep on floating all night? 46796 But, Bob, where could that boat have come from? |
46796 | But, I wonder if Colonel Boone knew about such a thing as a flood when he led us to where the settlement now stands? |
46796 | But, Pat,Bob continued,"of what danger was Blue Jacket about to warn our people? |
46796 | But, if he is your friend, what was he creeping up to the door of your cabin for? |
46796 | But, what good would that do us? |
46796 | Can it be a sly trick on the part of Indians to keep our attention fastened on that boat while they slip up behind us? |
46796 | Can we peep again, Pat? |
46796 | Did you hear that? |
46796 | Did you not suspect that your friend, Henri here, might have taken a notion to take the belt and hide it? |
46796 | Did you see any Indians? |
46796 | Did you see him do that job, and ai n''t he able to use that short bow better''n any Indian you ever met? |
46796 | Do n''t you think either Bob or myself might get there ahead of them, if we went along the edge of the river? 46796 Do you mean Jacques Larue?" |
46796 | Do you really think there''s any chance, then? |
46796 | Do you see anything, Bob? |
46796 | Do you think they are really coming? |
46796 | Do you think we will have any trouble getting back to the other shore of the river, this afternoon? |
46796 | For this old floating log, you mean? |
46796 | For what would ye be sayin''the likes av that, sor? |
46796 | Had n''t we better be backing out of this then, right away? |
46796 | How do you think they knew we were there? |
46796 | How does this suit you, Sandy? |
46796 | How far below the camp do you think we are? |
46796 | How far do you believe we will be from home when we get to land? |
46796 | How is it at the cabin? |
46796 | How is it, Sandy; are you all right? |
46796 | How is your ankle going to hold out, Sandy? |
46796 | How is your gun fixed now; are you sure that it will hold safe, even if we should knock up against another log? |
46796 | How will that do, Henri,_ mon cher_? |
46796 | I do n''t believe we are more than a single mile away from them now; is that so, Pat? |
46796 | I wonder if the chief would feel like giving us another, in case he learned of our losing this one? |
46796 | I wonder what I would have done without you? |
46796 | I wonder what the Indians will think when they hear that volley? |
46796 | I wonder who they could have been, Indians, or French trappers heading for the nearest trading post with their winter''s catch of pelts? |
46796 | In what way, Pat? |
46796 | It means that we will be attacked by a tribe of Indians we''ve never met before, does n''t it? |
46796 | It''s already getting a little dim; do n''t you think, Bob? |
46796 | Jerk it for winter use; d''ye mind? |
46796 | Make the sun stand still, you mean, Sandy? |
46796 | Now, here''s the arrow to which this message was fastened; and would n''t you say this one had been made by just the same cunning hand? |
46796 | Perhaps they''ve already gone by? |
46796 | Shall we push in closer? |
46796 | Stuff for what? |
46796 | That is no Shawanee arrow, Pat, I take it? |
46796 | The signals, you mean, Pat? |
46796 | Then do you hope to follow up the water, and get there ahead of them? |
46796 | Then had we better take them along with us? |
46796 | Then the falls are n''t so very high, after all? |
46796 | Then you think our friends have escaped, do you, Pat? |
46796 | There, does that fix it, Sandy? 46796 There, it is at the point where the outward sweep begins; but will such a big object be influenced by so small a change in the current?" |
46796 | There, it must have been about where your hand is now; and-- why, what is that? |
46796 | We do n''t want to lose our guns, to begin with; and, once we took to the water in that way, how could we hold on to them? 46796 Well, how do we know that yet?" |
46796 | Well, what about some day? |
46796 | Well, what do you say now, Jacques? |
46796 | Were they leaving the settlement at the time this man saw them? |
46796 | What ails you? |
46796 | What are they talking about, Pat? |
46796 | What brings you and Blue Jacket here, and on your way to our cabin, as I reckon you are from the way you head across the river? |
46796 | What do you mean, Bob, and where did you get that second Delaware arrow? |
46796 | What does all this mean, Kate? |
46796 | What does he seem to say this time? |
46796 | What happened? |
46796 | What has happened to you, Pat? |
46796 | What if they follow the boat down the river, and come on us when we are trying to get aboard? |
46796 | What is Pat O''Mara talking so fiercely about? |
46796 | What is it now, a tiger, a lion or an elephant? |
46796 | What is it, mother? |
46796 | What makes you say that, Bob? |
46796 | What was that dropped down just beside you, Bob? |
46796 | What''s that ye say; a wolf, is it? |
46796 | What? |
46796 | When was it that he saw them? |
46796 | Who are you, and what ails you? |
46796 | Why, look at that, will you? |
46796 | Why, who do you take me for? |
46796 | With the river booming bank- full, and the current as fierce as a wolf pack, how in the wide world would we ever manage to get across, Bob? |
46796 | Yes, and then? |
46796 | Yes, what do you think of it, Sandy? |
46796 | Am I near it now? |
46796 | And it is just the same kind of a boat, too, do n''t you think?" |
46796 | And we have been no such time making this point; have we, Pat?" |
46796 | And what would mother think?" |
46796 | Are yees riddy?" |
46796 | Armstrong?" |
46796 | Armstrong?" |
46796 | Be ye the Arrmstrong byes I''m afther hearin''out on this roarin'', tearin''flood this night?" |
46796 | Bears can swim, all right, Bob; is n''t that so?" |
46796 | Bob, what is that floating past yonder? |
46796 | But how in the wide world do you suppose he came there; and why does n''t he swim ashore? |
46796 | But just now I was wondering where he can be, and how he makes his way across from one side of the river to the other?" |
46796 | But what brings her down in this country of the Mississippi?" |
46796 | But where did you get this, father?" |
46796 | But why, do you think, did no one answer our shouts back there?" |
46796 | But, after all, he is only an Indian, and how can a white man understand his ways? |
46796 | But, did you mean you thought the river could have risen enough, since we left, to carry it off?" |
46796 | But, do you think they have drawn off, and mean to let us alone?" |
46796 | CHAPTER VI SIMON GIRTY, THE RENEGADE"WHO are they, Pat?" |
46796 | CHAPTER XXV THE PERIL OF KATE"WHAT have we here, Henri?" |
46796 | CHAPTER XXVIII CREEPING UP ON THE QUARRY"ISN''T it a shame that we wo n''t be able to catch up with them before dark comes?" |
46796 | Can it be some of our friends from above, brother?" |
46796 | Chances are they would leave a broken arrow behind, or some feathers that were cast aside; and I do not see any such, do you?" |
46796 | Did ye not notice the direction the bog trotters do be goin''?" |
46796 | Did you see that savage fall when he fired? |
46796 | Do you notice how he has drawn this big star close down to the level of the horizon? |
46796 | Do you understand now, brother?" |
46796 | Does that look as if he was a renegade, Pat?" |
46796 | Have the Indians again taken to the warpath, after their professions of peace, and after saying that the hatchet was buried ever so deep?" |
46796 | His father, mother, sister and brother were going along; and what need then to feel distressed? |
46796 | If he could do this, what was to prevent a dozen, or fifty, of his kind from accomplishing the same thing? |
46796 | Is that all plain to you, Sandy?" |
46796 | Is that what you figure on, Pat?" |
46796 | Is there anything wrong, do you think, about that answer to our shouts? |
46796 | It would be dark before three hours, and then how could they overtake the Frenchmen, who, given such a long start, would get beyond their reach? |
46796 | It''s harrd, I do be understandin''; but what''s the use thryin''to smash your head ag''inst a stone wall? |
46796 | Ready, Sandy? |
46796 | Tell me what worries you?" |
46796 | There may be plenty of game away out there, and lots of fur- bearing animals; but what do we know about the new dangers that we are apt to face? |
46796 | Was this some friend of the prisoners, and did he mean to try to effect their release? |
46796 | What could we have done to deserve such kindness, such faithfulness?" |
46796 | What does it mean, do you think, and who can he be?" |
46796 | What would they do with her? |
46796 | Where was it you saw the nut fall, Sandy? |
46796 | Where were you when they caught you; and how is it you did not call out?" |
46796 | Why should a Delaware want to do us a good turn; tell me that, Bob?" |
46796 | Would n''t we have given the wretches a scare, though, Bob?" |
46796 | You remember what mother told us, Sandy?" |
46796 | but how could Blue Jacket learn about that, when it must be many miles up the river, and coming much faster than any Indian could run?" |
46796 | do you mean to say that something might have happened to Kate?" |
46796 | echoed Sandy;"from the buffalo?" |
46796 | has anything terrible happened to father and mother, that we find you like this?" |
46796 | he cried,"and who would be afther expectin''to say a Delaware brave as far away from his home country as this wan?" |
46796 | he shouted a little later,"what can that be on the big log out yonder? |
46796 | how can we warn them?" |
46796 | how could that be?" |
46796 | how could that be?" |
46796 | murmured Bob;"what could they want there?" |
46796 | what if, after all, we should have the great good luck to meet the robbers some fine day; would n''t we demand that they return our property, though? |
46796 | where do you think he could have found it?" |
46796 | where will we find our mother and father; can you direct us, sir?" |
46796 | will the old river ever go down again, so that we can reach the door and know the worst?" |
46796 | will we have to abandon our fine flatboat there, and take up the journey on foot?" |
47237 | Am I blaming you? |
47237 | And so you talked of Ralph Hinchley? |
47237 | And what are you doing up here in the dark? |
47237 | And you have carried notes between them before? |
47237 | And you think it wicked, I believe? |
47237 | And you, Margaret? |
47237 | Are you better? |
47237 | Are you blaming me? |
47237 | Are you going to sing? |
47237 | Are you hurt? |
47237 | Are you ill? |
47237 | Are you in earnest? |
47237 | Are you never coming to see Margaret? |
47237 | Are you not judging hastily? |
47237 | Are you really hurt, Margaret? |
47237 | As Phil Yates the gambler''s wife? 47237 As how?" |
47237 | At least you can say if you think she loves me? |
47237 | But did you not own you considered her cold and hard? |
47237 | But not heartless? |
47237 | But the duel? |
47237 | But what would you have said? |
47237 | But will you go and speak to her? |
47237 | But you will have a cup of tea? |
47237 | Ca n''t you give us a bed for our friend? |
47237 | Confound you, what do you look like that for? |
47237 | Could you ride a few miles further, Ned? |
47237 | Did I? 47237 Did you speak?" |
47237 | Did you think it wrong? |
47237 | Do n''t you ride with us? |
47237 | Do we stay? |
47237 | Do you call it folly? |
47237 | Do you dare deny having written to Ralph Hinchley that you loved him-- that you were ready to abandon your engagement and marry him? |
47237 | Do you expect him back to- night? |
47237 | Do you think I would not have freed you at once? |
47237 | Does he touch these? |
47237 | Does that mean you prefer to walk alone? |
47237 | Good- morning,he said;"are you talking so sweetly with those roses that you can neither see nor hear?" |
47237 | Great heavens, Sybil, who is this man? |
47237 | Have I complained? |
47237 | Have I not clung to you as few women would have done? 47237 Have n''t you perjured your soul enough, already? |
47237 | Have you any other commands? |
47237 | Have you been trouting, Laurence? |
47237 | Have you come to that? |
47237 | He may, perhaps, avenge you; why not? |
47237 | He wo n''t drink, and he wo n''t gamble; so what''s to be done? 47237 How are you now, Laurence?" |
47237 | How can I tell? 47237 How far is that?" |
47237 | How long must this continue? |
47237 | How many times must one ask you to do a thing before you condescend to pay attention? |
47237 | How so? |
47237 | I beg your pardon; what did you wish? |
47237 | I believe she is in her room; shall I call her? |
47237 | I say Phil and I are not two angels for temper in dull times; do you think so? |
47237 | I? |
47237 | Is there another woman on earth brazen enough to have written it? |
47237 | Is there no physician near? |
47237 | Is this your strength? 47237 Kill you, my pet? |
47237 | Laurence, is it not almost time to go home? |
47237 | Laurence,called one of his friends, stooping over him,"are you better?" |
47237 | Look at this bud, Mr. Laurence; did you ever see any thing more beautiful? |
47237 | Margaret-- Margaret Waring? 47237 May I have a cup of tea, Miss Chase?" |
47237 | No; I believe he is at the mines,she answered; then added quickly, pointing to the injured man:"Has he fainted?" |
47237 | Nonsense, Mr. Laurence-- you are not jealous? 47237 Now, why ca n''t you be honest and say you are glad to see us start?" |
47237 | Of what are you thinking? |
47237 | Oh, I thought-- that is, from the way you spoke--"What did you think? |
47237 | Oh, is n''t it? 47237 One of the gentlemen had a hurt--""Was the doctor here?" |
47237 | Possibly; but ca n''t we stay here? |
47237 | Shall we be able to go from here soon, Philip? |
47237 | Shall we go on? |
47237 | She is frightened, of course,said Sybil;"who could help it? |
47237 | Speak the truth, Sybil,he said,"speak the truth, I say; did the young lady write that letter they were talking about?" |
47237 | Sybil, you have called yourself my friend; answer me: do you believe that Hinchley loves Margaret? |
47237 | Sybil,said Laurence, in a grave, low voice,"is this thing true?" |
47237 | Then what''s the use of talking about it,exclaimed Yates, angrily,"if he wo n''t drink or play?" |
47237 | Then you did n''t speak to him? |
47237 | Then you pity her for the misfortunes she has brought upon herself? |
47237 | Think so? |
47237 | This is Monday, is n''t it? |
47237 | Well, you are not frightened, now it is all over? |
47237 | Well? |
47237 | Well? |
47237 | What are you going to do? |
47237 | What caused it? |
47237 | What day of the month is this? |
47237 | What did she say? |
47237 | What did you come for? |
47237 | What did you say? |
47237 | What do you mean? |
47237 | What do you mean? |
47237 | What do you want of me? |
47237 | What is a man likely to want when he comes home tired and hungry, I should like to know? |
47237 | What is he to you? 47237 What is the matter?" |
47237 | What is to come now? |
47237 | What makes you think so? |
47237 | What proof have you? |
47237 | What''ll we do? |
47237 | What''s the good of keeping this up? 47237 When shall I expect you?" |
47237 | Where is Miss Waring? |
47237 | Where is the woman? |
47237 | Where''s Tom? |
47237 | Which I am morally certain you will spill on the carpet-- won''t he, Miss Waring? |
47237 | Who ever supposed it was any thing else? |
47237 | Who has been here to- day? |
47237 | Who is there? |
47237 | Who then? |
47237 | Who wrote the letter Mr. Laurence saw you give me? |
47237 | Why are you here, sir, and who is that man? |
47237 | Why did n''t you keep them? |
47237 | Why did you not say to me frankly-- I detest this marriage? |
47237 | Why have you come here? |
47237 | Why? |
47237 | Wife? |
47237 | Will there never be an end? 47237 Will you go and sit with my uncle for a while, Miss Chase?" |
47237 | Will you promise to conduct yourselves like men? |
47237 | Yes; did you expect me? |
47237 | You are certain? |
47237 | You are very obliging--"Oh, she means to beat you unmercifully,interrupted Margaret;"do n''t you, Miss Chase?" |
47237 | You do n''t feel afraid, Sybil? 47237 You have had no tea,"she said;"shall I order it brought up?" |
47237 | You have n''t had any supper, Tom? |
47237 | You have no business on hand? |
47237 | You will not feel lonely if I go? |
47237 | You would not care in what way; you would not mind the occupation? |
47237 | Are you blaming Miss Waring or me?" |
47237 | Are you fond of trout- fishing, Miss Chase?" |
47237 | At the close he said:"When will he be at the diggings?" |
47237 | But what is your news?" |
47237 | Can you blame me for longing to have another home than this?" |
47237 | Did I faint?" |
47237 | Did you write to Hinchley?" |
47237 | Do you consider that she conducts herself as an engaged person should?" |
47237 | Do you know him?" |
47237 | Does it desert you now?" |
47237 | Had there been any? |
47237 | Hinchley?" |
47237 | I have got out of worse scrapes than this-- fudge, what''s this place compared to Australia?" |
47237 | I know she tells you all her troubles freely enough; why should you refuse to listen to my part of the story?" |
47237 | I say, California sheep get pretty tough, now do n''t they?" |
47237 | I suppose every wife ought to be exceedingly careful; but then, is a woman to be deprived of every bit of sentiment or romance?" |
47237 | Just now I want to know what brought that Laurence here?" |
47237 | Miserable, cowardly girl, why did you not come frankly and tell me the truth?" |
47237 | Miss Chase seated herself by the tray, while Laurence turned to Margaret:"Where is Hinchley?" |
47237 | Now will you come?" |
47237 | Shall we go down?" |
47237 | She turned at the sound of his footstep, and demanded, angrily:"What do you wish more? |
47237 | Sybil waved that claim to consideration carelessly aside, and went on:"There was a party of strangers at the house one night last week?" |
47237 | Tell me: do you believe any woman who loved a man would act as she does? |
47237 | There may be half a dozen robberies-- will one more make any great difference?" |
47237 | They rode toward her; as they reached the spot, she rose and called again:"You are not hurt, Miss Waring?" |
47237 | What did he want? |
47237 | Who knows how many listeners we may have?" |
47237 | Why did she tremble so violently in the first clasp of his arms? |
47237 | Why do I weep for Thee? |
47237 | Why should you always blame me?" |
47237 | With all this, why was there so much pain left in her heart? |
47237 | Yates?" |
47237 | Yates?" |
47237 | You was afraid I should kill him, eh?" |
47237 | You will be back to dinner?" |
47237 | You will be my friend; say, will you not try to help me?" |
47237 | You wo n''t draw back?" |
47237 | groaned Margaret, almost fainting from a sharp recoil of outraged feeling,"is there no man living who will avenge me on this libeler?" |
47237 | tell man unsought that you loved him? |
47237 | where the deuce are you, I say?" |
40430 | And what and where is the square? |
40430 | And where is the road by which the guerillas will or have arrived at the place? |
40430 | And where were they going? |
40430 | And you have deserted your companions in arms? |
40430 | Are there only two of them? |
40430 | Are these Titus''s boys standing here? |
40430 | Are you a loyal citizen of the United States? |
40430 | Are you all idiots? |
40430 | Are you and the other man provided with commissions from any source? |
40430 | Artie, do you know where Captain Truman is posted with his command? |
40430 | BE YOU UNS SOLDIERS, MASS''R? |
40430 | Be you uns soldiers, Mars''r? |
40430 | But are you not an officer, Deck? |
40430 | But how came he on the hill road? |
40430 | But how could they have got around to the point where you saw them? |
40430 | But if they were breaking camp, why have we not heard from them before this time? |
40430 | But what became of you? |
40430 | But what do you know about the approach of the guerillas, Clover? |
40430 | But what do you suppose has become of Dexter, Knox? |
40430 | But where are we going, Artie? |
40430 | But you expect there will be a fight, do n''t you, Deck? |
40430 | But, father, do you expect to fight this battle without me? |
40430 | Can I take my place in the ranks where I belong, father? |
40430 | Can it be possible that the commander of the Rangers has obtained information of our presence here, and of the result of the affair at the bridge? |
40430 | Can it be reached without going by the south road? |
40430 | Can you make out any movement of the enemy to the south of us, Major Lyon? |
40430 | Can you make out what Lieutenant Gadbury is doing, Deck? |
40430 | Captain Tites and his men--"Captain who?" |
40430 | Captain Truman, have you noticed a considerable knoll on the left of the south road, just above the cross- roads? |
40430 | Ceph? 40430 Colonel Coffee, is there any other road than the one by which we have come from Greeltop that leads to the south?" |
40430 | Coming, be they, Deck? |
40430 | Could I see the young man that was foremost in saving me? 40430 Did that captain you spoke of drink whiskey, Cato?" |
40430 | Did you cut through the enemy? |
40430 | Did you hear no noise of any kind? |
40430 | Did you hear what they said when they came to the house? |
40430 | Did you make out how many there were, Layder? |
40430 | Did you see anybody over there? |
40430 | Do n''t you know Tom Lobkill? 40430 Do n''t you see? |
40430 | Do n''t you think we uns are right smart down this way? |
40430 | Do n''t you think you have carried me about far enough? |
40430 | Do they know the Riverlawn Cavalry is here, father? |
40430 | Do you belong to the company encamped in the woods farther down the road? |
40430 | Do you come from that house beyond the cornfield? |
40430 | Do you expect, little po''k- eater, we uns should''a''let you do such a wicked deed as that? |
40430 | Do you know what those villains are doing there, Cato? |
40430 | Do you know where the railroad bridge over the creek is? |
40430 | Do you know where there are any of them? |
40430 | Do you mean to shoot them down as they stick in the mud there? 40430 Do you see that flag on the railroad bridge, Dexter?" |
40430 | Do you see that little knoll not fifty rods from us? |
40430 | Do you suppose I can enlist in one of your companies, Deck? |
40430 | Do you suppose the first company will remain where they are for any length of time? |
40430 | Do you suppose the flag means that he has found Deck, father? |
40430 | Do you suppose there is any danger of another invasion of Greeltop to- night from the north, Colonel Coffee? |
40430 | Do you surrender? |
40430 | Do you surrender? |
40430 | Do you surrender? |
40430 | Do you understand it all, Dexter? |
40430 | Do you want me to kill him? 40430 Fiction? |
40430 | Has anything been done at the bridge? |
40430 | Have n''t I done so, Captain Truman? |
40430 | Have they left the blocusses on foot behind? |
40430 | Have we licked that Home Guard? |
40430 | Have you any message for the major, Captain? |
40430 | Have you anything to advise, Captain Gordon? |
40430 | Have you seen Tom Lobkill about here in your travels on this bridge? |
40430 | Have you seen anything of the guerillas, Life? |
40430 | Have you seen the enemy, Artie? |
40430 | Have you seen the enemy, Withers? |
40430 | Have you your watch with you, Dexter? |
40430 | How are you now, Artie? |
40430 | How did you find us this morning? |
40430 | How do you feel, Major Vinegold? |
40430 | How do you know there is any company there? |
40430 | How do you suppose the Texans got out of the mud- hole, Deck? |
40430 | How does he stand on the war question? 40430 How many companies have you, Deck?" |
40430 | How many men are there at the house, or near it, Cato? |
40430 | How many men can you muster in your company? |
40430 | How many of them are there, Life? |
40430 | How many of them are there? |
40430 | How many of them were there? |
40430 | How many were there of them? |
40430 | How''s that, little sonny? 40430 I am fixing the bridge, do n''t you see?" |
40430 | I did n''t mean to scare your horse, sir,said the elder of the ladies;"but for the love of Heaven, ca n''t you do something for my husband?" |
40430 | I do n''t know whar I am, Jube; do you? |
40430 | I heard a volley a little while ago; has there been another engagement? |
40430 | I know it is; did n''t father say they were to come over here to do their work? 40430 I reckon so too; but whar''s here, Jupiter?" |
40430 | I reckon you hain''t seen nothin''on''em, hev yon, Deck Lyons? 40430 I saw that six of you came down the hill together; have you left no pickets in front of the company?" |
40430 | I suppose you are a Union man, sir? |
40430 | I''m sure I do n''t know; why did n''t you ask your father, if you want to know? |
40430 | Is it a large force? |
40430 | Is it possible that Uncle Titus''s family are reduced to such a strait? |
40430 | Is n''t there any way for those men to get out of that quagmire? |
40430 | Is that you, Deck? 40430 Is there any news from up above, Major Lyon?" |
40430 | Is there any open place at the end of the hill where the captain is, to the right of the grove? |
40430 | Is your company the only body of troops about here? |
40430 | It is you who have brought this message, is it, Clover? |
40430 | No, I did n''t, Life; what''s the use of making such a to- do about nothing? 40430 Not gone, Deck?" |
40430 | Now, Joseph, where were the guerillas when you saw them? |
40430 | Now, Mr. Barkland, do you know of any other body of troops in this vicinity? |
40430 | Now, who are you? |
40430 | That''s what''s the matter, is it? 40430 Then they had supper at the mansion?" |
40430 | Then what are you doing with me now? |
40430 | Then what did you ask me if I belonged to it for? |
40430 | Then you propose to go to Plain Hill, Major? |
40430 | Then you think they have camped at some place not far from us? |
40430 | Then your master has plenty of money? |
40430 | Then, Captain Dingfield has gone out with his whole company to intercept Gordon? |
40430 | Upon what did you disagree with him? |
40430 | W''ich o''you uns is Mars''r Major Lyon? |
40430 | Well, Beck, what is your news? |
40430 | Well, Deck, is the business finished? |
40430 | Well, Deck, what do you make of it? |
40430 | Well, Deck, what next? |
40430 | Well, Dexter, you have been playing the hero again, have you? |
40430 | Well, my little dandy, what now? |
40430 | Well, what is it? |
40430 | Well, which side is he on? |
40430 | Well, why do n''t they burn it, then? |
40430 | What are the Sesh soldiers here for, Cato? |
40430 | What are them men doin''in there? |
40430 | What are they? 40430 What are they?" |
40430 | What are you doing here? |
40430 | What are you doing here? |
40430 | What are you four doing about here? |
40430 | What are you going to do now, Deck? |
40430 | What are you going to do with me? |
40430 | What be they goin''over that way for if that ai n''t what they mean? |
40430 | What brought you here, Deck Lyon? 40430 What can that mean, Colonel?" |
40430 | What company do you belong to? |
40430 | What did I say that was not true? |
40430 | What did you see? |
40430 | What do these two darkies want? |
40430 | What do you know about this attack upon Plain Hill, Lieutenant? |
40430 | What do you suppose has become of Deck, father? |
40430 | What do you think of the idea advanced by Knox, Captain Gordon? |
40430 | What does all this mean, Deck? 40430 What does this mean?" |
40430 | What else can they do? |
40430 | What fight? |
40430 | What has turned up now? |
40430 | What have you here? |
40430 | What is it all about, then? |
40430 | What is it, Artie? |
40430 | What is it, Deck? |
40430 | What is it? |
40430 | What is the matter, Joseph? |
40430 | What is the matter, Mr.----? 40430 What is your back name?" |
40430 | What is your message from Captain Gordon? |
40430 | What makes you so late, boys? |
40430 | What makes you think so, Deck? |
40430 | What next? |
40430 | What other business have they got there? |
40430 | What things? |
40430 | What time is it now? |
40430 | What was it that the nigger told you, Sykes Wimple? |
40430 | What was the condition of the bridge when you reached it, Knox? |
40430 | What were they? |
40430 | What were you doing up here, then? |
40430 | What would you call it? 40430 What you been doin'', Lank Rablan?" |
40430 | What you uns doin''here? |
40430 | What''s all that gwine on down below? |
40430 | What''s gwine on at that fire, Minky? |
40430 | What''s that? |
40430 | What''s the matter? 40430 What''s the trouble?" |
40430 | When can I see you again, Deck? |
40430 | Where are Styles and Brehan now? |
40430 | Where are the enemy now, Knox? |
40430 | Where are the enemy now? |
40430 | Where are the scouts, Deck? |
40430 | Where are they going now? |
40430 | Where are they? |
40430 | Where are we going? 40430 Where are we now, my friends?" |
40430 | Where are you going? |
40430 | Where are you hit, Deck? |
40430 | Where are you uns bound? |
40430 | Where did it lead? |
40430 | Where did you get that little shooter, Lyons? |
40430 | Where did you see him? |
40430 | Where did you sleep? |
40430 | Where do they come from? |
40430 | Where do you come from, CÃ ¦ sar? |
40430 | Where is Captain Gordon? |
40430 | Where is Captain Truman? |
40430 | Where is Captain Truman? |
40430 | Where is Lieutenant Redway? |
40430 | Where is Major Lyon? |
40430 | Where is Major Lyon? |
40430 | Where is Plain Hill, sir? |
40430 | Where is my horse? |
40430 | Where is the colonel, Dexter? |
40430 | Where is the company of cavalry which must have arrived an hour or two since? |
40430 | Where is the company, Yowell? |
40430 | Where? |
40430 | Who and what are you? |
40430 | Who are you? |
40430 | Who are you? |
40430 | Who comes there? |
40430 | Who comes there? |
40430 | Who comes there? |
40430 | Who commands that rabble in front of us? |
40430 | Who done tole you my name, Mars''r? |
40430 | Who is Hasbrook? |
40430 | Who is Vinegold, Captain Stinger? |
40430 | Who is it? |
40430 | Who is the captain of your Home Guard? |
40430 | Who is the commander of the company? |
40430 | Who is the gentleman on horse- back? |
40430 | Who was he, Knox? |
40430 | Who was with you, More? |
40430 | Who''s we? |
40430 | Who? |
40430 | Why did n''t you do the shootin''when you had the chance, little coon? |
40430 | Why did n''t you follow them up? |
40430 | Why do n''t you speak out, Deck, and tell me what you are thinking about? |
40430 | Why do you call me your friend? |
40430 | Will you pay the bill I have brought to you? |
40430 | Wo n''t you take a seat on this old bench, and let us talk it over? |
40430 | Yes, Mars''r; but if you uns is soldiers, which side was you on? |
40430 | You did n''t mean that what you said was true? |
40430 | You did n''t mean that, did you? |
40430 | Your orderly? |
40430 | 282"WHAT ARE YOU UNS DOING HERE?" |
40430 | Ai n''t that so, Artie? |
40430 | Any news from there?" |
40430 | Are the men who came to the mansion in uniform, Cato?" |
40430 | Are you all ready to march with your company?" |
40430 | But how come you over here, Deck?" |
40430 | But how do you know that they are waiting for the other gang, Captain?" |
40430 | But what do you want? |
40430 | But what is the point in regard to the snoring, Major Lyon?" |
40430 | But where are the Texans in front of us? |
40430 | But where are you going?" |
40430 | But where was Deck? |
40430 | CHAPTER XXXV SURROUNDED AND TOTALLY DEFEATED"What does all this mean, Withers?" |
40430 | Can the enemy see what he is doing, Colonel?" |
40430 | Could you see it from behind the knoll?" |
40430 | Did n''t I ask you point- blank what you would do?" |
40430 | Did n''t I see Sandy and Orly Lyon by that house?" |
40430 | Do n''t you see it?" |
40430 | Do you go to Plain Hill, Colonel?" |
40430 | Do you happen to know?" |
40430 | Do you mean to take six on us with only three?" |
40430 | Do you think you can find him?" |
40430 | Elbroon?" |
40430 | Had any re- enforcement been sent to the Texan cavalry? |
40430 | Have you seen any of the enemy up this way?" |
40430 | Have your six men returned?" |
40430 | How did it happen that they had not met, and a fight had not ensued? |
40430 | How large was the detachment you fought, Redway?" |
40430 | How long will it take you to reach the spot on the hill where the second company is posted?" |
40430 | How many men do you require for this service?" |
40430 | I s''pose you hain''t seen nothin''o''him, nuther?" |
40430 | If you hain''t seen Tom Lobkill, did you come across Lank Rablan in your travels on the road?" |
40430 | Is Captain Stinger still of the same mind?" |
40430 | Is he in a bad way?" |
40430 | Is that your idea, Deck?" |
40430 | Is the distance about three miles?" |
40430 | Is this thing loaded with ball?" |
40430 | LEE AND SHEPARD PUBLISHERS BOSTON[ Illustration:"Be you uns soldiers, mass''r?"] |
40430 | Lyon?" |
40430 | Major Lyon''s brother?" |
40430 | May I ask whom I have the honor to address?" |
40430 | Mr. Elbroon, will you attend to this matter?" |
40430 | Now, the question is, What were they sent for?" |
40430 | Was Major Lyon awake? |
40430 | Was it possible that Belthorpe had returned to the camp? |
40430 | We heard the company cheering you; what mighty deed have you done now?" |
40430 | What do you call it, Deck?" |
40430 | What do you mean by that?" |
40430 | What do you suppose the presence of those two fellows here means?" |
40430 | What have you to say, Layder?" |
40430 | What was our loss?" |
40430 | What you runnin''off fur?" |
40430 | What''s the reason we uns ai n''t not all dead, little''possum?" |
40430 | Where are the enemy?" |
40430 | Where are we, Jube?" |
40430 | Where is he?" |
40430 | Where is the fellow you captured? |
40430 | Who brought Major Vinegold to the ground? |
40430 | Who is he?" |
40430 | Who sent you here to interfere with my business?" |
40430 | Who served Lieutenant Makepeace in the same way? |
40430 | Why not compromise on your idea; send half our force across the cornfield, and leave the other half to take care of this road? |
40430 | Will you take your place in the line? |
40430 | Wo n''t you just show me how to work it?" |
40430 | You do n''t mean to turn traitor to your father and the cause, Orly?" |
40430 | You have fought a severe fight, Captain; in what condition are your men?" |
40430 | exclaimed the major,"And what became of them?" |
31259 | ''Air ye goin''to stop at Houghton?'' 31259 ''How much further?'' |
31259 | ''Of course,''I answered,''what''s on your mind?'' 31259 ''Would n''t he have a better chance if some skin- grafting were done?'' |
31259 | A canary bird? 31259 A what?" |
31259 | After all, this Ice Patrol that the_ Miami_ is going on next month, was only begun as a result of the sinking of the_ Titanic_, was n''t it? |
31259 | All night? |
31259 | An''smellin''is another? |
31259 | An''you have n''t found much crime, have you, eh? |
31259 | And did it work? |
31259 | And did that sort of business last all through? |
31259 | And did the people profit by it, sir? |
31259 | And did you haul it down several times? |
31259 | And how long could a fellow stand that much of the gas? |
31259 | And if she had the build of a cruiser, would she have the speed of an Atlantic greyhound? |
31259 | And red is only a small part of that, is n''t it? |
31259 | And that was the final effort of the sea? |
31259 | And the crew of the schooner? |
31259 | And the men? |
31259 | And the three quarters of an inch still lacking? |
31259 | And then what? |
31259 | And those who were drowned? |
31259 | And thus silenced the wolf''s howl? |
31259 | And was he on deck at the time? |
31259 | And you passed it, son? |
31259 | And you? |
31259 | Any luck? |
31259 | Any more of your men mutiny, Captain? |
31259 | Anything doing? |
31259 | Are my feet going to take a long time to heal, Doctor? |
31259 | Are n''t we going to do any work to- day, either? |
31259 | Are n''t you putting that on a bit? 31259 Are the galleries as small as that?" |
31259 | Are there only those two ways? |
31259 | Are they the same? |
31259 | Are you English? |
31259 | Are you the captain? |
31259 | Ask him what he considers strange? |
31259 | Broke it? |
31259 | Bromides, Doctor? |
31259 | But I thought he was inspector here? |
31259 | But do you really think such a thing is possible? |
31259 | But how can I thank you? |
31259 | But how do you do it? |
31259 | But is a lightship just as good? |
31259 | But suppose he made out he did n''t hear the call? |
31259 | But was n''t it an awful chance to take, to go back into that stuff? |
31259 | But what are you doing with coal mines? |
31259 | But what happens to the canary? |
31259 | But what the crickets do they need a canary bird for? |
31259 | But what was the idea? 31259 But where could they get stills? |
31259 | But which is the better? |
31259 | But why does n''t he answer? |
31259 | But wo n''t it cripple him? |
31259 | But wo n''t you tell me who you are? |
31259 | But you could see other lights? |
31259 | But, Dan, how about this studying I''m supposed to do? |
31259 | Ca n''t you get word to him? |
31259 | Ca n''t you see that if your light is too high, the beam will have to strike the water at such an angle that its horizontal effect would be lost? 31259 Can I give you a hand?" |
31259 | Can you see the derelict now? |
31259 | Copper? |
31259 | Could n''t you pick him up, Father? |
31259 | Could n''t you pick it up? |
31259 | Could she have speed if she were armed with heavy guns? 31259 Did he get all right again?" |
31259 | Did he have rheumatism? |
31259 | Did he order you not to haul down the flag? 31259 Did he order you not to haul down the flag?" |
31259 | Did n''t your arm hurt like blazes? |
31259 | Did you ever climb a mountain with a dog team? |
31259 | Did you ever hear why that particular rock was called Wolf Rock? |
31259 | Did you go? |
31259 | Did you receive orders from your captain to do so? |
31259 | Did you remove the signal flags from the locker? |
31259 | Did you see, Doctor? |
31259 | Did you try it? |
31259 | Do n''t you think that''s carrying it a bit too far? |
31259 | Do you have to learn gunnery? |
31259 | Do you have to run ahead of the dogs? |
31259 | Do you know how they chase wolves in some parts of Western Canada? |
31259 | Do you suppose that had anything to do with his drowning? |
31259 | Do you suppose we''ll strike out to sea? |
31259 | Do you suppose your sending apparatus is in good order? |
31259 | Do you think there''s any change, Jim? |
31259 | Do you think you can get on board? |
31259 | Do you? 31259 During the storm?" |
31259 | Found him, Eric? |
31259 | French? 31259 Give them all a new start, eh?" |
31259 | Going all right? |
31259 | Good swimmer, eh? |
31259 | Got him all right? |
31259 | Has any one ever been saved who has been under water as long as that? |
31259 | Hatteras is called the''graveyard of ships,''is n''t it? |
31259 | Have n''t you been expecting it? |
31259 | Have you a cook on the rock? |
31259 | Have you a doctor in your party? |
31259 | Have you a spike or anything? |
31259 | Have you found out who he was? |
31259 | Have you seen him shoot? |
31259 | Heard anything of a wreck round Au Sable way? |
31259 | Hearin''is just one o''the five senses, ai n''t it? |
31259 | How about the wireless messages? |
31259 | How about you? 31259 How big was the cylinder?" |
31259 | How can you stand up? |
31259 | How could he catch up with Jarvis with a load like that,queried the boy,"when the first part of the expedition was traveling light?" |
31259 | How could he do that? 31259 How did he show you?" |
31259 | How did you do it? |
31259 | How do reindeer travel? |
31259 | How do you distinguish the different lights, then? |
31259 | How do you like that, Eric? |
31259 | How do you mean you could n''t get him? |
31259 | How do you mean, Father? |
31259 | How do you mean? |
31259 | How do you suppose he got left behind? |
31259 | How do you think he is? |
31259 | How does he fire him? |
31259 | How far can that be seen, Father? |
31259 | How long did he stay? |
31259 | How long do you suppose he was under? |
31259 | How long was Mooney under water? 31259 How many men did you rescue?" |
31259 | How much real swimming do you suppose the kids learn from that stuff? |
31259 | How was it? |
31259 | How was that, Ed? |
31259 | How would it feel to be somewhere around Point Barrow now? |
31259 | How''s that? |
31259 | How''s that? |
31259 | How? 31259 How?" |
31259 | How? |
31259 | How? |
31259 | How? |
31259 | I do n''t see why? |
31259 | I do n''t suppose,Eric remarked,"that they ever told these survivors that they had done their best to make them the victims of the hungry sea?" |
31259 | I know the flashing light is quite different, Father, but just how is it worked? |
31259 | I know the idea,''scuppers pouring blood,''and that sort of business, eh? |
31259 | I see,said Eric,"it''s another case of wonderful but not wonderful enough, is n''t it?" |
31259 | I suppose you had n''t any trouble finding a volunteer? |
31259 | I suppose you think they just light the lantern when they have a mind to and then snore all night long? |
31259 | I suppose you''d have your pirate vessel chosen for speed? |
31259 | I thought gas was just gas,Eric answered,"''damp,''do n''t they call it?" |
31259 | I wonder what would happen if a captain did n''t? |
31259 | If I might? |
31259 | In a storm? |
31259 | Into the compressed air? |
31259 | Is he leaving? |
31259 | Is it comin''out to watch us ye are, Miss? |
31259 | Is n''t that just the stuff we breathe out? |
31259 | Is the call still coming? |
31259 | Is there any shnow left at all? |
31259 | It does n''t make any difference if you bring the body to the legs, does it? |
31259 | It''s because of some arrangement of the lens, is n''t it? |
31259 | Just how quickly does the earth''s curve come into play, Father? 31259 Like the calm to- day?" |
31259 | Likely enough,said the other,"but is n''t that what you like about it?" |
31259 | Mice? 31259 Mill- pond, eh?" |
31259 | Never? |
31259 | No,said the keeper,"what did you hear?" |
31259 | On the_ Kirkmore_? |
31259 | Probably dragging, sir? |
31259 | Right here in San Francisco Bay? |
31259 | Sank? |
31259 | Smith''s Point, is n''t it? 31259 Sort of hermit style?" |
31259 | Sure you''re not tired? |
31259 | Teach me all I want to know? |
31259 | Tell me about it? |
31259 | That you, Muldoon? |
31259 | The Gulf? |
31259 | The Quipucamayocuna--"The what, Dan? |
31259 | The first one? |
31259 | Then what happens? |
31259 | Then what''s that flag doing there? |
31259 | Then you think it''s all right for a chap to smoke after he''s grown up? |
31259 | They do, sure enough,said Eric, after testing half a dozen magic squares,"but how do you do it? |
31259 | They made it themselves? |
31259 | They scrap a lot, too, do n''t they? |
31259 | Think there''s anything in it? |
31259 | Was he swimming with you? |
31259 | Was n''t it? 31259 Well, do n''t you see? |
31259 | Well,said the other,"you know the big Arctic gull they call the Burgomaster?" |
31259 | Well? |
31259 | Well? |
31259 | Well? |
31259 | Well? |
31259 | Well? |
31259 | Well? |
31259 | Well? |
31259 | Well? |
31259 | Well? |
31259 | Were n''t you scared? |
31259 | What did he do? |
31259 | What did the captain say? |
31259 | What did they get? |
31259 | What did you do? |
31259 | What difference would that make? |
31259 | What do you mean? |
31259 | What do you suppose is the reason? |
31259 | What do you suppose it is? |
31259 | What do you suppose the good people of Devonshire did? 31259 What do you suppose this mate we collared will get?" |
31259 | What do you think is the meaning of that call? |
31259 | What does he say? |
31259 | What does it mean? |
31259 | What else is there? |
31259 | What for? 31259 What for?" |
31259 | What for? |
31259 | What for? |
31259 | What happened to the imprisoned bunch? |
31259 | What has put them all out of business? |
31259 | What if I did? |
31259 | What in the wide world was that for? |
31259 | What is he? |
31259 | What is it, son? |
31259 | What is it? |
31259 | What kind of a machine is that? |
31259 | What kind of a mine rescue? 31259 What the mischief are you stopping for?" |
31259 | What was that for? |
31259 | What was that? |
31259 | What was that? |
31259 | What would be the others? |
31259 | What would hold it, resting on the top of the sand? |
31259 | What''s all this drill the kids are talking about? |
31259 | What''s mush- ice? |
31259 | What''s that craft over there, I wonder? |
31259 | What''s that for? |
31259 | What''s that? |
31259 | What''s the excitement? |
31259 | What''s the matter with him? |
31259 | What''s the odds? 31259 What''s the trick?" |
31259 | What''s the trouble? |
31259 | What''s yours? |
31259 | What? |
31259 | What? |
31259 | What? |
31259 | When can we go to see him, Father? |
31259 | When did you see the tug? |
31259 | When your examination is? |
31259 | Where away? |
31259 | Where did you leave him? |
31259 | Where were they bound for? |
31259 | Where''s Jake? |
31259 | Where''s the captain? |
31259 | Where''s the mate? |
31259 | Whereabouts is this town going to be? |
31259 | Which is the better? |
31259 | Which of you is the best swimmer? |
31259 | White damp? |
31259 | White light? |
31259 | Who bothers about chances? |
31259 | Who was the next to land? |
31259 | Who''s the nearest? |
31259 | Why did n''t you always do that? |
31259 | Why did they roll half- drowned people on a barrel in the old times? |
31259 | Why do the railroads use red for danger signals, then? |
31259 | Why do we use the Schaefer method, Doctor? |
31259 | Why for not? |
31259 | Why not, old man? |
31259 | Why not? |
31259 | Why not? |
31259 | Why not? |
31259 | Why not? |
31259 | Why not? |
31259 | Why would n''t I be? |
31259 | Why, Father, do you know what a chap has to do before he can even enlist? |
31259 | Why, because of the wind? |
31259 | Why, do you suppose? |
31259 | Why, sir? 31259 Why? |
31259 | Why? |
31259 | Why? |
31259 | Why? |
31259 | Why? |
31259 | Why? |
31259 | Why? |
31259 | Why? |
31259 | With nothing to do? |
31259 | With the Lyle gun, you mean? 31259 Without any shelter?" |
31259 | Without cork- jackets or anything? |
31259 | Wo n''t he have an awful scar? |
31259 | Worse than the Horn? |
31259 | Would n''t it? |
31259 | Would n''t you say the sea was fairly smooth? |
31259 | Yes, but what of that? |
31259 | Yes, that''s the base of the lungs, is n''t it? |
31259 | Yon''s the crew? |
31259 | You are sure of yourself? |
31259 | You are? 31259 You can do all that, Eric, eh?" |
31259 | You did n''t hear a hail? |
31259 | You do n''t mind my going, do you? |
31259 | You do n''t think it''s too much for you? |
31259 | You do? |
31259 | You have guns in the Coast Guard? |
31259 | You keep accounts, your own money? |
31259 | You know Latin numerals? |
31259 | You know every miner carries a safety lamp? |
31259 | You know that light is made up of all the colors of the rainbow? |
31259 | You know the commanding officer of the Bering Sea fleet came up, while you were away? |
31259 | You know what they call him, magic? |
31259 | You mean a real canary bird? |
31259 | You mean he''s not out of the woods yet, Doctor? |
31259 | You mean its designing? |
31259 | You mean that an applicant has to pass that test before entering the volunteers at all? |
31259 | You mean that the wreckers have put up a false light to lead vessels on to the reefs? |
31259 | You mean the fog- horn does? |
31259 | You mean they were dead? |
31259 | You never had anything to do with the old Revenue Cutter Service, had you, Father? |
31259 | You really think that we shall save him? |
31259 | You really want to learn? |
31259 | You remember that Father was interested in mines? |
31259 | You remember that I told you there was an air- shaft in the middle of the caisson? |
31259 | You see Johnson''s hands are pressing right between the short ribs, are n''t they? |
31259 | You speak Italian? |
31259 | You think we''re sort o''peacefully floatin''in a zone o''quiet up here? 31259 You want to know? |
31259 | You wanted to speak to me? |
31259 | You will remember them, hereafter? |
31259 | You''re going away? |
31259 | You''re supposed to swim with your legs as well as your hands, are n''t you? |
31259 | You''re the mate? |
31259 | You''ve heard of blow- holes? |
31259 | You''ve lived in a city, have n''t you? |
31259 | Your father, too? |
31259 | Your last day? |
31259 | Your orders, keeper? |
31259 | After all, organization does make a heap of difference, do n''t you think? |
31259 | An accident?" |
31259 | An''what would you do with the five thousand dogs when you got''em up there? |
31259 | And red?" |
31259 | And take them''by and large,''as the shellbacks say, do n''t you think the Coast Guard crowd is just about the finest ever?" |
31259 | And their wireless would be working overtime, would n''t it?" |
31259 | And yellow?" |
31259 | Are you all right now?" |
31259 | Are you fit enough to come and see the youngsters at their work?" |
31259 | Ask him what the message is?" |
31259 | Barnett,''I said hurriedly,''will you take charge?'' |
31259 | Because she''s too heavy?" |
31259 | Bribe the operator, or threaten him?" |
31259 | But I wanted to ask you, Captain Jorgsen, how did you come to be so far out of your course?" |
31259 | But I''ve been wanting to ask you, Eric, what effect the formation of this new Coast Guard will have on your plans?" |
31259 | But do n''t you think that there really would be a chance for a big Atlantic greyhound pirate?" |
31259 | But do you remember just how much oxygen a lamp has to have?" |
31259 | But how can you kick out with both legs when you''re standing on them?" |
31259 | But that was a temporary appointment, while the inspector was ill.""And you''re going home a couple of weeks ahead to help pack, eh?" |
31259 | But was n''t that reason enough?" |
31259 | But what do you suppose I found when we got there?" |
31259 | But what''s happened to you,"the lad continued,"what have you been doing with yourself?" |
31259 | But when she''s blowin''good an''strong, an''the gale''s got more heft''n a steamer''s screws, what use is her machines to her?" |
31259 | But--""Yes, sir?" |
31259 | By introducing reindeer?" |
31259 | Could we find out what''s up, sir?" |
31259 | Cunningham?" |
31259 | Did I ever tell you what made me want to join?" |
31259 | Did n''t I just show you that the rays of a lantern had to be sent out in a single beam?" |
31259 | Did n''t you ever hear the story o''Cookie?" |
31259 | Died?" |
31259 | Do n''t you think that''s something?" |
31259 | Do you have to remember all those figures and just where they go?" |
31259 | Do you want to tell him?" |
31259 | Does the red mean soldiers, Dan?" |
31259 | Edith, with a readier sense that help was needed, said quickly,"What has happened? |
31259 | Eric made an uncomplimentary reference to Duncan under his breath, then questioned,"Unconscious?" |
31259 | Feeling sure that the doctor would understand him, the boy turned and said,"Doctor, shall we be able to beat out the sea?" |
31259 | Forced draft, eh?" |
31259 | Had the rescuer, the hero, been killed? |
31259 | Half an hour, was n''t it?" |
31259 | Hamilton?" |
31259 | He''d have the other ships around, would n''t he?" |
31259 | How about it? |
31259 | How about the Teller Station at Port Clarence? |
31259 | How are they going to exist? |
31259 | How could it help being a lot fainter? |
31259 | How would you like to have charge of the_ Miami_ now, Eric?" |
31259 | I asks him, sort o''sarcastic,''or are ye gittin''up speed enough to run on a mile or two after ye hit the shore?'' |
31259 | I was just wondering whether the color of the light had anything to do with making it seem dim?" |
31259 | I wonder if I could do it?" |
31259 | If the naval fleet included a destroyer with a thirty- knot speed, where would your pirate get off at?" |
31259 | In the Geological Survey?" |
31259 | Is it because of the shape of it, or because the sea breaking over it is like the fangs of a wolf or something like that? |
31259 | Is n''t he a dandy at it?" |
31259 | Is n''t that a great little alarm, though?" |
31259 | Is n''t that a reindeer layout?" |
31259 | Is n''t that being a gentleman, all right?" |
31259 | Is n''t there oxygen in water?" |
31259 | Is the fellow that Swift rescued badly burned?'' |
31259 | Is there anything wrong?" |
31259 | It is?" |
31259 | It was less nerve- racking to talk than to listen, so he went on,"What was the Mooney case?" |
31259 | James_ at the wharf at St. Paul,"what do you make of that cloud to the sou''west''ard?" |
31259 | Keelson?" |
31259 | Mathematics and navigation, I suppose?" |
31259 | Maybe you didn''hear o''the time the sea whittled off a slice o''rock weighin''a ton or so and sort o''chucked it at the light?" |
31259 | Meantime, what would the crew and passengers of the liner be doing?" |
31259 | Once, and only once, he got a little panicky, and, turning to the officer on the bridge, said:"Should I keep her out a bit, sir?" |
31259 | Ready?" |
31259 | Still thinking of the Revenue Cutter Service-- no, Coast Guard it is now, is n''t it?" |
31259 | Swift,"he continued, turning to Eric,"will you please take the boat and bring Dr. Fuhrman here?" |
31259 | Swift,"he queried,"why did you not take the Muskeget Channel?" |
31259 | Swift,"the senior officer answered, with a slight twinkle in his eye,"do you tie a granny knot in a reef- point?" |
31259 | Swift?" |
31259 | Swift?" |
31259 | Swift?" |
31259 | That makes artificial breathing, does n''t it?" |
31259 | The idea in the leg motions of swimming is to bring the legs to the body, is n''t it?" |
31259 | The quipu is wonderful but he''s not wonderful enough, eh?" |
31259 | Then, returning to Eric, he continued,"The Coast Guard uses the Sylvester method, does n''t it?" |
31259 | Then, turning to the captain, he said,"Do you accuse him of mutiny?" |
31259 | There was a pause, and Eric added,"What got you two clear?" |
31259 | They do seem a bit human, do n''t they? |
31259 | To break a trail?" |
31259 | To get the water out?" |
31259 | Was n''t it worked by a revolving shutter with wide slits in it?" |
31259 | We should have to, if there were any, would n''t we?" |
31259 | What are they?" |
31259 | What did you do, Doctor?" |
31259 | What do you think?" |
31259 | What you suppose white is?" |
31259 | What''s your end? |
31259 | When are we sailing, have you heard?" |
31259 | When was it?" |
31259 | Where''s Jake?" |
31259 | Who''ll volunteer?" |
31259 | Why does it always make a regular design?" |
31259 | Would n''t she necessarily have to be partly the build of a man- o''-war, say a cruiser?" |
31259 | Yes or no?" |
31259 | You are an expert swimmer, are you not?" |
31259 | You know Angel Island?" |
31259 | You know Dad-- everything he does, every one else has got to do?" |
31259 | You know it was his influence that swung Washington into line? |
31259 | You know that there''s a light and a fog signal there?" |
31259 | You know the difference?" |
31259 | You like to read what he says?" |
31259 | You mean those holes that make a noise when the tide comes in and out?" |
31259 | You reported by wireless having trouble with these wreckers,"the Coast Guard officer remarked;"are these men of yours badly hurt?" |
31259 | You see that skeleton lighthouse over there?" |
31259 | You teach them all to swim?" |
31259 | You''re Commissioner, ai n''t you?" |
31259 | You''ve heard of Wolf Rock?" |
31259 | said the old man,"what shall he do?" |
7962 | ''Are you game for putting something over on the Boches, and Old Pepper all in one?'' 7962 Does the straw bother you, mate? |
7962 | I beg your pardon? |
7962 | Then he turned to me and shouted:''Wilson, what do you think of it? |
7962 | Think it''s going to rain, Sergeant? |
7962 | We saluted, and were just going out the door of the dugout when the Captain called us back, and said:''Smoke Goldflakes? |
7962 | A bullet did you say? |
7962 | A question,"Who goes there?" |
7962 | A soft chuckle from my mate brought me to my senses, and I feebly asked,"For God''s sake, what was that?" |
7962 | A sort of"Good morning, have you used Fears Soap?" |
7962 | Add to this the weight of his rations, and can you blame Tommy for growling at a twenty kilo route march? |
7962 | After listening to this tirade, Lloyd, in a faltering voice, asked:"They are not going to shoot me, are they? |
7962 | Are n''t you ashamed of yourself, a husky young chap like you in mufti when men are needed in the trenches? |
7962 | As our section passed her I yelled out:"Hello, Flossie, Blighty-- What Hopes?" |
7962 | But what was that mangled shape lying over there among the sandbags? |
7962 | But what was that on his right? |
7962 | But why was n''t I wet? |
7962 | CHAPTER XXVI ALL QUIET(?) |
7962 | Crossing the street, I accosted a Bobbie with:"Can you direct me to the place of damage?" |
7962 | Did you ever see the like of it in your life? |
7962 | Do n''t you know that your country is at war and that the place for every young Briton is on the firing line? |
7962 | Do you think I''m a''goin''to? |
7962 | He asked me,"What damage?" |
7962 | He asked me:"Did you ever hear of the Royal Fusiliers?" |
7962 | He looked at me in contempt, and grunted,"''Ow''s it a''goin''ter rain with the bloomin''sun a''shinin''?" |
7962 | He looked up and greeted me with"I s''y, myte, want to tyke on?" |
7962 | He said,"Oh yes, just outside of New York?" |
7962 | He winked at me and I winked back, and then he asked,"How do you feel, smashed up a bit?" |
7962 | I called to him,"Are you hurt badly, Jock?" |
7962 | I eagerly asked,"What are they?" |
7962 | I like a booby was crying, can you beat it? |
7962 | I ran smash into our wire, and a sharp challenge"''Alt, who comes there?" |
7962 | I turned to the man on my left and asked,''"What''s the noise, Bill?" |
7962 | If I do, will I skin through the following one, and so on? |
7962 | It is never"who is going to win"but always"how long will it take?" |
7962 | My thoughts generally ran in this channel: Will I emerge safely from the next attack? |
7962 | Next morning the telephone bell rang, and someone asked,"Are you there?" |
7962 | Of course, I did n''t, did I?'' |
7962 | Oh, why had n''t he attended the machine- gun course in England? |
7962 | Old Pepper must have heard the Sergeant speak because he turned in his direction and in a thundering voice asked:"What did you say?" |
7962 | One very nice- looking, over- enthusiastic young thing, stopped at my bed and asked,"What wounded you in the face?" |
7962 | Pretty soon from a far corner of the billet, three indignant Tommies accosted the Corporal with,"What do you call this, a loaf of bread? |
7962 | She put this information down in a little book and then asked:"Where do you come from?" |
7962 | The Captain dead? |
7962 | The doctor came over and exploded,"What do you mean by bringing in a man in this condition?" |
7962 | The girl on the seat turned around and in a sympathetic voice asked,"Poor fellow, are you very badly wounded?" |
7962 | The reply came back instantly from the dark forms:"Shut your blinkin''mouth, you bloomin''idiot; do you want us to click it from the Boches?" |
7962 | The sentry next to me challenged,"Halt, Who Comes There?" |
7962 | Then to rub it in, they hoisted some more signs which read,"When are you coming over?" |
7962 | Then, turning to me with a grim face, said:"How about it, Sergeant? |
7962 | They called themselves"The Bow Bells,"and put on a sketch entitled''Blighty-- What Hopes?'' |
7962 | Tommy''s French for"Do you understand?" |
7962 | Turning to me, in a loud voice, he asked,"Empey, are n''t you C. of E.?" |
7962 | Understand?" |
7962 | Understand?'' |
7962 | Well, I''ll be damned, where''s that blighter of a draft man gone to? |
7962 | Well, tell me, I have always wanted to know, did it hurt worse going in or coming out?" |
7962 | What were they waiting for? |
7962 | What''s the matter, are you asleep?'' |
7962 | What''s the matter, getting the nerves? |
7962 | What''s the use of having artillery if it is not allowed to fire? |
7962 | When a stretcher- bearer arrives alongside of a Tommy who has been hit, the following conversation usually takes place- Stretcher- bearer,"Want a fag? |
7962 | When his turn comes the paying- officer asks,"How much?" |
7962 | Where are you hit?" |
7962 | Where is the blood to come from? |
7962 | While your mind is wandering into the future it is likely to be rudely brought to earth by a Tommy interrupting with,"What''s good for rheumatism?" |
7962 | Who in''ell''s a''goin''to draw the water for the mornin''tea? |
7962 | Why did n''t it open fire and save them? |
7962 | Why did n''t"D"Company fire on them? |
7962 | Why do n''t you join? |
7962 | Why in''ell did n''t you use mud?" |
7962 | Why not use the rafters overhead, call them boxes, and charge two francs for a seat on them? |
7962 | Why not write a sketch and break Tommy in as an actor? |
7962 | Why were they so strangely silent? |
7962 | Will you come out of this war crippled and tied into knots with rheumatism, caused by the wet and mud of trenches and dugouts? |
7962 | Wilson, did I give you any order for the Battery to open up? |
7962 | With a roar he shouted:"''Which one of you is Cassell? |
7962 | Yes? |
7962 | only a bullet? |
30826 | A gambler? |
30826 | A strike? |
30826 | Ai n''t I got a right to be heard in my own case? |
30826 | Also,said Talbot Ward irrelevantly,"did you notice how fat all their mothers are?" |
30826 | And Vasquez? |
30826 | And dividin''eighty by five? |
30826 | And how do you expect to determine this case? |
30826 | And how long from here to Sutter''s Fort by horse? |
30826 | And how much, about, are the goods? |
30826 | And how''s the money to pay them to be collected? 30826 And me with fifteen hundred good dollars?" |
30826 | And the Porcupine Flat venture was a bad loss? |
30826 | And the glass pillars will always be here; eh, Billy? |
30826 | And the gold? |
30826 | And the mud? 30826 And the principles of elementary navigation by dead reckoning?" |
30826 | And the second is, what are we going to do with ourselves? |
30826 | And then where will their owners be? |
30826 | And what did the blame critter mean by that? |
30826 | And what prevented Brannan, after he had heard your scheme, from going out on his own hook, and pocketing_ all_ the proceeds? |
30826 | And when you come right down to it, what''s the use of going back? 30826 And where does it go to?" |
30826 | And you? |
30826 | Any plans? |
30826 | Anybody got any idees as to why we should n''t follow Shirttail in this matter? 30826 Anybody need a drink?" |
30826 | Are they coming our way? |
30826 | Are they? |
30826 | Are you a friend of his? |
30826 | Are you sure those were the same Indians? |
30826 | Are you trying to intimidate me, sir? |
30826 | Around the Horn? |
30826 | As I call the names, will each gentleman step forward and draw his slip? |
30826 | At Italian Bar,went on Talbot,"how much did you make?" |
30826 | At the election, who would take interest to elect a decent man, even if you could get hold of one? 30826 Barring mining?" |
30826 | Bound for San Francisco? |
30826 | But how do we do it? |
30826 | But it ees good, the dance, eh, señores? |
30826 | But somewhere back in the hills? |
30826 | But was that fair to the flour people? |
30826 | But we''ve got to start pretty soon after noon, and in the meantime where do we eat? |
30826 | But why did you do it? |
30826 | But why do n''t you fellows branch out? |
30826 | But----? |
30826 | Can I speak to you alone a moment? |
30826 | Can we dig right next to you, then? |
30826 | Can we get to where they are? |
30826 | Can we really prove anything against them? |
30826 | Can you give me one? |
30826 | Can you keep out of them? |
30826 | Can you lick all the others? |
30826 | Can you make out where Higgins''s store was? |
30826 | Can you tell me what time it is? |
30826 | Crews skipped to the mines, I suppose? |
30826 | Did I kill him? |
30826 | Did n''t see anything of our three horses? |
30826 | Did you discover anything for yourself? |
30826 | Did you ever hear of rounds in a real fight? |
30826 | Did you ever hear of such a damfool way of doing the thing? |
30826 | Did you get all the goods over? |
30826 | Do n''t know who John McGlynn is? |
30826 | Do n''t you get any gold? |
30826 | Do n''t you want to keep this claim next me? |
30826 | Do ye now? |
30826 | Do you get any warning in a real fight? |
30826 | Do you give up? |
30826 | Do you know Danny Randall? |
30826 | Do you know what they are doing? |
30826 | Do you not regret the changed conditions? |
30826 | Do you take me for a robber, Talbot? |
30826 | Do you think we''ll advertise the date? 30826 Do you want two good horses and some blankets?" |
30826 | Do you, Frank Munroe, subscribe to this document as a man of honour, so help you God? |
30826 | Do? |
30826 | Does n''t it belong to anybody? |
30826 | Don Luis,said the court formally,"what do you, as expert, make of that?" |
30826 | Express business busted? |
30826 | Fair? |
30826 | Farm bred, of course? |
30826 | Feel that breeze? |
30826 | Flapjacks? |
30826 | Fool meetings? |
30826 | For how long? |
30826 | Gamblers? |
30826 | Going back home, or mining? 30826 Got any tobacco, boys?" |
30826 | Got your boat yet? |
30826 | Had n''t thought of it that way, had you? |
30826 | Hang who? |
30826 | Has he paid his share of the lodgings? |
30826 | Has n''t he come in yet? |
30826 | Has this man any friends here? |
30826 | Have n''t you discovered that the American has a perfect genius for organization? 30826 Have you got your baggage with you?" |
30826 | Have you struck it, too? |
30826 | Have you thought what a lucky escape you yourself had? |
30826 | How about our two horses and our blankets, and this boat? |
30826 | How about that second story? |
30826 | How about when it rains? |
30826 | How about you, Frank? |
30826 | How are you going to finish all this business you''ve scared up, and get off to the mines within a reasonable time? 30826 How did you do that? |
30826 | How did you get hold of this land? |
30826 | How did you guess what it was? |
30826 | How do I look, boys, with a halter around my neck? |
30826 | How do you know I''ll leave it? |
30826 | How do you like being popular heroes? |
30826 | How do you like these? |
30826 | How long have you been in the mines? |
30826 | How long would it take? |
30826 | How long you going to stay? |
30826 | How long? |
30826 | How many of them is there? |
30826 | How many of you belong here? |
30826 | How much all told? |
30826 | How much did you get for them? |
30826 | How much did you offer to pay him? |
30826 | How much do you get out of it? |
30826 | How much is one twentieth of two thousand thousand? |
30826 | How much is the river fare? |
30826 | How much? |
30826 | How much? |
30826 | How you getting on? |
30826 | How? |
30826 | I did n''t mean----"Did n''t you? |
30826 | I getta my Italian fiddle? 30826 I should put it into the heads of those three hundred men that they ought to get their passage money back?" |
30826 | I should think you''d find it easier later in the day when the wind came up? |
30826 | I suppose we ca n''t expect to get colour every time? |
30826 | I suppose you know you are proceeding against a regularly constituted officer of the law? |
30826 | I thought you said the time was not ripe? |
30826 | I ver''good fren''? 30826 I_ am_ drunk, old deacon,"rejoined Talbot,"but with the Wine of Enchantment-- do you know your Persian? |
30826 | If we''re going to be partners-- and that''s desired and understood, I suppose? |
30826 | In New York long? |
30826 | Is he a friend of yours? |
30826 | Is it a duel; and are you gentleman here to act as my seconds? |
30826 | Is it yourself, Judge Girvin? |
30826 | Is it''flour''or''flake''? |
30826 | Is that a plutocrat? |
30826 | Is that gold? |
30826 | It seems to us unnecessary, but who can tell? 30826 Jim Recket?" |
30826 | Johnny? |
30826 | Let''s pick''em out by hand? |
30826 | Licked? 30826 Look here, Johnny,"I said to him one day,"what''s the matter with those fellows? |
30826 | Lost? 30826 May we look?" |
30826 | Me, home? |
30826 | Me? 30826 Mines for you, Johnny, or home?" |
30826 | Mines? |
30826 | No inquests? |
30826 | No? 30826 Nor home?" |
30826 | Nothing done? |
30826 | Now how do you suppose they got her out here? |
30826 | Oh, is n''t there? |
30826 | Paid for how, and when? |
30826 | Pay dirt, hey? 30826 Pete,"I turned on him suddenly,"do n''t you know they''d skin you alive if they found out you''d been here?" |
30826 | Probably the other man is a servant? |
30826 | Question is,said Johnny,"what do we do with them?" |
30826 | Robbed? 30826 She said,"replied Ward,"literally this:''Why do n''t you take any of them without bothering me? |
30826 | Since which time Yank has been out of it completely? |
30826 | Slack off that rope and let a man take a parting drink, ca n''t you? |
30826 | So you proceeded to reverse matters? 30826 Strike it?" |
30826 | Struck the dirt? |
30826 | Suppose the camp does n''t back us up? |
30826 | Tell me, who and what is Danny Randall? |
30826 | That so? 30826 The captains?" |
30826 | The gang? |
30826 | The goddess fortune-- what else? 30826 The_ what?_"we yelled in chorus. |
30826 | Then you''re not a friend of this Hound? |
30826 | Then you''re not going back to the mines? |
30826 | There''s plenty of gold? |
30826 | Those fellows would stand together, but who of the lot would stand by us? 30826 Undertakers?" |
30826 | Want to get after them? |
30826 | Warp them in? |
30826 | Well, Don Luis,repeated the court,"what do you make of it?" |
30826 | Well, gentlemen? |
30826 | Well, sir? |
30826 | Well, what in hell did you mean? 30826 Well, what of it?" |
30826 | Well, who''s to decide, in case of dispute, which is the right man and which the wrong man? 30826 Well, why did n''t you?" |
30826 | Well, why do n''t you settle? |
30826 | Well, why not? |
30826 | Well? |
30826 | Well? |
30826 | What am I to do? |
30826 | What am I wanted for? |
30826 | What are we_ going_ to do? 30826 What are you getting, boys?" |
30826 | What are you going to do with your shares, boys? |
30826 | What are you going to do? |
30826 | What are''keskydees''? |
30826 | What did she say? |
30826 | What did they steal? |
30826 | What did you do? |
30826 | What do you bet on Warren''s place? 30826 What do you care for that gang?" |
30826 | What do you intend, Randall? |
30826 | What do you mean by that? |
30826 | What do you mean? |
30826 | What do you mean? |
30826 | What do you think of that? |
30826 | What do you want done with him? |
30826 | What do you want me to do? |
30826 | What do you want to stick here for like a lot of groundhogs? 30826 What do you want?" |
30826 | What for? 30826 What in thunder did they put the forfeit clause in for if it was n''t expected we might use it?" |
30826 | What is his profession? |
30826 | What is it, Pete? |
30826 | What is it, boys? |
30826 | What is there to be done? |
30826 | What next? |
30826 | What of that? |
30826 | What then? |
30826 | What treatment? |
30826 | What was he like? |
30826 | What was the matter? |
30826 | What was there to do? |
30826 | What will you do with me? |
30826 | What would you do, Doctor? |
30826 | What''n hell you fellows talking about? |
30826 | What''s happened? |
30826 | What''s that to you? |
30826 | What''s that, John? |
30826 | What''s that? |
30826 | What''s the alternative? |
30826 | What''s the fare? |
30826 | What''s the matter with going over to the Moreña cabin? |
30826 | What''s the matter with him? |
30826 | What''s the matter with them? |
30826 | What''s the matter with this here? |
30826 | What''s the matter, Billy? |
30826 | What''s the row? |
30826 | What''s the trouble? |
30826 | What''s to prevent the merchants doing this same hiring of ships for themselves? |
30826 | What''s to prevent? |
30826 | What? |
30826 | What_ are_ you drivelling about? |
30826 | When did you get here? |
30826 | When is that? |
30826 | Where are the others? 30826 Where can I get one of these?" |
30826 | Where did you come in? |
30826 | Where do you expect to get the money? |
30826 | Where is Tom Cleveland? |
30826 | Where the devil does it all come from? |
30826 | Where you been? |
30826 | Where''s Johnny? |
30826 | Where''s McGlynn? |
30826 | Where''s McNally? |
30826 | Where''s Missouri Jones? |
30826 | Where''s Yank? |
30826 | Where''s the proprietor of this place? |
30826 | Where''s the------------ that is going to make some money out of arresting me? |
30826 | Where''s your usual crowd? |
30826 | Where? |
30826 | Where? |
30826 | Whereabouts is your claim? |
30826 | Which is it to be? |
30826 | Which is? |
30826 | Whither would a thief run to? 30826 Who are you?" |
30826 | Who were talking? |
30826 | Who would you elect? |
30826 | Who''ll chip in? |
30826 | Who''s he? |
30826 | Why did n''t some of them go out and hire ships on their own account? |
30826 | Why did n''t you let us in on it? |
30826 | Why did you do it? |
30826 | Why did you hit me at first, as you did? 30826 Why do n''t you?" |
30826 | Why not bury it? |
30826 | Why not drain the bay? |
30826 | Why not? 30826 Why not? |
30826 | Why not? |
30826 | Why not? |
30826 | Why not? |
30826 | Why should I fight you? |
30826 | Why? |
30826 | Why? |
30826 | Will you go, Sam, if we pay you for going? |
30826 | Will you tell me, by all that''s holy,_ why_ you turned your back on the door? |
30826 | Wo n''t some one steal them? |
30826 | Wo n''t they attempt a rescue? |
30826 | Would you expect to get off your clothes in a real fight? |
30826 | Would you have been willing to have dropped out of this partnership? |
30826 | Would you have done it? |
30826 | Would you have had me, or any man, brute enough to go through with it? |
30826 | Yes? |
30826 | Yes? |
30826 | Yet you never heard----What camp? |
30826 | You are n''t going to lie down? |
30826 | You are the man who stuck up Scar- face Charley in Morton''s place, ai n''t you? |
30826 | You do n''t''wash''yourself? |
30826 | You had luck,said Talbot non- committally,"and you ran a strong risk of coming back here without a cent, did n''t you? |
30826 | You have n''t sold them? |
30826 | You lika music? |
30826 | You remember what Randall-- or the doctor-- said about the robberies, and the bodies of the drowned men floating? 30826 You think so?" |
30826 | You want to bite and gouge and scratch, then? |
30826 | You''ll be comin''alone? |
30826 | Your fee, sir? |
30826 | Your grant is a large one? |
30826 | ''How about all those other fellows?'' |
30826 | ''How mooch,''says he''is dot stoof?'' |
30826 | ''Say, you got any more barrels of dot sauerkraut?'' |
30826 | ''That what?'' |
30826 | ''What stuff?'' |
30826 | ''What''s that?'' |
30826 | Ai n''t it just an idee we got that it''s the proper thing to do? |
30826 | And do you understand the inner aspirations of mules, maybe?" |
30826 | And mines? |
30826 | And useless? |
30826 | And what''s a mining camp without mining? |
30826 | And what''s to prevent any man, after the drawing, from marking a blank slip-- or making a new slip entirely?" |
30826 | Any finds here?" |
30826 | Anybody hurt?" |
30826 | Anybody know anything nearer to home?" |
30826 | Anybody know if anywhar they do it the other way around?" |
30826 | Are they with you?" |
30826 | Are we going to wait here until the next steamer comes along?" |
30826 | Are we or are we not friends? |
30826 | Are we or are we not partners? |
30826 | Are you agreeable?" |
30826 | Are you handy with a gun?" |
30826 | Are you in?" |
30826 | Brown?" |
30826 | But if we do that, we got to give them a chance to eat, hain''t we? |
30826 | But wha''do you know about_ flippin''flapjacks_?" |
30826 | Can you tell me who he is?'' |
30826 | Can you walk back?" |
30826 | Come down and have a drink?" |
30826 | Could n''t she? |
30826 | Did n''t the Greek and Roman and Hebrew and Hun and every other good old fighter''strip for the fray''when he got a chance? |
30826 | Did you come out ahead on those_ monte_ games?" |
30826 | Did you then take a needed rest?" |
30826 | Do you know anything about this sort of thing?" |
30826 | Do you or do you not consider me a low- lived, white- livered, mangy, good- for- nothing yellow pup? |
30826 | Do you think she''ll go?" |
30826 | Do you think you can lick me as well as your rural friends?" |
30826 | Do you think you can lick me?" |
30826 | Do you understand all that?" |
30826 | Does any one here think any of them guiltless? |
30826 | Eh?" |
30826 | Forgotten that little point, have they?" |
30826 | Have a smoke?" |
30826 | Have n''t any? |
30826 | Have n''t any? |
30826 | Have n''t you anything in the second story?" |
30826 | Have you a good big room?" |
30826 | Have you been down to look at the river? |
30826 | He handed it to me then, did n''t he?" |
30826 | Hit at Danny Randall''s men, will they? |
30826 | How about it?" |
30826 | How about it?" |
30826 | How came he to be so travelled? |
30826 | How could he carry away these heavy ingots?" |
30826 | How did you get it, Tal?" |
30826 | How did you get it? |
30826 | How do you carry your dust? |
30826 | How does that strike you?" |
30826 | How have you gotten on?" |
30826 | How long did it take you?" |
30826 | How many of you?" |
30826 | How many times did you get stuck?" |
30826 | How much did the''robbers''leave you?" |
30826 | How much does that come to apiece?" |
30826 | How much is that worth, Johnny? |
30826 | How much money have you got, Yank?" |
30826 | I asked blankly"How should I know? |
30826 | I asked my guest,"boxing or wrestling?" |
30826 | I suppose it is fully subscribed, gentlemen?" |
30826 | I suppose you''ll be going back to the Porcupine?" |
30826 | I suppose, though, you''re going to the mines? |
30826 | I want to ask that gentleman there what is to prevent the wrong man from answering to a name, from drawing a slip without having any right to?" |
30826 | I''ve practically challenged all the hard cases in camp, do n''t you see? |
30826 | If you had lost, would you have been willing to have taken the consequences?" |
30826 | In an anxious tone he asked:"Is there any way of getting out of this scrape? |
30826 | In what way?" |
30826 | Is your money all gone?" |
30826 | Just get here to- day? |
30826 | Make a name for it? |
30826 | McGlynn?" |
30826 | Naturally, I see just how you feel----""It comes to about seven hundred apiece, do n''t it?" |
30826 | No? |
30826 | No? |
30826 | No?" |
30826 | Now who''d expect to run against a layout like this on the river?" |
30826 | Now, if we ca n''t leave our tents feeling our goods is safe, what do you expect to do about it? |
30826 | Question is: what do we want to do with them?" |
30826 | The question is, dare we declare it?" |
30826 | There''s two serious questions before the house: the first and most important is, who and what is Danny Randall?" |
30826 | This was all very well, but how did the general public know that the lots would be drawn fairly? |
30826 | Understand?" |
30826 | Want to go with me?" |
30826 | Want to sell''em?" |
30826 | We assailed them with a storm of questions-- why had they returned? |
30826 | Well, Jim?" |
30826 | Well, Johnny?" |
30826 | Well, sir, you would n''t think there was any Dutchmen in the country, now would you? |
30826 | Were n''t you trying to make me out a quitter?" |
30826 | Were the diggings holding out? |
30826 | Were the diggings very far away? |
30826 | Were the gold stories really true? |
30826 | Whar do you- all reckon to come up with them?" |
30826 | Whar''s all this assorted lot of theories I been hearing in the say- loons ever since that nugget was turned up?" |
30826 | What are they going to do? |
30826 | What are you conducting here? |
30826 | What are you laughing at?" |
30826 | What are you talking about?" |
30826 | What did you do with the rest of the day?" |
30826 | What do you know against them?" |
30826 | What does Jones or Smith or Robinson or anybody else really care for Italian Bar as a place; or, indeed, for California as a place? |
30826 | What does it mean, anyway?" |
30826 | What earthly chance had they? |
30826 | What license they all got chasin''every fool cut- off reported in? |
30826 | What more does a man want? |
30826 | What next? |
30826 | What were the chances for newcomers? |
30826 | What would you do?" |
30826 | What''s eating you?'' |
30826 | What''s it all about?" |
30826 | What''s the matter with this country, anyway-- barring mining?" |
30826 | What''s the use of a front sight at close range?" |
30826 | Where are the other three?" |
30826 | Where do you live?" |
30826 | Where would you get any one to serve? |
30826 | Where''s that confounded_ mozo_? |
30826 | Where''s your bag? |
30826 | Where''s your plunder?" |
30826 | Who was he?" |
30826 | Why could n''t you write a man occasionally?" |
30826 | Why do n''t you adopt a little regular law? |
30826 | Why was n''t I sent for before?" |
30826 | Why''n hell did n''t Buck and Missou give him a few lifts with the toes of their boots, and not come botherin''us with them?" |
30826 | Why, confound your pusillanimous souls, what do you mean by talking to me in that fashion? |
30826 | Why? |
30826 | Will you do it?" |
30826 | You would, would you?" |
30826 | _ Sabe?_ But we no pay twenty dollars unless you get us to Cruces_ poco pronto, sabe_? |
30826 | _ Sabe?_ But we no pay twenty dollars unless you get us to Cruces_ poco pronto, sabe_? |
30826 | a volcano?" |
30826 | breathed Johnny at last,"do you suppose, if he_ must_ mine, he does n''t buy himself a suit of dungarees or a flannel shirt?" |
30826 | cried Charley admiringly,"where did you get them? |
30826 | cried Johnny,"will one of you drinking men kindly take a look and inform me if I''ve gone wrong?" |
30826 | demanded Johnny indignantly;"is he sick?" |
30826 | enunciated one laboriously;"flapjacks? |
30826 | had there been an accident? |
30826 | shouted Johnny finally,"where''s the towels?" |
30826 | so intimately travelled? |
30826 | what had happened? |
30826 | where was Yank? |
27279 | ''How duz yo''sym''tums seem ter segashuate?'' 27279 ''How you come on, den? |
27279 | And are they really dead, our martyred slain? |
27279 | And how do you know that you have got to the right hand now? |
27279 | And it was in this wilderness that Professor Mitchell lost his life sixteen or seventeen years ago, was it not? |
27279 | And nobody lives in it? 27279 And what was that?" |
27279 | And where are you? |
27279 | And which_ are_ we for? |
27279 | And who told you all about it? |
27279 | Any more betting, sir? |
27279 | Bill? 27279 But how was it possible to bring a dead body up these steeps?" |
27279 | But what is a''sang- digger''? |
27279 | Did the fox eat the rabbit? |
27279 | Did you cross there? |
27279 | Do the white persons pay such respect to niggers in Savannah? 27279 Do you forget, sir, that he said,''When one is a wanderer, one feels that one fulfils the true condition of humanity?'' |
27279 | Dunno-- what be they? |
27279 | How do you know then where you are? |
27279 | How long before this rain began was it that they quitted this house? |
27279 | How would you like a scrummage, Andy, with them Scotchmen that stole your mother''s chickens this morning? |
27279 | I''ve got some sandwiches, here-- won''t you have one? |
27279 | Is n''t there an old field, about a mile from this, on that road? |
27279 | Is no hatchet sharp for Occonestoga? |
27279 | Is that all, on both sides of the river? |
27279 | Jemmy Steptoe,said he to the clerk,"what the devil ails ye, mon?" |
27279 | Mr. Murray, am I correct in my conjecture? |
27279 | Mr. Murray, if you insist upon your bitter à � sher simile, why shut your eyes to the palpable analogy suggested? 27279 Nan?" |
27279 | Not so, my dear madam, for are you not sure to lose? |
27279 | S''that another langidge fuh some name a knows? |
27279 | Shall I let loose upon them, Captain? |
27279 | Shall not the mother say farewell to the child she shall see no more? |
27279 | Southern Review), Theodicy, Is Davis a Traitor? |
27279 | Thank you,said Gilman, and then, after a second''s hesitation, added:"Where are you going? |
27279 | The red levin?_ ROBERT TOOMBS.--1. |
27279 | Then the people on that side of the river are your friends? |
27279 | Then you will bet again, madam? |
27279 | Thou art come, Matiwan-- thou art come, but wherefore? 27279 To lose?" |
27279 | Was not that mightily out of the way? 27279 Were you ever here before?" |
27279 | What arms have you in the house? |
27279 | What wouldst thou do, Matiwan? |
27279 | Where do you take us to? |
27279 | Where is Andy? |
27279 | Where, then? |
27279 | Wherefore sings he his death- song? |
27279 | Who is Bill? |
27279 | Who is at home with you? |
27279 | Who, I? |
27279 | Who,says he"will be there to sympathize with him? |
27279 | Whose seat is that? |
27279 | Why do you stand? |
27279 | Would you keep a mother from her boy, and he to be lost to her for ever? 27279 Wouldst thou slay me, mother, wouldst strike the heart of thy son?" |
27279 | _ Let us pass over the river and rest Under the shade of the trees._Has he grown sick of his toils and his tasks? |
27279 | ''George,''said his father,''do you know who killed that beautiful little cherry- tree yonder in the garden?'' |
27279 | (_ From Cartoons._[24])[ Illustration:~Natural Bridge, Virginia.~] What are the thoughts that are stirring his breast? |
27279 | (_ From Uncle Remus, His Songs and His Sayings._[42])"Did n''t the fox_ never_ catch the rabbit, Uncle Remus?" |
27279 | (_ From the"Federalist,"14th No._) But why is the experiment of an extended Republic to be rejected, merely because it may comprise what is new? |
27279 | * Chanler, Mrs. Amà © lie Rives, 1863- Va. A Brother to Dragons and Other Stories( 1888), Virginia of Virginia( 1888), The Quick or the Dead? |
27279 | --"But where is Webster? |
27279 | --"What thin- visaged man is that standing over yonder and constantly moving?" |
27279 | --"Who is that sitting by Cass?" |
27279 | --"Who is that walking down the aisle with that uncouth coat and all that hair about his chin? |
27279 | 2. Who first manufactured sugar in Louisiana? |
27279 | 2. Who has written his life? |
27279 | 2. Who was his mother? |
27279 | 2. Who was the first white child born in America? |
27279 | 2. Who was the"Blind Preacher"? |
27279 | 2. Who were Ridge and Ross? |
27279 | 2. Who were some of its contributors? |
27279 | 2. Who were the companions of Timrod''s vacations? |
27279 | 3. Who have written his life? |
27279 | 3. Who was H. W. Allen? |
27279 | 3. Who was founder of the University? |
27279 | 3. Who was governor of North Carolina in 1713- 1720? |
27279 | 3. Who wrote a sketch of his life? |
27279 | 4. Who was Mrs. White Beatty? |
27279 | 4. Who was his most famous son? |
27279 | 4. Who was the first Indian baptized? |
27279 | 4. Who were lords of Louisiana in 1750- 70? |
27279 | 5. Who first said,"To the victors belong the spoils,"as applied to public offices? |
27279 | Am I a freeman? |
27279 | Am I right, good woman?" |
27279 | And I says to a man settin''next to me, s''I,''What sort of fool playin''is that?'' |
27279 | And how have they lost their liberties? |
27279 | And what have we[ to] oppose to them? |
27279 | And where is that band who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more? |
27279 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
27279 | Are such things tolerable, and to be tolerated in the present age and condition of our Government? |
27279 | Are you going to take such gentlemen, and suppose that by intuition they will understand the Indian character? |
27279 | Banister, John,?-1692 botanist Eng., Va. Insects of Virginia, Curiosities in Virginia. |
27279 | Barbara Dering,[ sequel to The Quick or the Dead?] |
27279 | Barney._--Why, did he marry a Hooer? |
27279 | Barney._.--Who did he marry? |
27279 | Bledsoe, Albert Taylor: A Theodicy, Is Davis a Traitor? |
27279 | But was that gossamer- like illusion, lying upon the far horizon, the magic of nicotian, or the vague presence of distant heights? |
27279 | But when shall we be stronger? |
27279 | But where is that favored land? |
27279 | But, look you, Mr. Horse- Shoe, you''re not thinking of going after them?" |
27279 | By whom and when made?_ WILLIAM STRACHEY.--1. |
27279 | C. Pinkney_ 233 WEEMS, MASON LOCKE 126 What is Music? |
27279 | Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? |
27279 | Can they pursue a party who pounce down on a settlement and take property, and reclaim that property? |
27279 | Can you guess what sentence most frequently recurs to me? |
27279 | D''yuh eat them things ev''y day? |
27279 | Did he behave handsomely, Mr. Robinson? |
27279 | Did he ever come himself?__ 10. |
27279 | Did n''t he marry a Ramsbottom? |
27279 | Did the old rangers of Texas ever fail to do it, when they were seated on their Texas ponies? |
27279 | Did you ever see such a swaggerer? |
27279 | Does not every man feel that his own personal security and the security of his property depends on that fairness? |
27279 | For what is it noted?__ 6. |
27279 | For what special purpose was the Story of Mary Washington written? |
27279 | For what was he noted? |
27279 | For what was his daughter Evelyn noted? |
27279 | For what was his daughter Evelyn noted?" |
27279 | For what was his father distinguished?__ 3. |
27279 | For whom is Fort Moultrie named?__ 4. |
27279 | For whom is Montgomery named? |
27279 | For whom was Lord Cornwallis exchanged?_ JAMES WOOD DAVIDSON.--1. |
27279 | For whom was Murfreesboro named? |
27279 | For whom was he exchanged? |
27279 | From what States was Kentucky mainly settled? |
27279 | From whom was he descended? |
27279 | Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? |
27279 | Hath thy brow, Crowned with white blooms, begun To grow a- weary of its flagrant wreath, And do thy temples long to ache beneath A gilded, iron crown? |
27279 | Have they ever done it? |
27279 | Have we anything new to offer upon the subject? |
27279 | Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled, that force must be called in to win back our love? |
27279 | Having as much power and meanes as others, why should English men despaire, and not doe as much as any? |
27279 | Her most famous one? |
27279 | How did Fillmore afterwards become president of the United Stales?__ 7. |
27279 | How did Judge Longstreet feel about"Georgia Scenes"in his later years? |
27279 | How did Mrs. Dorsey gain her pen- name? |
27279 | How did he spend his time after 1609? |
27279 | How did you come on raisin''chickens this year, Mis''Shad? |
27279 | How is this to be done? |
27279 | How long and when was Madison President?__ 4. |
27279 | How long was Louisiana under Spanish domination?__ 6. |
27279 | How long was Texas independent and when did she enter the Union?__ 5. |
27279 | How long was he Chief Justice? |
27279 | How long was he professor at the University of Virginia? |
27279 | How many mouths has the Mississippi River?__ 3. |
27279 | How old was George Washington when William Byrd died?__ 6. |
27279 | How old was Judge Bacon then?_ ROBERT YOUNG HAYNE.--1. |
27279 | How old was she when her grandfather came back?__ 8. |
27279 | How stands he among Georgian writers? |
27279 | How was Mrs. Preston related to Stonewall Jackson? |
27279 | How was he buried? |
27279 | How watch? |
27279 | How were Benton and Clay connected?_(_ Mrs. |
27279 | How work? |
27279 | How? |
27279 | I ask gentlemen, sir, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission? |
27279 | I ask you, sir, what scenes followed? |
27279 | If so when and by whom made?_ WILLIAM BYRD.--1. |
27279 | If we, their countrymen, do not know and honor them, who can be expected to do so? |
27279 | In what battle was Colonel Fisher killed? |
27279 | In what family did he teach? |
27279 | In what great fire was his property destroyed in Columbia? |
27279 | In what languages did he write? |
27279 | In what novel of Thackeray did he write a chapter? |
27279 | In what year was the 250th anniversary of the settlement of Jamestown? |
27279 | Is it a moment''s cool halt that he asks Under the shade of the trees? |
27279 | Is it so very unreasonable as to furnish a justification for controlling the words of the Constitution? |
27279 | Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received? |
27279 | Is it the gurgle of waters whose flow Ofttime has come to him borne on the breeze, Memory listens to, lapsing so low, Under the shade of the trees? |
27279 | Is it unreasonable that it should also be empowered to decide on the judgment of a State tribunal enforcing such unconstitutional law? |
27279 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
27279 | Is my State a free State? |
27279 | Is the Dismal Swamp so hard to cross now?__ 5. |
27279 | Is the negro dialect the same in all the States? |
27279 | Is this,"he asked,"the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty? |
27279 | Is you deaf?'' |
27279 | It has no door to it?" |
27279 | L. Hawks_ 226 Virginian or American? |
27279 | Love? |
27279 | Marry? |
27279 | McDonald, Miss F. M. Va. Who Was the Patriot? |
27279 | Men did absurd, undignified, preposterous things for her: and she? |
27279 | Mention some of his poems? |
27279 | My Life is Like the Summer Rose,& c. Wiley, Calvin Henderson, 1819- 1887 N. C., S. C. Roanoke, or Where is Utopia?, Alamance, Early Life at the South. |
27279 | Name of Mrs. M''Cord''s father? |
27279 | Name of his home? |
27279 | Need I press the necessity of this? |
27279 | Not they who have been trained with him in the same gymnasium? |
27279 | O''c''ose, Providence put de bank dyah, but how come Providence nuver saved Marse Chan? |
27279 | Of what church was he rector? |
27279 | Of what does his"Mocking- Bird"remind one? |
27279 | Of what magazine was he editor from 1847 to 1859? |
27279 | Of what measures was he the author? |
27279 | Of what paper is he editor? |
27279 | Of what paper was he editor? |
27279 | Of what political party is he considered the founder? |
27279 | Of what profession were their daughters? |
27279 | Of what race is he? |
27279 | Oh, where, Among the sweet musicians of the air, Is one so dear as thou to these old solitudes? |
27279 | Old Miss Stallins come out fust, and as soon as she seed the bag, ses she:"What upon yeath has Joseph went and put in that bag for Mary? |
27279 | Over what great trial did Marshall preside? |
27279 | Pendleton, James Madison, 1811- 1891(?) |
27279 | Perhaps I can give you a lift on your way? |
27279 | Refuse them, and what then? |
27279 | Religion and morality enjoin this conduct; and can it be that good policy does not equally enjoin it? |
27279 | Robinson?" |
27279 | Shad._--Why, he married-- stop, I''ll tell you directly-- Why, what does make my old head forget so? |
27279 | Shall she have no parting with the young brave she bore in her bosom? |
27279 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
27279 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
27279 | Shall we try argument? |
27279 | She got in and took the level on her knee, then burst out laughing again--"A reckon yuh wonders what a''m a haw- hawin''at?" |
27279 | Sighs the worn spirit for respite or ease? |
27279 | Sir, what are we about? |
27279 | So rich was the South in 1860, that Mr. Lincoln spoke but common sentiment when he said:"If we let the South go, where shall we get our revenues?" |
27279 | Sprunt, James, 1846- merchant, British vice- consul Scotland, N. C. Wilmington( 1883), A Colonial Plantation, What Ship is That? |
27279 | Tak''st thou the glint of Mammon''s glittering car To be the gleam of some new- risen star-- Yond clamor, for renown? |
27279 | The Poetical? |
27279 | The Quick or the Dead? |
27279 | The name of his son? |
27279 | Then why complain? |
27279 | To curse, like the father-- to curse, like the Manneyto?" |
27279 | To what poems does Barbe refer in his tribute to Lanier?_(_ See under Waitman Barbe._) 6. |
27279 | To whom are Wilson''s poems dedicated? |
27279 | To whom did she will her Mississippi home? |
27279 | To whom does the fifth stanza refer?__ 3. |
27279 | To whom is the poem addressed? |
27279 | To whom was he related? |
27279 | WHAT IS MUSIC? |
27279 | Was Mrs. Motte''s house burned down?_ MASON LOCKE WEEMS.--1. |
27279 | Was it vertue in those Hero[e]s to provide that[ which] doth maintaine us, and basenesse in us to do the like for others to come? |
27279 | Was there any settlement in South Carolina at this time?__ 5. |
27279 | Well, sir, there is a remedy for all this, and it is very easy to apply it; but how are we circumstanced there? |
27279 | Were they such as should characterize an able general, a magnanimous warrior, and the President of a great nation numbering eight millions of souls? |
27279 | Whar you fum, anyhow? |
27279 | Whar you fum?" |
27279 | What action did South Carolina take in 1832? |
27279 | What action had the citizens of Boston taken in 1809? |
27279 | What are the Peabody Symphony Concerts?_ JAMES LANE ALLEN.--1. |
27279 | What are the marshes of Glynn?_(_ Salt marches on the coast of Ga._)_ 8. |
27279 | What battles of the Revolution occurred in South Carolina during Drayton''s life?_ THOMAS JEFFERSON.--1. |
27279 | What bold public statement did he make in April, 1776? |
27279 | What book has his son published? |
27279 | What caused the Texan war of independence? |
27279 | What city was burned by the British in the year in which this song was composed?_ JOHN JAMES AUDUBON.--1. |
27279 | What collections did he make? |
27279 | What did Jefferson say of him? |
27279 | What did La Fayette say of her when a child? |
27279 | What did Oglethorpe write?_(_ See"List of Southern Writers. |
27279 | What did Webster say the Union would be if the doctrine of State Sovereignty should be accepted? |
27279 | What did Wirt say of life, in 1829? |
27279 | What did his mother say of him? |
27279 | What difference in their ages?_ WILLIAM HENRY DRAYTON.--1. |
27279 | What disaster occurred in Washington in 1814?__ 6. |
27279 | What discoveries did he make in Italy? |
27279 | What distinction about his birth? |
27279 | What distinction has Byrd among the writers of Virginia? |
27279 | What do these rebels demand? |
27279 | What do you think of this sketch of Virginians? |
27279 | What does Calhoun say of it? |
27279 | What does Everett say of them? |
27279 | What does Judge Story say of him? |
27279 | What does Paulding say of him? |
27279 | What does Stephens say of Calhoun in 1850?_(_ See under A. H. Stephens._) 10. |
27279 | What does Webster say of him? |
27279 | What does he say of the earthquake and its effects? |
27279 | What does he say of the relative positions of the upper and lower classes? |
27279 | What famous Frenchman visited Jefferson in 1825?__ 9. |
27279 | What famous men were teachers and students there?_ JOHN MARSHALL.--1. |
27279 | What famous pioneer is also buried in Frankfort?__ 5. |
27279 | What great orator was his uncle? |
27279 | What had become of the wretched colonists? |
27279 | What has his daughter Winnie written? |
27279 | What has"My Maryland"been called? |
27279 | What have been his services to Southern literature? |
27279 | What have we inherited from England? |
27279 | What induced Dr. Hawks to write a history of North Carolina? |
27279 | What inscription is on his tomb? |
27279 | What is Calhoun''s home now? |
27279 | What is Jefferson''s title? |
27279 | What is Professor Fiske''s estimate of him? |
27279 | What is his national title? |
27279 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
27279 | What is left of Jamestown now?_(_ See under John Smith._) GEORGE WILLIAM BAGBY.--1. |
27279 | What is meant by"the Dark and Bloody Ground"?__ 4. |
27279 | What is said of her in Washington? |
27279 | What is said of his great work? |
27279 | What is said of his"Science of English Verse"? |
27279 | What is said of the poem"Florence Vane"? |
27279 | What is said of the"Raven"in 1845? |
27279 | What is said of"On the Plantation"? |
27279 | What is the Beautiful? |
27279 | What is the Koran?__ 6. |
27279 | What is the Peabody Educational Fund?__ 4. |
27279 | What is the mystical vision he sees? |
27279 | What is the origin of the term"buncombe"as popularly used?__ 4. |
27279 | What is the poem by which he is known? |
27279 | What is the present name of Washington College? |
27279 | What is the principle of Nullification? |
27279 | What is the special fame of this description of a storm? |
27279 | What is the story of"Sir Walter Raleigh''s Ship"? |
27279 | What is the subject of most of Simms''novels? |
27279 | What is the usual form of Manneyto? |
27279 | What is there in the moon, that swims A naked bosom o''er the limbs, That all the wood with magic dims? |
27279 | What kind of ancestry had he? |
27279 | What loss had he during the war? |
27279 | What made you come so far around?" |
27279 | What monuments have been reared to him? |
27279 | What occupation did Timrod''s father choose and why? |
27279 | What office had Clay at the time?__ 6. |
27279 | What other ex- president died the same day? |
27279 | What other great man died the same year that he did?__ 6. |
27279 | What other names had Osceola? |
27279 | What other precedence can be assigned them? |
27279 | What other settlement was in America at this time besides Jamestown?__ 5. |
27279 | What other writers edited or wrote for the"Messenger"?_"Page 452--6. amended to 5.--"_5. |
27279 | What other writers edited or wrote for the"Messenger"?__ 4. |
27279 | What paper did he establish? |
27279 | What part did he take in the Revolutionary War? |
27279 | What passage of Grady''s does the extract illustrate? |
27279 | What patriotic song was written the same year?_ ST. GEORGE TUCKER.--1. |
27279 | What people are described in his stories? |
27279 | What poet did he befriend? |
27279 | What poet wrote his life?_ MIRABEAU BUONAPARTE LAMAR.--1. |
27279 | What position had his father in 1802? |
27279 | What prevented war? |
27279 | What probably became of the Lost Colony of Roanoke and of the little Virginia Dare? |
27279 | What race settled North Carolina? |
27279 | What rank does he hold as a statesman and patriot?_ 12. Who are the others mentioned as contemporary with Calhoun in the Senate? |
27279 | What rank does he hold as a statesman and patriot?_ 12. Who are the others mentioned as contemporary with Calhoun in the Senate? |
27279 | What relation does Mr. Gladstone think should exist between England and America? |
27279 | What relation was Lieutenant Hampton to General Wade Hampton, of South Carolina?_ WILLIAM WIRT.--1. |
27279 | What relation was he to P. P. Cooke and to John P. Kennedy? |
27279 | What relation was he to Robert Young Hayne? |
27279 | What relation was he to St. George Tucker? |
27279 | What relation were Maury and Herndon?__ 6. |
27279 | What river did De Soto discover and when did he march through Alabama?_ PHILIP PENDLETON COOKE.--1. |
27279 | What salary had he as Commander in Chief? |
27279 | What shall I say? |
27279 | What system was established by him in Alabama? |
27279 | What terms shall we find, which have not been already exhausted? |
27279 | What though fond hopes deferred Have overshadowed Life''s green paths with gloom? |
27279 | What though, perchance, we no more meet,-- What though too soon we sever? |
27279 | What title did he gain, and how? |
27279 | What title did his sea studies acquire for him? |
27279 | What title had he and why? |
27279 | What title had he in the Revolution? |
27279 | What title has been given him? |
27279 | What title was given his son John? |
27279 | What town is named for Governor Eden?_ SECOND PERIOD, 1750- 1800. |
27279 | What two distinguished men besides Toombs were ordered to be captured after the war? |
27279 | What two famous speeches by Wirt are here mentioned? |
27279 | What two titles did he have, and for what reasons? |
27279 | What war took place during that time?__ 5. |
27279 | What was Dr. Bagby''s pen- name? |
27279 | What was Mrs. Wilson''s first novel? |
27279 | What was happening in America during his imprisonment, 1779- 1781?_ GEORGE WASHINGTON.--1. |
27279 | What was her opinion as to going in to exile after the war? |
27279 | What was his connection with the Peabody Institute? |
27279 | What was his education? |
27279 | What was his favorite pursuit? |
27279 | What was his favorite remark on Art? |
27279 | What was his motto? |
27279 | What was his profession and what positions, if any, did he fill? |
27279 | What was his service to the Atlantic Telegraph Cable? |
27279 | What was his title? |
27279 | What was the Conquered Banner?_ WILLIAM GORDON MCCABE.--_1. |
27279 | What was the Forum?_ JAMES RYDER RANDALL.--1. |
27279 | What was the Western Reserve?_ JAMES BARRON HOPE.--1. |
27279 | What was the cause of the duel?__ 5. |
27279 | What was the consequence? |
27279 | What was the difference in the ages of Clay, Calhoun and Webster?_ FRANCIS SCOTT KEY.--1. |
27279 | What was the name of her father and grand father? |
27279 | What was the remark of Calhoun''s father about government? |
27279 | What was the resolution of the Virginia Convention on adopting the Constitution of the United States?__ 7. |
27279 | What well known words were first used by him? |
27279 | What were his last words? |
27279 | What were the Trenches?__ 2. |
27279 | What whispered voices bless me, With welcomes dropping dew- like from the weird and wondrous stars? |
27279 | What would they have? |
27279 | What, then, am I to do? |
27279 | When and where was he inaugurated president of the Confederacy? |
27279 | When and where was his greatest speech made? |
27279 | When and with whom was his great debate on Nullification? |
27279 | When did Calhoun die? |
27279 | When did Houston go to Texas? |
27279 | When did Mrs. Washington die?_ AUGUSTA EVANS WILSON.--1. |
27279 | When did Sir Walter Raleigh send his first colony?__ 9. |
27279 | When did Washington make his Southern tour?__ 4. |
27279 | When did he come to America and whom did he marry? |
27279 | When did he come to America? |
27279 | When did he live in Washington City?__ 4. |
27279 | When did he say"If this be treason--"? |
27279 | When did it occur?__ 6. |
27279 | When did mother curse the child she bore? |
27279 | When did the Civil War begin and end?__ 5. |
27279 | When did the Seven Days''Battles around Richmond occur? |
27279 | When did the battle of Noewee occur? |
27279 | When was Berkeley governor of Virginia?__ 5. |
27279 | When was Jamestown burned? |
27279 | When was Kentucky admitted to the Union?_ JOEL CHANDLER HARRIS.--1. |
27279 | When was Pierce president of the United States?__ 5. |
27279 | When was South Carolina University founded?_ JOHN PENDLETON KENNEDY.--1. |
27279 | When was Van Buren president?_ DAVID CROCKETT.--1. |
27279 | When was Washington City laid off as the Capital of the United States?__ 8. |
27279 | When was he in Belgium?_ 5. |
27279 | When was he president of Texas? |
27279 | When was it written? |
27279 | When was it? |
27279 | When was it?_ 3. |
27279 | When was the Farewell Address written? |
27279 | When was the Farewell Address written?" |
27279 | When was the Louisiana Purchase made?__ 7. |
27279 | When was the Seminole war?__ 5. |
27279 | When was the University established and opened?_ THIRD PERIOD, 1800- 1850. |
27279 | When was the University established and opened?_"Page 450--6. amended to 5.--"5. |
27279 | When was the battle of Blue Licks? |
27279 | When was the battle of Buena Vista? |
27279 | When was the great earthquake in the Mississippi Valley?__ 4. |
27279 | When was the monument unveiled? |
27279 | When was the poem written? |
27279 | When was this article published? |
27279 | When? |
27279 | When? |
27279 | When?_ ALEXANDER BEAUFORT MEEK.--1. |
27279 | Whence did Mrs. Dandridge get her first name? |
27279 | Whence his name?_(_ He was a blacksmith._) HUGH SWINTON LEGARÃ �.--1. |
27279 | Where and when did his inauguration as President take place?__ 7. |
27279 | Where are Miss Murfree''s stories laid? |
27279 | Where are fine statues of him? |
27279 | Where are monuments to Poe? |
27279 | Where are there monuments to Lee?__ 4. |
27279 | Where are they now? |
27279 | Where did he die? |
27279 | Where did he die? |
27279 | Where did he die?" |
27279 | Where did he pass his life? |
27279 | Where is Beauvoir?__ 6. |
27279 | Where is Fort Moultrie and for whom named?__ 4. |
27279 | Where is Forte Motte? |
27279 | Where is Magnolia Cemetery?_ PAUL HAMILTON HAYNE.--1. |
27279 | Where is Magnolia Cemetery?_"Page 453--6. amended to 4.--"_4. |
27279 | Where is Mr. Davis buried?_ EDGAR ALLAN POE.--1. |
27279 | Where is O''Hara buried? |
27279 | Where is William and Mary College and when was it founded?__ 3. |
27279 | Where is a set of his works to be seen? |
27279 | Where is found the quotation--"Free will fixed fate, foreknowledge absolute"?_ GEORGE TUCKER.--1. |
27279 | Where is it? |
27279 | Where is the Alamo?__ 5. |
27279 | Where is the Hermitage?__ 7. |
27279 | Where is the Natural Bridge?_(_ See Jefferson''s Description._) CHARLES HENRY SMITH("BILL ARP").--1. |
27279 | Where is the Natural Bridge?_(_ See picture under Mrs. Preston._)_ 5. |
27279 | Where is the Virginia Military Institute?__ 5. |
27279 | Where is the man? |
27279 | Where is the necessity of this provision in the Constitution? |
27279 | Where is the town named for him?_ 6. |
27279 | Where is the use of it? |
27279 | Where is there a monument to Lieutenant Herndon? |
27279 | Where is there a monument to him? |
27279 | Where is there a statue to Sergeant Jasper?_ JAMES MADISON.--1. |
27279 | Where was the author born? |
27279 | Which are the best lives of him? |
27279 | Which particular Tenthredo of the buzzing swarm around my spoiled apple of life would you advise me to select for my_ anathema maranatha_?" |
27279 | White- robed and fair to see, where goest thou now In haste from thy spiced garden? |
27279 | Who are the three greatest statesmen of the"Compromise Period"( 1820- 1850)?_ 8. |
27279 | Who are they, and what are such people called in London, in North Carolina, and in different other States?_ 3. Who was Mr. Ellington? |
27279 | Who are they, and what are such people called in London, in North Carolina, and in different other States?_ 3. Who was Mr. Ellington? |
27279 | Who can bind posterity? |
27279 | Who can forget the cook by whom his youthful appetite was fed? |
27279 | Who do you think were"the five greatest poets of the country"in his lifetime?_ CHARLES Ã � TIENNE ARTHUR GAYARRÃ �.--1. |
27279 | Who have written the life of General Lee? |
27279 | Who have written the life of President Davis?__ 4. |
27279 | Who is the"Fair Daughter of the Sun"? |
27279 | Who is"the Man"of the Yorktown Centennial Ode?__ 3. |
27279 | Who succeeded him?_ FRANCIS LISTER HAWKS.--1. |
27279 | Who that is a sincere friend to it can look with indifference upon attempts to shake the foundation of the fabrick? |
27279 | Who that knew him as a contented, well- treated slave, did not learn to love and admire the negro character? |
27279 | Who was Ashby?_ JABEZ LAMAR MONROE CURRY.--1. |
27279 | Who was Horse Shoe Robinson?__ 5. |
27279 | Who was Jackson?__ 5. |
27279 | Who was John Pendleton Kennedy?__ 5. |
27279 | Who was Mrs. C. A Warfield and what did she write?_(_ See"List of Southern Writers. |
27279 | Who was Pinckney?_ HENRY LEE.--1. |
27279 | Who was Rubinstein?_ SARAH ANNE DORSEY.--1. |
27279 | Who was Uncle Remus?_ ROBERT BURNS WILSON.--1. |
27279 | Who was he, or what had he done, who had provoked such relentless and far- seeking revenge? |
27279 | Who was his early teacher? |
27279 | Who was his second wife? |
27279 | Who was ruler of England at this time?_ JOHN LAWSON.--1. |
27279 | Who was the American general?__ 6. |
27279 | Who was then president of the United States?_ WILLIAM CAMPBELL PRESTON.--1. |
27279 | Who was"Ned Brace"? |
27279 | Who went with him to be educated? |
27279 | Who were Carroll, Howard, Ringgold, Watson, Lowe, May?_ ABRAM JOSEPH RYAN.--1. |
27279 | Who were Demosthenes, Ossian, Homer, Milton, Rousseau?_"Page 449--7. amended to 5.--"_5. |
27279 | Who were Demothenes, Ossian, Homer, Milton, Rousseau?_ JOHN RANDOLPH OF ROANOKE.--1. |
27279 | Who were Giotto Dante Tasso and Petrarch?_ AUGUSTUS BALDWIN LONGSTREET.--1. |
27279 | Who were Jackson and Stuart?__ 3. |
27279 | Who were Jasper, De Soto, Pulaski?_ MARY VIRGINIA TERHUNE("MARION HARLAND").--1. |
27279 | Who were Jefferson Hamilton Jackson, Clay John Randolph?_ ALEXANDER HAMILTON STEPHENS.--1. |
27279 | Who were Lord North and Lord Grenville?__ 4. |
27279 | Who were Philip, Alexander, Cà ¦ sar, Brutus, Madame de Staël, Bonaparte?__ 6. |
27279 | Who were Randolph and Clay?__ 4. |
27279 | Who were her paternal grandparents, and what did they write? |
27279 | Who were presidents before Jefferson?_"Page 449--Demothenes amended to Demosthenes--"_5. |
27279 | Who were presidents before Jefferson?__ 7. |
27279 | Who were the Huguenots?__ 3. |
27279 | Who were the Moors and when did they rule Spain?_ LOUISA SUSANNAH M''CORD.--1. |
27279 | Who were the Yemassees and when was the Yemassee war?__ 5. |
27279 | Who were the four presidents of the Republic of Texas?__ 4. |
27279 | Who wrote Dixie, and when?_ APPENDIX. |
27279 | Who wrote Hayne''s Life?_ SAM HOUSTON.--1. |
27279 | Who wrote Tristram and Iseult?_ SIDNEY LANIER.--1. |
27279 | Who wrote his life?_(_ See under G in"List of Southern Writers. |
27279 | Who wrote the lines on page 314?_ RICHARD MALCOLM JOHNSTON.--1. |
27279 | Who, after him, up to the time of his death?__ 8. |
27279 | Whom did Benton''s daughter Jessie marry, and what did she write?_(_ See"List of Southern Writers,"Frà © mont._) JOHN CALDWELL CALHOUN.--1. |
27279 | Whom did he succeed as editor of the"Southern Literary Messenger"? |
27279 | Whose brother and whose cousin was he? |
27279 | Whose son was he, and whose half brother? |
27279 | Whose son was he? |
27279 | Why did Captain Smith fight against the Turks? |
27279 | Why did he come to Carolina, and when? |
27279 | Why did he go to Europe in 1771? |
27279 | Why did he not sue for pardon? |
27279 | Why did the Cherokees go beyond the Mississippi?_ ST. GEORGE H. |
27279 | Why not establish a fencing- school for their benefit? |
27279 | Why stand we here idle? |
27279 | Will it be the next week or the next year? |
27279 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
27279 | Will the spirit of the Constitution justify this attempt to control its words? |
27279 | Will you draw down this curse on Virginia? |
27279 | Will you get in?" |
27279 | With what distinguished men was he associated, and who were they? |
27279 | With whom did he first write? |
27279 | Woman''s condition certainly admits of improvement,( but when have the strong forgotten to oppress the weak?) |
27279 | Yet why complain? |
27279 | You besieged and took the Alamo: but under what circumstances? |
27279 | You think Sir Archy will beat Selim? |
27279 | [ Illustration:~State House, Columbia, S. C.~]"They took the route towards Ninety- Six, you said, Mistress Ramsay?" |
27279 | _ What else can you learn of her?__ 6. |
27279 | and from what source, men, animals, and elements of the universal fire have their origin? |
27279 | hain''t that good, though? |
27279 | in 1779? |
27279 | say can you see by the dawn''s early light, What so proudly we hailed at the twilight''s last gleaming? |
27279 | what is it?" |
27279 | what power Can stay him in his silent course, or melt His iron heart to pity? |
27279 | who could have wronged thee so? |
27279 | who will set me adrift on this Nile?''" |
38579 | A what? |
38579 | Ai n''t you acoming in here, young man? |
38579 | Ai n''t you afraid? |
38579 | Ai n''t you going in? |
38579 | Am dat so? |
38579 | Are they fresh? |
38579 | Are you at the helm? |
38579 | Are you hurt? |
38579 | But why should you act upon a different rule from other men? |
38579 | But you can have it longer if you wish--"Ah, monsieur, sal be ver mooch glad if I can have zat house_ so long as I please_--eh-- monsieur? |
38579 | But,she asked,"how came these names here-- names I never saw before?" |
38579 | Can you hold on five minutes longer, John? |
38579 | Come to what? |
38579 | Den we dot up and prayed dust well as we tould, And Dod answered our prayers: now was n''t He dood? |
38579 | Did you ever try it? |
38579 | Do n''t you hear the governor calling? 38579 Do you consider_ your_ life worth more than other people''s?" |
38579 | Do you hear me, I say? |
38579 | Do you send mail there? |
38579 | Do you think any of your company would have missed you, if you had been killed? |
38579 | Does yer mean ter sen''me away from yer, Mass Cap''n? |
38579 | End is there none? |
38579 | For the Holy War? 38579 God of the flower,"he said, with reverent voice,"The violet lives again, and why not I? |
38579 | Have you any eggs this morning, Uncle Mose? |
38579 | How did this occur? |
38579 | How does she head? |
38579 | How long before we can reach there? |
38579 | How old are you? |
38579 | How so? |
38579 | How''d I get it? |
38579 | I wanted to know if you liked my f''ower? |
38579 | If he wanted a piece of gingerbread, why did n''t he say so? 38579 In,_ in_, ter,_ ter_,_ inter_"--"Then you spell it with an_ I_?" |
38579 | Is it askin''ye are, phwat''s makin''me croiy? |
38579 | Is she comin''? |
38579 | Is that all? |
38579 | Is there any danger? |
38579 | Is there such a place in this country as Cleveland? |
38579 | Is this Heaven? 38579 Is this the woman?" |
38579 | Is your name Mrs. Bacon, dear? |
38579 | Just hold me at first, Sam, will you? |
38579 | Major, your men? |
38579 | Me? 38579 Now,"said Wardle, after a substantial lunch,"what say you to an hour on the ice? |
38579 | Oh, holy father,Alice said,"''twould grieve you, would it not, To discover that I was a most disreputable lot? |
38579 | Oh, my goodness? 38579 Phy, Dinny, me bhoy, ye''re croiyin''yersilf,"He said with a chuckle and grin;"Phwat''s troublin''_ yer_ sowl? |
38579 | Run at the first fire, did you? |
38579 | See? |
38579 | Spell what? |
38579 | Stood your ground, did you? |
38579 | Then it will be two cents, eh? |
38579 | Then it will take twelve cents? |
38579 | Then patriotism and honor are nothing to you? |
38579 | Then you must value it very highly? |
38579 | Well, but have you no regard for your reputation? |
38579 | Well, now, what are you going to do? |
38579 | Well, who asked you to give me anything? |
38579 | Well, why tan''t we p''ay dest as mamma did den, And ask Dod to send him with p''esents aden? |
38579 | Were you in the fight? |
38579 | Whar''s it at, Mass Cap''n? |
38579 | What can an ignorant old woman like her want to hear Dr.---- preach for? 38579 What can you do?" |
38579 | What did you come here for? |
38579 | What for? |
38579 | What have we here? |
38579 | What is it? |
38579 | What satisfaction would dat be to me when de power ob feelin''was gone? |
38579 | What troubles you, child? |
38579 | What''s she doin''? |
38579 | What''s she doin''now? |
38579 | What''s that? |
38579 | When is yer gwine, Mass Cap''n? |
38579 | Where have you come from? |
38579 | Where is she now? |
38579 | Where is your mother? |
38579 | Which way is she lookin''? |
38579 | Who is defending her? |
38579 | Who vash dot? |
38579 | Who vhants to catch''em? |
38579 | Who was she? |
38579 | Why ai n''t they? |
38579 | Why should I bow the proud, imperious knee, To mighty powers no mortal eye can see? |
38579 | Why should I keep der flies oudt? 38579 Why, how ole am de boy?" |
38579 | Why, my_ dear_ sir, what did_ you_ propose to spell it with? |
38579 | Why? |
38579 | Will you give me those boots? 38579 Will you please tell me your first name?" |
38579 | Yes, Tobe, what is it? |
38579 | Yes, my boy: what shall I tell them? |
38579 | Yes, sa, I does; more dan all dis world, more dan a million ob dollars, sa; for what would dat be wuth to a man wid the bref out ob him? 38579 You skate, of course, Winkle?" |
38579 | ''Twas only aid he wanted to help him across the wave, But what are a couple of women with only a man to save? |
38579 | A patient form I seemed ter see, In tidy dress of black, I almost thought I heard the words,"When will my boy come back?" |
38579 | A whiff came through the open door-- Wuz I sleepin''or awake? |
38579 | After lying a few minutes with closed eyes, as if in sleep, he suddenly whispered:"Dinah, whar is you? |
38579 | Ah? |
38579 | Amazed and surprised, Mr. Dinny O''Doyle Said:"Michael, me darlin''bhoy, Phwat''s troublin''yer sowl? |
38579 | An''de chillun-- whar''s de chillun? |
38579 | An''doan''yer see de pearly gates a- openin''to let ole black Jake go frew? |
38579 | An''the ould mother says,"Sure, an''it is; an''have ye the little rid hin?" |
38579 | An''yer''ll be kind to my wife and chilluns for my sake, wo n''t yer?" |
38579 | An''yo''say she has childruns? |
38579 | And do n''t she look just lovely in that picture? |
38579 | And in all chivalrous France was there not a champion to take up the gauntlet in defence of a helpless girl? |
38579 | And truly I think that they may be well called so-- what word strikes so forcibly upon the heart as mother? |
38579 | And we''ve been very happy-- have we not?" |
38579 | And what have we to oppose to them?--Shall we try argument? |
38579 | And what is this? |
38579 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
38579 | Are not my people happy? |
38579 | Are they dead that yet act? |
38579 | Are they dead that yet move upon society, and inspire the people with nobler motives, and more heroic patriotism? |
38579 | Are they dead that yet speak louder than we can speak, and a more universal language? |
38579 | Are you God''s wife?" |
38579 | Are you an angel?" |
38579 | Are you ready to begin?" |
38579 | Art thou the one Who hast so long his vengeance counted dear? |
38579 | Beautiful story, is n''t it? |
38579 | Bess looked at the babies a moment, With their wee heads, yellow and brown, And then to grandma soberly said,"_ Which one are you going to drown_?" |
38579 | Buried him without knowing whether he was dead or not? |
38579 | But soft-- through the ghastly air Whose falling tear was that? |
38579 | But what is the fare to poppy land? |
38579 | But when shall we be stronger? |
38579 | But why pause here? |
38579 | By Bill Nye, 70 How"Old Mose"Counted Eggs, 272 How Shall I Love You? |
38579 | Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? |
38579 | Can you face the just Judge and the souls you have wrecked? |
38579 | De vistles vas plowing, und dem pells vos ringing, und von man shtepped up mit Yawcup und say"Vot vor dem pells pe ringing so mooch?" |
38579 | Did you ever notice what life and power the Holy Scriptures have when well read? |
38579 | Did you ever see a battery take position? |
38579 | Did''st hope to have my knee Bend at thy feet, and with one mighty thrust,"The life thou hatest flee before thee here? |
38579 | Did''st thou think to see A son of Gheva spill upon the dust His noble blood? |
38579 | Do n''t you think you would like to go there?" |
38579 | Do n''t your little boy call you so?" |
38579 | Do you buy all your clothes with missionary money? |
38579 | Do you know you''re destroying both body and soul Of the men whose honor and manhood you''ve stole? |
38579 | Do you murmur a prayer, my brothers, when cozy and safe in bed, For men like these, who are ready to die for a wreck off Mumbles Head? |
38579 | Do you not guess his name? |
38579 | Does it not become a descendant of the Ptolemies and of Cleopatra? |
38579 | Does not your heart beat responsive to mine?" |
38579 | Does the hard accusation arouse you to fright? |
38579 | Eh, monsieur?" |
38579 | Every morning he would question:"Will she come to me to- day?" |
38579 | Fine countenance, has n''t he? |
38579 | For what? |
38579 | Go''st thou to build an early name, Or early in the task to die? |
38579 | HOW SHALL I LOVE YOU? |
38579 | Had she not bled for them? |
38579 | Had she not faithfully done her work? |
38579 | Had she not saved the kingdom? |
38579 | Had you, or have you, any brothers or sisters? |
38579 | Handsome picture, ai n''t it? |
38579 | Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? |
38579 | Have we anything new to offer upon the subject? |
38579 | Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled, that force must be called in to win back our love? |
38579 | Have you never looked at yourself in the light Of a thief, nay, worse, a murderer, too? |
38579 | He came to life again? |
38579 | He disappeared, then? |
38579 | He knew that few would ever ask,"What must I do to be saved?" |
38579 | He looked at the silver and bills and gold, And he said:"She gives all this to me? |
38579 | He looks like a man to do that, do n''t he? |
38579 | He''ll be bruised, and so shall I-- How can I from bedposts keep, When I''m walking in my sleep? |
38579 | Her dark eyes lit with the flash of fire, And she said:"You will pity my need most dire? |
38579 | How canst thou then behold the God of Light, Before whose face the sunbeams are as night? |
38579 | How could he be a hypocrite then? |
38579 | How did you happen to meet Burr? |
38579 | How do you account for that? |
38579 | How do you like your house?" |
38579 | How shall I love you? |
38579 | How shall I love you? |
38579 | How''s your son coming on at de school? |
38579 | I am so sorry; will you ever forgive me? |
38579 | I ask gentlemen, sir, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission? |
38579 | I know that I did it myself? |
38579 | I look upon the past and the present, upon my nearer and remoter subjects, and ask, nor fear the answer, Whom have I wronged? |
38579 | I said,--"How do you spell it?" |
38579 | If you were at his funeral, he must have been dead; and, if he was dead, how could he care whether you made a noise or not? |
38579 | Is he not grand?" |
38579 | Is it fixed in nature that the limits of this empire should be Egypt on the one hand, the Hellespont and the Euxine on the other? |
38579 | Is it not a magnificent sight to see that strange soldier and that noble black horse, dashing like a meteor, down the long columns of battle? |
38579 | Is it not an honorable ambition? |
38579 | Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received? |
38579 | Is it wapin''ye are for a sin?" |
38579 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
38579 | Is life worth living for its little hour Of empty pleasure, if decay we must?" |
38579 | Is n''t that a brother of yours? |
38579 | Is n''t that gorgeous? |
38579 | Is n''t that voluntary lovely? |
38579 | Is no poppy- syrup nigh? |
38579 | Is there a burden your heart must bear? |
38579 | Is there a thorn in the crown that you wear? |
38579 | Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty? |
38579 | Is_ so_ much ambition praiseworthy, and_ more_ criminal? |
38579 | Lemme have your name, wo n''t you?" |
38579 | Let the ambition be a noble one, and who shall blame it? |
38579 | Nature soon will stupefy-- My nerves relax-- my eyes grow dim-- Who''s that fallen, me or him?" |
38579 | Now is n''t that splendid? |
38579 | Now, Nursey, what makes you remind me? |
38579 | Now, how does that strike you? |
38579 | Now, where was the mystery? |
38579 | Now, will you give them up?" |
38579 | Oh, Mister Breacher, shall I be cast into dat lake if I am vicked, or shust close py or near to-- shust near enough to be comfortable? |
38579 | Oh, yes!--she stood up and recited, what do you think? |
38579 | Or hath empire no natural limit, but is broad as the genius that can devise, and the power that can win? |
38579 | Phwat the mischief''s about ye that bothers me so? |
38579 | Phwat''s the raison ye''ve tears in yer oi?" |
38579 | Phwat''s wrong wid ye now? |
38579 | Phwat''s wrong wid_ ye_ now? |
38579 | Pickwick?" |
38579 | Praising your beauty, eh? |
38579 | SIX LOVE LETTERS"Are there any more of those letters?" |
38579 | Say, do the nigger ladies use hymn- book leaves to do their hair up on and make it frizzy? |
38579 | Sebenty- two, sebenty- free, sebenty- foah, sebenty- five, sebenty- six, sebenty- seben, sebenty- eight, sebenty- nine-- and your mudder? |
38579 | Shall I put fly- screens in the doors?" |
38579 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
38579 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
38579 | Smart, was n''t it? |
38579 | So one day Captain Leigh said:--"Tobe, how would you like to go North?" |
38579 | So vot you tinks? |
38579 | Still he stares-- I wonder why; Why are not the sons of earth Blind, like puppies, from their birth? |
38579 | Surprising what some of these men have gone through, ai n''t it? |
38579 | That I think, is-- is-- that''s a-- a-- yes, to be sure, Washington-- you recollect him, of course? |
38579 | That''s a pretty cloak you''ve got, ai n''t it? |
38579 | The lady bent over, and whispered,"Are you happier now, my lad?" |
38579 | The padre said:"Whatever have you been and gone and done?" |
38579 | The passengers rushed forward and inquired of the pilot,"How far are we from Buffalo?" |
38579 | The soldiers were about finishing their examination, when one of them said,"What''s that under the seat of that wagon?" |
38579 | The star in the storm and the strength in the strife; How shall I love you, my sweetheart, my wife? |
38579 | Thine eyes before this trifling labor fall, Canst gaze on him who hath created all? |
38579 | This time the door opened in response:"Well, child, what is it? |
38579 | Thy golden fortunes, tower they now, Or melt the glittering spires in air? |
38579 | To feel once more that fresh, wild thrill I''d give-- but who can live youth over? |
38579 | Und ven I looked around dere shtood dot Villiam R. Shtover mit Leavenworth, Kansas-- und I said pooty quick:"Vot vor dem pells vas ringing? |
38579 | Upward floats the voice of mourning--"Jesus, Master, dost thou care?" |
38579 | Very flattering, was n''t it? |
38579 | Want some gingerbread?" |
38579 | Was n''t it a pity? |
38579 | Was n''t it cruel? |
38579 | Well-- where was I? |
38579 | Were not Suez and Armenia more natural limits? |
38579 | What are a couple of women? |
38579 | What do I see on looking back? |
38579 | What do you do it with?" |
38579 | What do you want to spell it for?" |
38579 | What do_ you_ think? |
38579 | What good would forty heads do her? |
38579 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
38579 | What is sacrifice to doing good and lifting toward heaven our fellow- men? |
38579 | What is that?" |
38579 | What is the matter? |
38579 | What is the matter? |
38579 | What province have I oppressed, what city pillaged, what region drained with taxes? |
38579 | What shall I do? |
38579 | What sound is that that is borne upon the breeze of the summer night? |
38579 | What terms shall we find which have not already been exhausted? |
38579 | What the mischief makes him cry? |
38579 | What was the date of your birth? |
38579 | What was the matter? |
38579 | What would they have? |
38579 | When I heard the first words I thought I should faint(_ imitating_):"Been out in the lifeboat often? |
38579 | When a person gets to be fifty- three years old----""Fifty- free? |
38579 | When in the world did the coxswain shirk? |
38579 | When it''s rougher than this? |
38579 | Where was that mother now? |
38579 | Where were you born? |
38579 | Who have we next? |
38579 | Who is now fluttering in thy snare? |
38579 | Who is this a picture of on the wall? |
38579 | Who of this crowd to- night shall tread The dance till daylight gleam again? |
38579 | Who sorrow o''er the untimely dead? |
38579 | Who was the rider of the black horse? |
38579 | Who writhe in throes of mortal pain? |
38579 | Whoever achieved anything great in letters, arts, or arms, who was not ambitious? |
38579 | Whom do you consider the most remarkable man you ever met? |
38579 | Whose honor have I wantonly assailed? |
38579 | Whose life have I unjustly taken, or whose estates have I coveted or robbed? |
38579 | Whose rights, though of the weakest and poorest, have I violated? |
38579 | Why stand we here idle? |
38579 | Why, boy, did ye take me in earnest? |
38579 | Why, boy, do ye think ye''ll suffer? |
38579 | Why, how ole am de gal? |
38579 | Why, just suppose it was you? |
38579 | Why, you''ll reform, and what will then become of Father Paul?" |
38579 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
38579 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
38579 | Will you let me ask you certain questions calculated to bring out the salient points of your public and private history?" |
38579 | Would that be an evil? |
38579 | Would you mind telling me what peculiar circumstance it was that made you think Burr was such a remarkable man? |
38579 | Yer''ll nebber forgit how Jake tuk keer of yer an''de chilluns when ole marster gone to de war? |
38579 | You might make her look all mended-- but what do I care for looks? |
38579 | You say he spoke to you, and that he was dead? |
38579 | You will forgive my presumption, will you not, and speak the words that tremble on your lips-- the words that will fill my cup of joy to overflowing?" |
38579 | You will give me steed to fly afar, To my love in the deserts of Khandakar?" |
38579 | _ A._ Why, have you noticed that? |
38579 | _ A._ Why, what makes you think that? |
38579 | _ Q._ But was n''t he dead? |
38579 | _ Q._ How could I think otherwise? |
38579 | _ Q._ What do_ you_ think? |
38579 | _ Q._ When did you begin to write? |
38579 | _ Q._ Why, how could that be, if you are only nineteen now? |
38579 | _ Q._ Why, is he dead, then? |
38579 | _ Question._ How old are you? |
38579 | _ You_ may call it a"drug store,"but does n''t God know? |
38579 | again demanded the woman,"or do you want me to come out there to you with a stick? |
38579 | are you Americans, men, and fly before British soldiers? |
38579 | came another call, short and sharp;"do you hear me?" |
38579 | do you hear your mother?" |
38579 | doan''yer hear de bells ob heaven a- ringing? |
38579 | have ye the pot bilin''?" |
38579 | really, have I? |
38579 | the angel solemnly demanded:"Is there indeed no end, and is this the sorrow that kills you?" |
38579 | think''st thou yon sanguine cloud Raised by thy breath, can quench the orb of day? |
38579 | what do you think of that?" |
38579 | what do you want of a heathen doll?" |
38579 | when ye come from heaven, my little name- sake dear, Did ye see,''mongst the little girls there, a face like this one here? |
38579 | where is the land that each mortal loves best, The land that is dearest and fairest on earth? |
38579 | who caused your stern heart to relent, And the hasty words spoken so soon to repent? |
38579 | whose breath Waves through the mother''s hair? |
6186 | Am I not a white man''s wife? |
6186 | Are you comin''with me, Nance, dear? |
6186 | But I mus''to get there, an''you- you will to help me, eh? |
6186 | But if the white man''s Medicine fail? |
6186 | But if there were the Sun Medicine also, the Medicine of the days long ago? |
6186 | But now? |
6186 | Ca n''t have a fire, I suppose? |
6186 | Clint right or wrong? 6186 Do you think you could stand a little parting?" |
6186 | Do you want to risk all and lose? |
6186 | Have all your dreams come true, my mother? |
6186 | Have you told her you''ve got a wife-- down East? 6186 Hiding him away here--""Hiding? |
6186 | How d''ye cook without fire? |
6186 | How long? |
6186 | How long? |
6186 | Is that your shack-- that where you shake down? |
6186 | It is Medicine for a white man, will it be Medicine for an Indian? |
6186 | Long way, I no can get dere in time? |
6186 | My name''s Buckmaster, ai n''t it-- Jim Buckmaster? 6186 No chance to get him at the Fort?" |
6186 | Qui va la? 6186 Qui va la? |
6186 | Show you what? |
6186 | Take me with you-- me-- where? |
6186 | Tell me again-- it is so at last? |
6186 | Tell me,she said quietly--"tell me how you are able to save Haman?" |
6186 | Then the moon''s up almost? |
6186 | There-- rock? |
6186 | Was it any of your business, Abe? |
6186 | Was that all Ricketts told you, Buck? |
6186 | Water? |
6186 | What are you doing out there, Mitiahwe? |
6186 | What did I say? |
6186 | What do you mean? |
6186 | What does he know about the business? 6186 What for?" |
6186 | What has happened? 6186 What have you to do with Haman?" |
6186 | What is it, Mitiahwe? |
6186 | What is that? |
6186 | What time is it? |
6186 | What time, if please? |
6186 | What was it you were saying? 6186 What was the story Ricketts told you? |
6186 | What''s that-- what''s that you say? 6186 What''s the use of my hearin''? |
6186 | When did you eat last? |
6186 | When was that? |
6186 | Why did n''t Ricketts tell it right out at once? |
6186 | Why did n''t you tell me he was here? |
6186 | Why do you do this kind of thing? 6186 Why do you want to go the''quick''way to Askatoon?" |
6186 | Why do you want to go the''quick''way to Askatoon? |
6186 | Why, gol darn it, Nance, what''s got into you? 6186 Will you not to show me?" |
6186 | Would n''t it be better for the law to hang him, if you''ve got the proof, Buck? 6186 You can show me dat way?" |
6186 | You go on-- how can you go on? |
6186 | You not happy-- you not like me here? |
6186 | You''re sure Greevy killed your boy, Buck? |
6186 | You''re sure he did it? |
6186 | Your old home was in Nove Scotia, was n''t it, Dingan? |
6186 | A nice quiet time coming on the border, Abe, eh?" |
6186 | A year or so in jail, an''a long time to think over what''s going round his neck on the scaffold-- wouldn''t that suit you, if you''ve got the proof?" |
6186 | And now that Mitiahwe had been told that he would go, what would she do? |
6186 | Anne?" |
6186 | Are you a colonel, or a captain, or only a principal private?" |
6186 | Are you comin''?" |
6186 | But if there were the red man''s Medicine too--""What is the red man''s Medicine?" |
6186 | D''ye see?" |
6186 | Did I not see it all in my dream, and follow after them to take them to my heart? |
6186 | Did I? |
6186 | Do n''t I know my own name? |
6186 | Have you told her that you''ve got a wife you married when you were at college-- and as good a girl as ever lived?" |
6186 | He was sure to do it; and, when he had done it, and found her gone on this errand, what would he do? |
6186 | Herself-- to leave her here, who had been so much to him? |
6186 | His people? |
6186 | His return? |
6186 | How goes it-- all right?" |
6186 | How long have I slept?" |
6186 | I''m a bit of hickory, I''m not a prairie- flower--""Who said you was a prairie- flower? |
6186 | Is it so, ma''m''selle?" |
6186 | Never-- wronged- a- woman? |
6186 | Presently he said, holding out his pipe,"You not like smoke, mebbe?" |
6186 | Shall the white man''s Medicine fail? |
6186 | She called into the icy void,"Qui va la? |
6186 | Then I waked with a cry, but my man was beside me, and his arm was round my neck; and this dream, is it not a foolish dream, my mother?" |
6186 | Walk into the parlour?" |
6186 | Was he going? |
6186 | Were they both thinking of the same thing now? |
6186 | What did he ever do but what was right? |
6186 | What did your boy tell Ricketts? |
6186 | What had she said to the prisoner? |
6186 | What was Ba''tiste to her? |
6186 | What would she herself do if she were in Mitiahwe''s place? |
6186 | What''s got into you, Abe?" |
6186 | What''s he doing out here? |
6186 | What''s she to me?" |
6186 | When Long Hand comes, what will Mitiahwe say to him?" |
6186 | Where?" |
6186 | Who goes?" |
6186 | Who is it? |
6186 | Who is it?" |
6186 | Who were you speaking to?" |
6186 | Who''s been hiding him? |
6186 | Why are you off the trail?" |
6186 | Why did Ba''tiste haunt her so? |
6186 | Why do you smuggle?" |
6186 | Why had she not gone with him and attempted the shorter way the quick way, he had called it? |
6186 | Why had she not gone with him? |
6186 | Would he go? |
6186 | Would he reach Askatoon in time, she wondered, as she shut the door? |
6186 | You comin''with me, Nance?" |
6186 | You remember how Clint used to laugh sort of low and teasin''like-- you remember that laugh o''Clint''s, do n''t you?" |
6186 | You''re ready to step in when he steps out, ai n''t you, Lablache?" |
35214 | ''Tis true I heard something that sounded like a threat; but what need you fear from a man who can have no control over you or your sister? 35214 A covenant?" |
35214 | A gentleman accompanied them? |
35214 | An old school- fellow of yours, is he not? |
35214 | And M''amselle De Hauteroche? |
35214 | And did they embark in her? |
35214 | And do you think she is on her way to Cincinatti now? |
35214 | And from whom? 35214 And is it not?" |
35214 | And now he is an officer in the Mexican army? |
35214 | And now, sir, may I ask you to certify that you have recovered your mare, since that will be necessary to enable me to recover my money? |
35214 | And what occurred at our first interview? |
35214 | And who has said all this? |
35214 | And who was it? |
35214 | And you are certain she is now on the way to Cincinatti? |
35214 | And you have not had it off since? |
35214 | And you will go with me? 35214 And you?" |
35214 | And your sister-- has she had a letter since? |
35214 | Answer me, Pluto,said I, addressing myself to the domestic,"you say you drove your mistress and Mademoiselle to the boat-- the_ Missouri Belle_?" |
35214 | Are that what you''re arter, old Rube? |
35214 | Are you certain of that? |
35214 | Are you safe? |
35214 | Are you sure of that? |
35214 | At what hotel have they stopped? |
35214 | Bah.--Is it a thief send a challenge to a gentleman? 35214 Besides, the climate of Jalapa is much more favourable to the healing of wounds-- is it not?" |
35214 | Besides, where is old Pluto? 35214 But did your sister accompany you in the campaign?" |
35214 | But where are you going? |
35214 | By a Texan Ranger? |
35214 | Card!--what card? |
35214 | Come, my man,said I,"what''s the meaning of that?" |
35214 | Craze, massr? 35214 Did I understand you to say that the boat we have just met-- the_ Missouri Belle_--is in the Ohio trade?" |
35214 | Do you perceive any change in me since we parted? 35214 Does Monsieur Despard live here?" |
35214 | Dog- gone it, wur it you? 35214 Durnation dark-- whar are we anyhow?" |
35214 | Early,_ mon frere_? 35214 Follow them, of course?" |
35214 | Gorry, massr; p''raps Massr Looey, he no let me tell? |
35214 | Has there been any letter addressed to Monsieur Luis De Hauteroche? |
35214 | Have you ever heard the name of Ramon Rayas? |
35214 | He has not succeeded in--? |
35214 | He made that offer? |
35214 | He would be safer in Jalapa? |
35214 | How came she to be here to- night? |
35214 | How could that affect my recovery? 35214 How feel you now?" |
35214 | How long do you keep guard here? |
35214 | How long have you had that coat on? |
35214 | How much? |
35214 | How war I to get at the water o''that river, that flowed so tauntinly jess out o''reach? 35214 How? |
35214 | I can; but this mare is no mustang? |
35214 | I hope there is no danger of your losing her? |
35214 | I will, but what do you intend? |
35214 | I''ll watch''em-- say, what boat was that? |
35214 | If what, Capitan Rayas? |
35214 | In what quarter, Monsieur? |
35214 | Is this your_ real_ address? |
35214 | Is your gun loaded, senhor? |
35214 | It is possible he may have lost your card? 35214 Look there!--perhaps you will deny having given it?" |
35214 | Lost my card? 35214 May I ask Monsieur, what business has brought him into the streets at such an hour of the morning?" |
35214 | May I beseech you to open the door? |
35214 | May I request you to keep them in safety until I can have an opportunity to send for them? |
35214 | May I take my own men? |
35214 | Monsieur Despard, I believe? |
35214 | Moss''r Despard? 35214 Mummeries?" |
35214 | My friend,he exclaimed on entering,"what can this mean? |
35214 | My friends will confirm it? |
35214 | Nay, please answer my question-- how long? |
35214 | Not that I am aware off,_ mon ami_; but pray why do you make these inquiries? |
35214 | Now, Monsieur, do you apologise? |
35214 | Of what boat are you speaking? |
35214 | Oh, Senor,she cried, making the appeal to myself,"will you call him back to-- to see Calros?" |
35214 | Perhaps he is hunting up a friend? |
35214 | Perhaps they are up in the town? |
35214 | Ramon Rayas,I said, as soon as the girl was gone out of hearing--"This Ramon Rayas appears to be no friend of yours?" |
35214 | Raw? |
35214 | Shall I ever see her again? |
35214 | Shall I ever see her again? |
35214 | She was lately stolen from you? |
35214 | Surely you must be mistaken-- it might have been some other hand? |
35214 | Tapado? |
35214 | The Madame may have business? |
35214 | The blood upon his bosom-- his cheeks-- you see--''tis fresh? |
35214 | The mare-- well, what of her? |
35214 | The mouth of the Ohio? |
35214 | The zact figger yer want? |
35214 | This is your mare? |
35214 | To France? |
35214 | To Jalapa, I presume? |
35214 | To whom? |
35214 | To- day, do you mean? |
35214 | Trapped in a tree? |
35214 | Wal, strenger, I haint yet got to the eend o''my story-- I s''pose you wish to hear the hul on it? |
35214 | Wal, strenger, what do ye suppose I did next? |
35214 | Wal; ye do n''t suppose I kim down from the tree? |
35214 | We are medicos-- doctor--_entiende usted_? |
35214 | Well, Joao, what is it? |
35214 | Well, Major,I replied, for L-- as well as myself had gained a"step"--"what is it?" |
35214 | Well, my dear sir,I asked, after a pause,"how am I to know that your statement is true?" |
35214 | Well, senor,I asked,"what is it?" |
35214 | What business, Monsieur, but that of my profession? |
35214 | What can all this mean? 35214 What do you mean to do?" |
35214 | What has that to do with the Capitan Rayas? |
35214 | What is it, my dear L--? 35214 What is it,_ dear_ Lola?" |
35214 | What is it? |
35214 | What matter,added I,"about the other having gone astray? |
35214 | What of all that, hombre? |
35214 | What of_ him_? |
35214 | What other errand? 35214 What then?" |
35214 | What treasure? |
35214 | What will they think of my riding past in this ludicrous style? |
35214 | What,I repeated to myself,"can Madame Dardonville have to do on a Cincinatti boat? |
35214 | What? |
35214 | When did you last hear from Madame Dardonville? |
35214 | When that time arrove whar shed I be? 35214 Where may I find him?" |
35214 | Where was it? |
35214 | Where? |
35214 | Which of them? 35214 Which one-- who?" |
35214 | Which, then, Lola? |
35214 | Who has hid her? |
35214 | Who is it? |
35214 | Who said it was Monsieur De Hauteroche? |
35214 | Who would not love her? |
35214 | Who, then, does the marketing for you? |
35214 | Who-- who is he? |
35214 | Whose then? 35214 Why do you think so?" |
35214 | Why is it that the wolves have left_ their_ bodies untouched? |
35214 | Why is it? |
35214 | Why not take her with you, then? |
35214 | Why not? 35214 Why, Monsieur? |
35214 | Why, Pluto, where should I have come from, but from home?--from New Orleans? |
35214 | Why, stranger, whar else''ud she be goin''? |
35214 | Why, then, has she been marked? |
35214 | Why? |
35214 | Will you have the goodness to order one of your servants to remove the saddle and bridle? |
35214 | Will you have the goodness to say that a gentleman wishes a word with him? |
35214 | Will you not give him an hour''s grace? 35214 Ye''re Mexicans, are ye? |
35214 | Yes,I said, reaching forward and taking my double- barrelled piece from its rest--"what is it?" |
35214 | You are not disposed to give her up, then? |
35214 | You are speaking of Ramon Rayas? |
35214 | You have an agent in Mexico,continued I,"who has claimed this animal in your name?" |
35214 | You have not been in the battle by your own will, then? |
35214 | You have not been out of the office either? |
35214 | You know him, then? |
35214 | You refuse to give me twenty men? |
35214 | You saw an officer among them, did you not?--a handsome young officer? |
35214 | You say, then, the mare is yours? |
35214 | You see those spots of blood on your shirt- bosom? 35214 You think there''s something in their flesh that the wolves do n''t relish-- something different from that of other people?" |
35214 | You wo n''t tell me? |
35214 | _ Think_ you have a chance to recover? 35214 A body of your troops will likely remain there for some time? |
35214 | A duel?" |
35214 | A heavy foot was heard inside: some one coming along the hallway? |
35214 | A quarrel? |
35214 | A slatternly female-- a mulatto-- half asleep, came slippering along the hall; and, on reaching the door, drawled out:--"_Que voulez vous, Mosheu_?" |
35214 | After a little puzzling and adjusting of hair, I made out the letter C."What is this?" |
35214 | After all, what good could come of it? |
35214 | After such a scene as that witnessed by the_ rancheria_ of El Plan, it could not much astonish me to find the sister of Cairo? |
35214 | Against whom?" |
35214 | Ai nt it, Bill?" |
35214 | Ai nt she, Bill?" |
35214 | And those are the eagles I purchased from Mrs Stump?" |
35214 | And what, after all, was there strange in it? |
35214 | And you will go, then?" |
35214 | Are you dead? |
35214 | At daybreak old Riley shouted,"Forward and give them hell?" |
35214 | At least, one of them might have been playing sentinel, I think?" |
35214 | Beside, what chance o''her findin''me in a track o''timmer twenty mile in sarcumference? |
35214 | But do tell, Massr Looey, whar be de ma''m an''ma''aselle?" |
35214 | But how did you get her back again?" |
35214 | But say, Massr Looey, why hab you come back? |
35214 | But was he dead? |
35214 | But what can be his motive for attempting to take your life?" |
35214 | But what mattered it, so long as there would be no one to witness the event? |
35214 | But what reason had I to think it was he? |
35214 | But why should Madame Dardonville adopt this roundabout method, and especially at such a time? |
35214 | Ca n''t I, Bill?" |
35214 | Ca n''t you, ole gurl?" |
35214 | Capitan Rayas did n''t, I know; or why should he have offered an onza to any one who would tell him?" |
35214 | Could it be doubted that of some one of them she had reciprocated the passion? |
35214 | Could it not be easily explained? |
35214 | Could the enemy have attacked us? |
35214 | Desirous of tempting him to the relation of it, I continued,"Trapped in a tree? |
35214 | Did De Hauteroche receive a letter that morning, and from Saint Louis? |
35214 | Did Lola comprehend it? |
35214 | Did Madame tell you where she was going?" |
35214 | Did n''t I come to make certain that your wound was mortal? |
35214 | Did n''t I drive you all''board de boat yes''day noon, and sure massr, I han''t seed none ob you since den?" |
35214 | Did she expect us to follow her there? |
35214 | Did she suspect it? |
35214 | Do n''t all the world come here? |
35214 | For what purpose could_ she_ be going to Cincinatti? |
35214 | From you, sir?" |
35214 | Had I heard aright? |
35214 | Had I lost my two hundred and fifty dollars? |
35214 | Had Lola been already the victim of a misfortune? |
35214 | Had Madame Dardonville not written after all? |
35214 | Had she written again, and once more altered the arrangement? |
35214 | Had the death of his intended victim been caused by the shot- wound in the thigh, hastened by the terror of that horrid threat? |
35214 | Had the murderer succeeded in his design? |
35214 | Had the robber, after all, failed in his fatal thrust? |
35214 | Had the wretch any right to apply that vile epithet"putita?" |
35214 | Had this individual been overlooked? |
35214 | Has he fulfilled his vow?" |
35214 | Have you ever seen this weapon before?" |
35214 | He professes to be her very best friend-- at least her lover, which should be the same thing? |
35214 | Hev they, Bill?" |
35214 | Hope dar''s nuffin wrong, massr?" |
35214 | How could that be, Mr Stump, an old forester like you?" |
35214 | How ked they be other''ise, eatin''nothin''but them red peppers, an''thur garlic, an''thur half- rotten jirk- meat? |
35214 | How learnt you his name?" |
35214 | How was I to get out of it? |
35214 | How, then, do you support yourself?" |
35214 | How? |
35214 | How?" |
35214 | How?" |
35214 | I can think of no means-- how would you act?" |
35214 | I had the presentiment of an evil-- but what evil? |
35214 | I hope none for the worse, eh?" |
35214 | I might put them on their guard; but surely they had received warning already-- sufficient to stimulate them to the utmost caution? |
35214 | I shall give him sweet water; shall I, father?" |
35214 | I was going to say my liberty, but that''s not true: else why am I dragged from my home to fight battles in which I have no interest? |
35214 | If I have overheard you aright, it is your wish I should see some one who is wounded-- some one dear to you, no doubt?" |
35214 | Is it to torture a dying man?" |
35214 | Is it, Billee?" |
35214 | Is_ she_ of that opinion?" |
35214 | It may still be possible to intercept this villainous adventurer, and frustrate his scheme of infamy?" |
35214 | It was Calros, silent, but not asleep; speechless and motionless; perhaps dead? |
35214 | Monsieur, for heaven''s sake, explain to me if you can?" |
35214 | Monsieur-- is what you tell me true?" |
35214 | Monsieur-- you are jesting?" |
35214 | Monsieur_, do you still continue your insults? |
35214 | Mora, Morita, digame de donde viene, Morita_?" |
35214 | Much dirt in the water?" |
35214 | My watch is gone-- it was taken from my fob here: you see_ this_, gentlemen?" |
35214 | Need I say that he had troops of them? |
35214 | Not content with persecuting you with his infamous proposals, he has followed me, even to the field of battle? |
35214 | Now er yer satisfied?" |
35214 | Of course you intend to challenge him?" |
35214 | Oh!--""That may all be; I doubt it not; but what else can you do?" |
35214 | One of the men would have to be dismounted, in order that the officer might ride; but how was the man to be taken along? |
35214 | Or could she be acquainted with the more particular fact, as to who was the individual made prisoner? |
35214 | Or had I properly interpreted what I had heard? |
35214 | Perhaps I was mistaken about the voice? |
35214 | Perhaps he may send this morning?" |
35214 | Perhaps he might mean prospectively? |
35214 | Perhaps my thoughts were his? |
35214 | Perhaps she had written a third letter, which had not reached New Orleans at the time of our leaving it? |
35214 | Perhaps she knows that the boat is near: she may have heard it from below, and has driven up to the landing to meet us? |
35214 | Perhaps she would only go as far as the Ohio mouth, in this boat, and there wait for another, coming down the Ohio river? |
35214 | Perhaps they had something to say to each other which should not be overheard by any one? |
35214 | Perhaps this card will refresh it; or do you repudiate that also?" |
35214 | Perhaps when you have seen Olympe--""And what of Olympe?" |
35214 | Perhaps you can explain it? |
35214 | Perhaps you do not remember me?" |
35214 | Perhaps, only a domestic? |
35214 | Presuming on our friendly intimacy, I put the question:"How do you make out to live? |
35214 | Shall we proceed to the Rue de Bourgogne?" |
35214 | She regarded it as somewhat eccentric; but Luis De Hauteroche was to her, nearest and dearest, and how could she refuse compliance with his proposal? |
35214 | Should I confess all, and throw myself on their mercy? |
35214 | Should I go on to the hotel and meet his second? |
35214 | Some distant relative or retainer? |
35214 | Some friend, perhaps, of the family? |
35214 | Some old remembrance connected with her? |
35214 | Still in the tree ov coorse; but whar war my purvision to cum from? |
35214 | Sure missa an''Ma''aselle''Lympe are safe? |
35214 | Surely it was not for him? |
35214 | Surely the horse had not slackened his speed? |
35214 | Surely there is something astray?" |
35214 | That''s why she whighers, ai nt it, Bill?" |
35214 | The bullet has passed through your thigh-- what of that? |
35214 | The dialogue ran thus:--"Who goes there?" |
35214 | The horses will be ready by this, and the rest will be waiting; come Henry, you will go? |
35214 | The incident of meeting a steamboat on the Mississippi? |
35214 | The sister of a common soldier-- for such was the rank of Calros-- what harm could be done? |
35214 | There was but one shipment from port to port, and where could be the risk? |
35214 | There was hardly time to have changed it? |
35214 | There was no copy of a will?" |
35214 | They must certainly hear the blowing of our grand boat? |
35214 | They were growing worse, when--""You sent her out of his reach?" |
35214 | Through what part of the body are you perforated?" |
35214 | Was Moro stung by my reproach? |
35214 | Was it dew from the grass? |
35214 | Was it my destiny to inspire this passion? |
35214 | Was it possible I could have made a mistake, and had, in transatlantic phrase"waked up the wrong passenger?" |
35214 | Was it possible of accomplishment? |
35214 | Was it possible the boat was not_ then_ on her way to New Orleans? |
35214 | Was it some new arrangement of ownership, not yet completed? |
35214 | Was it the company of De Hauteroche himself or that of Adele, his fair sister, that drew me so often thither? |
35214 | Was it the name of the boat, which I had been enabled to decipher? |
35214 | Was it the weapon of the wounded man, or that I had lately seen in the hand of his enemy? |
35214 | Was it the_ medico_ who dressed my wound? |
35214 | Was she aware of the capture which they had made-- an officer of the American army? |
35214 | Was that grand triumph to be mine? |
35214 | Was there no help to come from God? |
35214 | Was this cause of detention unexpectedly removed? |
35214 | What a sad spectacle for the eye of the loved Dolores-- the_ loving_ Dolores-- how could I doubt it? |
35214 | What am I to do with her?" |
35214 | What are you talking of? |
35214 | What conditions? |
35214 | What could it be? |
35214 | What could the man mean by the boat no longer running to Orleans? |
35214 | What d''ye want hyar?" |
35214 | What danger, then, either to himself or to his sister? |
35214 | What did it mean? |
35214 | What else?" |
35214 | What had become of the original"mount"? |
35214 | What had he to gain by fighting with such a man? |
35214 | What has brought you hither? |
35214 | What is it? |
35214 | What is your business?" |
35214 | What mean you, Lola?" |
35214 | What means this rudeness?" |
35214 | What of that? |
35214 | What say you, camarados?" |
35214 | What say you, senorita?" |
35214 | What want you with me? |
35214 | What was my astonishment-- consternation, I may say-- on discovering its true character? |
35214 | What was the explanation? |
35214 | What wish? |
35214 | What wrong could I be dreaming about? |
35214 | What, then, could Casey gain in measuring weapons with a character of this kind? |
35214 | When could we start for Wheeling? |
35214 | Whence had these blood- drops proceeded? |
35214 | Where are they?" |
35214 | Where is Dolores?" |
35214 | Where is the wound that has robbed you of life, and me of my only friend? |
35214 | Where was that just given by the sword of the Salteador? |
35214 | Where?--where?" |
35214 | Who are you? |
35214 | Who but I could have been his slayer? |
35214 | Who is to carry him there-- a poor soldier?" |
35214 | Who wud supply me wi''fish an''flesh an''fowl, as the eagles had done? |
35214 | Why are the windows closed? |
35214 | Why did Lola not look round? |
35214 | Why do you not answer me? |
35214 | Why had I not thought of it before? |
35214 | Why hinder me-- I who love her as my own life? |
35214 | Why should he? |
35214 | With such a prospect, when might I stray towards Lagarto? |
35214 | Would she have preferred the road to Jalapa? |
35214 | Would they awake? |
35214 | Would you like to go there? |
35214 | Yer can see that, kint ye?" |
35214 | You can not know anything of him? |
35214 | You heard a shot? |
35214 | You know de_ Belle_ did n''t start till near night; an''how could you a got dar? |
35214 | You know what I''m trackin''up, Bill Garey? |
35214 | You may recover from it, if--""You think I have a chance to recover?" |
35214 | You will stand by us?" |
35214 | You would think some one would be on the look out? |
35214 | You''s only a playin''possum wi''de ole nigga? |
35214 | _ She_ might comprehend it, and to my prejudice-- perhaps deem me importunate? |
35214 | and by the_ Sultana_, too? |
35214 | and for what end? |
35214 | and had she, in consequence, started southward, without waiting for the_ Sultana_? |
35214 | and on such a beautiful morning? |
35214 | and was she bound round to Cincinatti? |
35214 | and, least of all, at such a crisis-- when she should be expecting her friends from the south? |
35214 | called the voice,"was it you I heard? |
35214 | can you?" |
35214 | continued she, after a pause,"surely they expect us? |
35214 | drive who?" |
35214 | exclaimed Adele,"I feel cold enough; you see, I shiver? |
35214 | exclaimed one of the men, who appeared to be of easy conscience himself;"what if the Capitan Rayas has done a little business on the road? |
35214 | he gasped out,"what can this fellow mean?" |
35214 | hope dar''s nuffin wrong? |
35214 | interrogated the first speaker,"what do ye konklude from thet?" |
35214 | my friend, what''s the matter?" |
35214 | or had her letter miscarried? |
35214 | perhaps even through the delay caused by myself, and which had separated her from her escort of Jarochos? |
35214 | she''s in the Ohio trade now?" |
35214 | that is your errand?" |
35214 | war de dibbil hab you come from?" |
35214 | wha''did you leave missa and Ma''aselle''Lympe?" |
35214 | what am I talking of? |
35214 | what could it mean? |
35214 | what mean you?" |
35214 | what use in spilling one''s blood for a country that''s not free? |
35214 | what, then?" |
35214 | where Calypse and Chloe? |
35214 | whose blood?" |
35214 | whose is it then?" |
35214 | you it war, ye say, young feller?" |
35214 | you traffic in these?" |
35214 | you will forgive me?" |
35214 | you will not be here so soon?" |
5391 | All? |
5391 | And did you know that Mr. Brice had gone out, with letters, when the Judge was better? |
5391 | And he means to stay here in the heat and go through, the campaign? |
5391 | And is there nothing-- for me? |
5391 | And now? |
5391 | And so they are going into the house? |
5391 | And what did you say? |
5391 | And why did you always fight the aristocrats? |
5391 | And you, Lige? |
5391 | And your conscience? |
5391 | And your family? |
5391 | Are you doing this for a reward? |
5391 | Are you sure that that is all? |
5391 | Brinsmade,he said,"do you remember this room in May,''46?" |
5391 | Broadswords? |
5391 | But where? 5391 Could n''t you contrive to come?" |
5391 | Did she answer your letter? |
5391 | Did she mention Stephen? |
5391 | Did she speak of him? |
5391 | Did you mean the Judge? |
5391 | Did you rent our house at Glencoe? |
5391 | Do you guess we can keep off the subject, Comyn? |
5391 | Do you mean war? |
5391 | Do you really think that Tom is with the Yankees? |
5391 | Do you recall the day you left your Harvard, and your Boston, my friend? |
5391 | Do you think that Lincoln would make a good President? |
5391 | Has he treated you badly, Ephum? |
5391 | Have n''t you a costume? |
5391 | Have you read the President''s message to Congress, sir? 5391 He is not coming?" |
5391 | Here? |
5391 | How about Judge Whipple? |
5391 | How do you know? |
5391 | I told you that we stayed with a real lord in England, did n''t I? |
5391 | Is n''t she to marry him? |
5391 | Is that all, Jinny? |
5391 | It does not make any difference to you what my politics are, does it? |
5391 | It was I who stopped you,she said;"I was waiting for--""For whom?" |
5391 | Jinny,he said,"what is the matter?" |
5391 | Lige, why do n''t you give up steamboating and come along to Europe? 5391 Lige, you''re not such a fool as to vote against the Union?" |
5391 | Lige,he said,"is n''t it about time you got married?" |
5391 | Making a case, Brice? |
5391 | Marse Comyn? |
5391 | My dear, what will Mr. Brice think of us? |
5391 | Oh, Puss,cried Anne, that evening, for Miss Russell had come to spend the night,"how could you have talked to him so? |
5391 | Oh, why do you ask that? |
5391 | Pa said something about them to- night,she answered; why?" |
5391 | See here, Mr. Korner,said he,"how did Richter come by that scar? |
5391 | Shall I tell you a secret? |
5391 | Stephen,said the Judge( here the surprise came in),"Stephen, what do you think of Mr. Lincoln''s chances for the Republican nomination?" |
5391 | The foxes? |
5391 | Then-- then you wo n''t marry me? |
5391 | They have dared to nominate that dirty Lincoln,he said.--"Do you think that we will submit to nigger equality rule? |
5391 | Tom, what does this mean? |
5391 | Uncle Silas,she said,"are n''t you coming to dinner any more?" |
5391 | What did he do? |
5391 | What is it? |
5391 | What makes you so late? |
5391 | What then? |
5391 | What''s the matter with you, Ephum? |
5391 | Where have you been? |
5391 | Where was Stephen Brice last night, Jack? |
5391 | Whom did he mean, Jinny? |
5391 | Whom have you invited, Anne? |
5391 | Why could n''t things remain as they were? |
5391 | Why did you come? |
5391 | Why is n''t he coming? |
5391 | Why not? |
5391 | Why should I set him upon a pedestal? |
5391 | Why, Jinny,cried Mr. Brinsmade,"what does this mean? |
5391 | Why? |
5391 | Yes? |
5391 | You did not wish me to come? |
5391 | You expected it? |
5391 | You may remember a night at my uncle''s, Colonel Carvel''s, on the occasion of my cousin''s birthday? |
5391 | You mean that this white trash Lincoln may be President? |
5391 | ''He said that to Colonel Carvel?" |
5391 | ''May I ask you what price you got for it?'' |
5391 | Abraham Lincoln would not have blushed between honest clerks and farmers Why should Stephen Brice? |
5391 | Am I to be confronted with that Yankee everywhere I go? |
5391 | And what mystery was it that sent him here this night of all nights? |
5391 | And what, after all, was this girl to him? |
5391 | And when?" |
5391 | And who shall blame him if Miss Virginia''s replies to his sallies enchained him? |
5391 | And yet why should he let his pride and his feelings stand in the way of the health-- perhaps of the life-- of Judge Whipple? |
5391 | Are n''t you going to kiss me?" |
5391 | Brice?" |
5391 | Brice?" |
5391 | Brice?" |
5391 | But now? |
5391 | But suppose he has addressed fifty Lincoln meetings, as they say, is that any reason for making much of him? |
5391 | But what shall we say of Mr. Cluyme, and of a few others whose wealth alone enabled them to be Directors of the Fair? |
5391 | But what was she to say to Virginia? |
5391 | Can you look on while our own states defy us, and not lift a hand? |
5391 | Can you sit still while the Governor and all the secessionists in this state are plotting to take Missouri, too, out of the Union? |
5391 | Could any good come of it all? |
5391 | Could he afford to risk his life in the war that was coming, and leave his mother dependent upon charity? |
5391 | Did he, George? |
5391 | Did it seem long, Jinny?" |
5391 | Did you ever know any one to change so, since this military business has begun? |
5391 | Did you, Jinny?" |
5391 | Do you love your country, sir? |
5391 | Do you remember when you told me that I was good for nothing, that I lacked purpose?" |
5391 | Do you see the Southern delegates rising in their seats? |
5391 | Do you see the bride in her high- waisted gown, and Mr. Calvin in his stock and his blue tail- coat and brass buttons? |
5391 | Eh, Rudolph?" |
5391 | Had it been a dream? |
5391 | Had she done right? |
5391 | Have you seen him since you got home, Jinny? |
5391 | Hessians? |
5391 | Hopper?" |
5391 | How dare you? |
5391 | How long, O Lord?" |
5391 | How many readers will smile before the rest of this true incident is told? |
5391 | I asked Easter where Jinny was, and I found her--""You found her--?" |
5391 | Leaning over in the saddle, he whispered:"I''ll be back in a quarter of an hour Will you wait?" |
5391 | Now that the ocean was to be between them, was it love that she felt for Clarence at last? |
5391 | Now who do you think stopped at the booth for a chat with Miss Jinny? |
5391 | Shall I stand by selfishly and see him ruined, and thousands of others like him?" |
5391 | She wore--"but why destroy the picture? |
5391 | They called the architecture Tudor, did n''t they, Pa?" |
5391 | Was he doing right? |
5391 | Was he like them? |
5391 | Was it''Auld Robin Gray''that she sang? |
5391 | Were there not other qualities? |
5391 | Were they going to be able to keep it off? |
5391 | What could she say to him? |
5391 | What could the Leader and Captain Lyon do without troops? |
5391 | What if she should raise her eyes, and amid those vulgar stares discern his own? |
5391 | What should she say to Clarence now? |
5391 | What, indeed, could he say? |
5391 | When I am a general, will you marry me?" |
5391 | Whether she had read that part before, who shall say? |
5391 | Who bought her, sir? |
5391 | Who made her blush as pink as her Paris gown? |
5391 | Who slipped into her hand the contribution for the church, and refused to take the cream candy she laughingly offered him as an equivalent? |
5391 | Who will you be?" |
5391 | Why listen, to the rumblings in the South? |
5391 | Why mention the dread possibility of the negro- worshiper Lincoln being elected the very next month? |
5391 | Why not, and have done with sickening doubts? |
5391 | Will you go with me, Jinny?" |
5391 | Would it crumble in pieces before Abraham Lincoln got to Washington? |
5391 | exclaimed the disgusted German,"will nothing move you? |
5391 | said Puss, with a thread in her mouth;"why should you all set him upon a pedestal? |
37485 | ''What in blazes be you goin''to do?'' 37485 A dance? |
37485 | Ai n''t it? |
37485 | Alice, if you call him Cookie, he''ll poison you, wo n''t you-- Joe? |
37485 | And did you shoot him after that? |
37485 | And now where is it? |
37485 | And pray when did you learn to ride? |
37485 | And spend the night in the cloud? 37485 And the height?" |
37485 | And where are we going? |
37485 | And where''s Joe? |
37485 | And you''ve eaten it all yourselves? 37485 Any chance to- morrow?" |
37485 | Any ice work? |
37485 | Are n''t you foolish? |
37485 | Are we going to have_ meat_, really, truly meat, for dinner, Cookie? |
37485 | Are you a good cook? |
37485 | Are you all right? 37485 Are you going to make him do it?" |
37485 | Are you really? |
37485 | Are you sure you are n''t hurt, Joe? |
37485 | Are you the cook? |
37485 | As a_ what_? |
37485 | Aw, no, but a feller splashes around washin''his face, and dumpin''the bowl into the slop basin, do n''t he? |
37485 | Boys, had enough slides for to- day? 37485 But I guess it would cost your mother more if you were laid up, would n''t it? |
37485 | But do n''t grizzlies have to fight to kill anything as big as a moose? |
37485 | But have you had any experience rock climbing? |
37485 | But how did it get the name? |
37485 | But it''s been so hard for mother----"It would be harder for her if you could n''t go to school at all-- ever, would n''t it? |
37485 | But ought he to do hard work? |
37485 | But the Ranger? |
37485 | But what I do n''t see,Joe said,"is why the top is n''t just level? |
37485 | But what do you think the old bear did? 37485 But what''s a pow- wow, and why''s it being held here?" |
37485 | But why do they eat such-- such dry stuff? 37485 By glory, do n''t you know what a bighorn is?" |
37485 | Ca n''t you see the marks of their hoofs? 37485 Can I help?" |
37485 | Can I help? |
37485 | Can you count change? |
37485 | Can you make a bed? |
37485 | Can you ride yet? |
37485 | Can you tell us why the Rocky Mountains have n''t any foot- hills? |
37485 | Can you tell us why there are n''t any foot- hills to this range? |
37485 | Can you throw a diamond hitch? |
37485 | Chimney work, or mostly shelf? |
37485 | Come make me some coffee, will you? |
37485 | Could n''t he have my tent, and sleep outdoors? |
37485 | Did n''t you have blankets enough? |
37485 | Did you really get one? |
37485 | Dizzy? |
37485 | Do Chinook winds come before spring? |
37485 | Do the goats use this chimney? |
37485 | Do you fellows really want to help old Joey? |
37485 | Do you mean to tell me the goats walk around on that? |
37485 | Do you mean to tell me we are going over that place? |
37485 | Do you sleep with a small brother? |
37485 | Do you sleep with your windows wide open at night? |
37485 | Do you think we can see one in the Park this summer? |
37485 | Does it? |
37485 | Dr. Meyer,Tom put in,"ought n''t Joe to go away somewhere to the mountains-- the Adirondacks, or Colorado, or-- or some place?" |
37485 | Either of you got your axe on? |
37485 | Forks, what for? 37485 Get a good show?" |
37485 | Getting sort of tired of life? |
37485 | Giving? 37485 Going to leave me here alone?" |
37485 | Good name for it, eh? |
37485 | Guess you ai n''t never been out here before, have you? |
37485 | Have you got lots and lots to eat? 37485 Have you hunted goats?" |
37485 | He''s fed up on glaciers, anyhow, ai n''t you, Val? |
37485 | Hi, Pete, what''s old Stabs- by- Mistake saying? |
37485 | Holy smoke, what did that? |
37485 | How about Cleveland? |
37485 | How are you going to manage it, Tom? |
37485 | How do you feel? |
37485 | How many shots did it take? |
37485 | How on earth did it get up here? |
37485 | How soon can he play? |
37485 | How''d I have''em? 37485 How''d you like this for a souvenir?" |
37485 | How''s that? 37485 Hurt?" |
37485 | I guess it''s my tent and I can do what I please with it, ca n''t I? 37485 I suppose you learned cooking as a scout, too, eh?" |
37485 | I wonder if she''ll buck when we throw a diamond hitch? |
37485 | I''m a regular cowboy now, eh, what? 37485 If a feller fell down there, and they did n''t get him up, and he froze into the ice, would he come out some time at the bottom of the glacier?" |
37485 | In the hammock? |
37485 | Is it a bear? |
37485 | Is it cold? |
37485 | Is it for a party? |
37485 | Is it that far, Mr. Mills-- now, honestly? |
37485 | Is it? |
37485 | Is that a threat or a promise? |
37485 | Is that all? |
37485 | Is that an Indian name? 37485 Is that really a goat? |
37485 | Is that what used to be all over the country, and was called a panther? |
37485 | Is the lake good to swim in? |
37485 | Is-- is there something the matter with me? |
37485 | Is-- is-- has old Joey got consumption? |
37485 | Is_ that_ what we''ve got to climb? |
37485 | It looks like a lake in Switzerland, does n''t it? |
37485 | Joe, can you have breakfast ready then? |
37485 | Kind o''mixed, is n''t it? |
37485 | Let the wild winds howl; what do we care for your old August blizzards? |
37485 | Matter? 37485 Mechanical toy, eh?" |
37485 | Mills, will you breakfast with us? |
37485 | Mills, will you take number one place for a way? 37485 Now you get the big idea, Bob, eh?" |
37485 | Now, where''s this Ranger? 37485 Oh, Dr. Kent, I-- I-- why, what''ll you do?" |
37485 | Oh, could n''t we get up it? |
37485 | Oh, do you? |
37485 | Only four? 37485 Ought n''t my stirrups to be shorter?" |
37485 | Promise for Bob, a threat for Mrs. Jones, I guess,said the Ranger, rising from the ground, and adding,"Who''s ready for bed?" |
37485 | Ready? |
37485 | Saves time, all right,the Ranger agreed,"but what''s to become of me?" |
37485 | Say, I''m patrol leader, ai n''t I? |
37485 | Say, Joe, let me get some of that heat, will you? |
37485 | Say, Joe, old scout, what ails you, anyhow? |
37485 | Say, Joe,he called,"great place for skis, eh?" |
37485 | Say, Mr. Mills,Joe heard Bob call,"has this horse of mine got strong ears?" |
37485 | Say, dad, what''s the matter with you? |
37485 | Say, have you been to see a doctor? |
37485 | Say, he does n''t leave much of you unexplored, does he? |
37485 | Say, he''s my best friend, is n''t he? 37485 Say, how old are you, anyhow? |
37485 | Say, is this August first or January first? |
37485 | Say, ma, how''d you like to be on your prancing steed right now, up on top of the Pass, still seven miles from blighty? 37485 Say, what do you take these sardines out with?" |
37485 | Say, what do you think I am, a millionaire? |
37485 | Say, what you giving us? |
37485 | Say, what''s the matter with you, Spider? 37485 Say,"he called up to the Ranger,"what happens to you if your horse falls off here?" |
37485 | Say,he finally asked,"are we going to_ climb_ that?" |
37485 | Say,it called,"what had we better do?" |
37485 | Scouts are supposed to be cheerful, are n''t they? |
37485 | Scouts never take tips, and that would be a tip, would n''t it, sir, really? 37485 See that house over on the one little island? |
37485 | See why we had the rope? |
37485 | So you are Seymour, eh? |
37485 | Some of us are going to come around every day and''tend to things, so old Joey can mind the doctor, are n''t we, fellows? |
37485 | Some pond, eh? |
37485 | Suppose this boy Tom here can do it? |
37485 | That''s normal, ai n''t it? 37485 The two big ones are silver tips?" |
37485 | The_ what_? |
37485 | These people got wood, and cots, and everything? |
37485 | Think I want to go down the hill again backwards? |
37485 | Think these horses are mules? |
37485 | Walk around? |
37485 | Want a job? |
37485 | Want to be lowered down? |
37485 | Want to climb up that cliff with your rope, Tom? |
37485 | Want to go out on the glacier? |
37485 | Want to pat one? |
37485 | Was Bob as gay as this last night? |
37485 | Well, Joe,Mills said,"they''re keeping you busy, eh? |
37485 | Well, what''s he goin''to say? 37485 Well, what''s your name now?" |
37485 | Well, who be you, and where''d you come from? |
37485 | Well,he said, as he made this second,"you mix''em all inside, do n''t you? |
37485 | Well,he said, finally,"going on?" |
37485 | Well,he said, turning to Joe,"how do you feel this morning? |
37485 | Well--_what_ are you doing? |
37485 | Wha''s''at? |
37485 | What Dr. Meyer-- not Julius Meyer? |
37485 | What a pretty name-- it must be Indian, of course? |
37485 | What are you planning to become? 37485 What did you kill him for, then?" |
37485 | What do you do, throw it around the room? |
37485 | What do you mean, spillin''water on the wall paper? |
37485 | What do you mean-- Big Ben? |
37485 | What do you weigh, Joe? |
37485 | What for? |
37485 | What good''ll that do? 37485 What have you done for him?" |
37485 | What if there should n''t be any caretaker at the hotel at the head of the lake? |
37485 | What is it, Pete? |
37485 | What kind of trees are these? |
37485 | What must he do, doctor? |
37485 | What on earth happened here? |
37485 | What you going to feed''em with? |
37485 | What''s a bighorn? |
37485 | What''s a deer yard? |
37485 | What''s a thunder- storm doing in December? |
37485 | What''s he talking about? |
37485 | What''s it, anyhow? |
37485 | What''s that mountain? |
37485 | What''s that? |
37485 | What''s the big idea? |
37485 | What''s the big idea? |
37485 | What''s the damage, Mr. Rogers? 37485 What''s the matter?" |
37485 | What''s the name of that heavenly little lake? |
37485 | What''s the trouble? 37485 What''s your name?" |
37485 | What''s your pay going to be? |
37485 | What_ are_ you looking at, mother? |
37485 | What_ do_ you mean? 37485 What_ really_ happened?" |
37485 | When you going to show us a bear? |
37485 | Where are the sheets and pillow- cases? |
37485 | Where are we bound to- day? |
37485 | Where are we going to- day? |
37485 | Where are you going to get the chestnuts? |
37485 | Where are you going, Val? |
37485 | Where do I come in, Joe? |
37485 | Where do you come from, anyhow? 37485 Where you going?" |
37485 | Where''d they go to? |
37485 | Where''d you learn all this? |
37485 | Where''s that fish? |
37485 | Where? 37485 Where?" |
37485 | Who is it? |
37485 | Who told you you had tuberculosis? |
37485 | Who was Hugh Monroe? |
37485 | Why Piegan-- and why a pass? |
37485 | Why did n''t you remind me of the forks? |
37485 | Why did n''t you''phone from Many Glacier? |
37485 | Why do n''t we make a toboggan? |
37485 | Why do n''t you christen it Congressman Peter W. Jones Falls? 37485 Why do n''t you get a job in the movies, you''re so graceful?" |
37485 | Why do n''t you go into vaudeville with that act? |
37485 | Why do n''t you take him over and weigh him this afternoon? |
37485 | Why not? 37485 Why not?" |
37485 | Why would n''t he be? 37485 Why?" |
37485 | Wire''s on the bum-- can''t you hurry and''phone? |
37485 | Wo n''t I hurt the horse? |
37485 | Wonder what''s happened since you left? |
37485 | Wonder why they are colored that way? |
37485 | Would n''t you kill a bear if it came for you? |
37485 | Yes, and what about me? 37485 Yes, and who''ll go with me?" |
37485 | Yes, what''s the matter with you? |
37485 | You are? |
37485 | You do n''t know of anybody, do you? |
37485 | You got him, eh? |
37485 | You look like a strong, capable boy, but have you had any experience with rock climbing? |
37485 | You mean I ca n''t play second next week, either? |
37485 | You mean to tell me you''ve come over Swift Current since last night, in that snow, and then through the Chinook? |
37485 | You mean two thousand, all cliff? |
37485 | You really feeling better, old Joey? |
37485 | You want a room with a bath, too? |
37485 | You''ll be cooking for me, wo n''t you? 37485 You-- you mean it?" |
37485 | You? |
37485 | _ He_ told you? |
37485 | _ You_ the man that came over Swift Current yesterday? |
37485 | ''I know it, and you know it,''said the other fellow,''but does the dog know it?''" |
37485 | A dance? |
37485 | About your regular weight?" |
37485 | All right? |
37485 | Am I alone in the camp to- night?" |
37485 | And if you find any better way to earn Joe''s keep out there, where you wo n''t have to take tips to get your living, you take it, wo n''t you?" |
37485 | And we must teach all the scouts to stop sleeping with their windows shut, too, must n''t we?" |
37485 | And what good was a surveyor or an engineer or a forester who did not know his business? |
37485 | Are n''t they ever killed? |
37485 | Are you tired all the time like this?" |
37485 | As soon as the tents were pitched, and lunch was over, Mills said:"Well, who wants to go up to Blackfeet Glacier?" |
37485 | Besides, did n''t we come out here for you to get well? |
37485 | Besides, he had no time, for Mrs. Jones broke in:"Well, I''d like to know if you expect Mrs. Elkins and me to stay here all alone?" |
37485 | Besides, he wanted to go to college, did he not, or to a forestry school? |
37485 | But how was Joe going to get there, and how was he going to live when he got there? |
37485 | Can you cut wood?" |
37485 | Did Tom think you could know your business without studying? |
37485 | Did a bear come into your camp? |
37485 | Did he not know that there were examinations to be passed? |
37485 | Did n''t it, Joe?" |
37485 | Did you ever stand in Broadway below the Woolworth Tower, and look up? |
37485 | Did you keep still as I told you to?" |
37485 | Do n''t they ever miss?" |
37485 | Do n''t you want to see the Rocky Mountains?" |
37485 | Do you know it''s two o''clock?" |
37485 | Do you think I''m goin''to sleep with a grizzly bear''most under my bed?" |
37485 | Eh, wot?" |
37485 | Ever hear of Glacier National Park?" |
37485 | Feel of it, Joe-- ain''t it soft?" |
37485 | Finally Tom said,"Won''t-- won''t you have some breakfast?" |
37485 | Gee, what''s just sitting on the porch for a few weeks? |
37485 | Get it now?" |
37485 | Got a fever?" |
37485 | Has the tenderfoot patrol mutinied?" |
37485 | Have n''t you been to anybody else since, when you did n''t get better?" |
37485 | Have you a cook here?" |
37485 | He sprang to help them up, crying,"Are you hurt?" |
37485 | He''s a good cook, is n''t he?" |
37485 | How are you? |
37485 | How do you like giving instead of receiving?" |
37485 | How was it going to be managed? |
37485 | How wide do you reckon it was?" |
37485 | How''d you have the blankets?" |
37485 | How''ll you like that, Tom?" |
37485 | How''s a feller going to get a bed of coals?" |
37485 | I do n''t suppose you''d let me make you a little present, would you, to show how grateful we are?" |
37485 | I suppose, though, you''d like some grub first, would n''t you?" |
37485 | Is that on the level?" |
37485 | Is that too early, Mills?" |
37485 | It''s Indian, I suppose?" |
37485 | It''s a great forest, is n''t it?" |
37485 | Joe stopped coughing as soon as he could, and demanded,"Well, you do n''t think I keep the old thing around because I like it, do you? |
37485 | Joe''s a Boy Scout, are n''t you, Joe?" |
37485 | Live around here?" |
37485 | Matter?" |
37485 | Mills?" |
37485 | Mills?" |
37485 | Mr. Mills, would n''t we be back in time for Joe to get dinner, if he went?" |
37485 | Mrs. Jones cried, looking up the red precipices of Jackson to the snow- fields far above,"do you suppose there''ll be another one?" |
37485 | My goodness, how does he stick on? |
37485 | Not a very exciting day, you say? |
37485 | Now, would n''t you act so, if you was here for Uncle Sam?" |
37485 | One of the girls beckoned at Tom, as much as to say,"Shall we get him?" |
37485 | Pretty good monument, eh?" |
37485 | Remember, when we went to the White Mountains we got into smaller mountains long before we reached Washington? |
37485 | Ride a horse, either of you?" |
37485 | Rockefeller?" |
37485 | Rogers?" |
37485 | Say, Joe, why do you suppose that range goes right up out of the prairie without any foot- hills? |
37485 | Say, Joe,"Bob called,"if I get a fish early to- morrow, will you cook him for breakfast?" |
37485 | Say, Mr. Mills, how soon are you going to show us that bear? |
37485 | Say, doc, ca n''t you make''em just sick enough so they''ll have to stay?" |
37485 | Seen how they work?" |
37485 | Sick, were you, Mills?" |
37485 | The doctor gazed in silence for several minutes, and then he said,"Tom, how do you like it?" |
37485 | The real wilderness stuff, eh?" |
37485 | The two girls were standing near him, and when they saw him looking, they said,"Is n''t it lovely?" |
37485 | There were kisses and some tears from the women, and a scout cheer from the boys, and cries of"Have you got your axe, Spider?" |
37485 | Tired? |
37485 | Want to see''em dive?" |
37485 | Well, Mr. Mills, did I make good?" |
37485 | What are you studying to be?" |
37485 | What are you trying to do, commit suicide?" |
37485 | What do you take me for?" |
37485 | What do you think I hired this horse for?" |
37485 | What do you think about it?" |
37485 | What is it?" |
37485 | What time is it?" |
37485 | What''ll you take to throw her in the lake?" |
37485 | What''s a tepee camp?" |
37485 | What''s the matter with me going too? |
37485 | What''s the use of being in the House of Representatives if you ca n''t name a dinky little waterfall after yourself?" |
37485 | What''s your friend going to do?" |
37485 | Where are you going to bunk, Joe?" |
37485 | Where''d you get it?" |
37485 | Where''d you get the curry comb? |
37485 | Where''s Val?" |
37485 | Where''s the axe, Joe?" |
37485 | Where?" |
37485 | Why are there any peaks and valleys?" |
37485 | Why did n''t he wait till he had the whole bunch?" |
37485 | Why do n''t you pick a wild, windy, stormy day to go climbing Wilbur? |
37485 | Why not first? |
37485 | Wonder if Mr. Mills will come, or stick it out at the other yard?" |
37485 | Would you like an omelette for supper, Mr. Kent, with some chicken soup and fried potatoes and griddle cakes and coffee?" |
37485 | You all right?" |
37485 | You did n''t say that, did you?" |
37485 | You do n''t have panthers out East any more, do you?" |
37485 | You have n''t got a cold, have you?" |
37485 | You must write to me and tell me about it, wo n''t you?" |
37485 | and"Joe, dear, are you sure you put in your comb and brush?" |
37485 | here?" |
46798 | A rabbit, you say, Dick? |
46798 | An elk? |
46798 | And did he escape without being badly burned? |
46798 | And did the fighting cease immediately? |
46798 | And then what did you do? |
46798 | And when morning comes, how about breakfast? |
46798 | And you slept no more, but stood on guard, not knowing but that the unseen and mysterious foes might return to finish their work? |
46798 | As usual, we have been lucky; when even the water- spouts stand back of us, what have we to fear? |
46798 | But I hope this little adventure is not going to make us think of leaving here, to spend the night under the stars, and in the cold wind? |
46798 | But do you think they noticed us? |
46798 | But have you noticed where they put our guns and powder horns? |
46798 | But he seemed to be of about the same build; and, Dick, you could see nothing to prove that it was any one else, could you? |
46798 | But how long ought it take us to burrow through? |
46798 | But tell me how you would know his trail from any other? 46798 But the sun is only setting, and these Indians never get tired, so what makes you think they will halt?" |
46798 | But what if the lake freezes over, as it may do in very hard winters? |
46798 | But what is it made of, I''d like to know? |
46798 | But what makes it boil that way? 46798 But what of these Indians who attacked your party-- they were not of the Sioux or the Mandan tribes, I take it?" |
46798 | But what will you do with us; I hope you will not send us with the Blackfeet also? |
46798 | But who ever before met with boiling water in the open? |
46798 | But you do not believe such silly stories, I hope? |
46798 | But you must have snatched up your guns and fought them? |
46798 | But, Dick, where is the rope to come from? 46798 Can you see the white man plainly, Dick?" |
46798 | Could that have been our friend Jasper Williams? |
46798 | Could you not see whether they were Indians or otherwise? |
46798 | Could you see our light out there? |
46798 | Dick, what can it mean? |
46798 | Did you go back and try to find it? |
46798 | Do you believe there is any truth in that account, Dick; or can it be set down as a fable, like this Evil Spirit of the land? |
46798 | Do you mean it has come down from the side of the mountain, and filled the opening we used to get in here? |
46798 | Do you mean to say the paper they set such store on is missing? |
46798 | Do you mean to tell me, Roger, that you believe any such thing? |
46798 | Do you really mean it? |
46798 | Do you see what I mean, Dick? |
46798 | Do you think it would be wise? |
46798 | Do you think that awful hole can have any bottom, Dick? |
46798 | Do you think they saw us? |
46798 | Do you think we are safe away, Mayhew? |
46798 | Does it afford you any sort of clue as to the meaning of this mysterious attack in the dark, and the seizure of the paper you were sending home? |
46798 | He must have gotten some of that information from the Blackfoot prisoner the Mandans have in their strong lodge? |
46798 | How can we find a soft place to lie down on, please tell me, Dick? |
46798 | How can we let Beaver Tail know what we are here for, and beg him to help us save Williams from the Frenchmen? |
46798 | How did the news reach camp; and what made the captain allow you to start out almost alone into this heathen land in order to rescue me? |
46798 | How does that happen? |
46798 | How long ago? |
46798 | I hope you are not thinking me silly just because I''ve been complaining of feeling hungry? |
46798 | I try to-- honestly I do, Dick; but what hope have we now? 46798 If they could n''t climb up out of that hole on account of the smooth face of the rock, how shall we go down to help them, Dick?" |
46798 | Is he dead, do you think? |
46798 | Is it far away? |
46798 | Is it time yet, Dick? |
46798 | Is there a chance that we can break loose, tied up as we are? 46798 It strikes me the snow is packed lighter than what we struck at first; what do you think about it, Mayhew?" |
46798 | Listen, Roger, what was that sound? |
46798 | Listen, what do you suppose that sound can be? 46798 Look up, Roger; what do you see?" |
46798 | Look yonder, Dick,he would say huskily,"and tell me is that the old bull just alongside that rock? |
46798 | Not the whistle Jasper Williams taught us to practice, Roger, and which he uses when he wants to communicate with friends? |
46798 | Now that we have burrowed out of that trap, what is the next move, Dick? |
46798 | Of all the strange things, did you ever hear such a terrible groaning before, Dick? |
46798 | Oh, Dick, do you really mean it? |
46798 | Oh, what has happened now? |
46798 | One or the other, what do we care, so long as we can bag him? |
46798 | Searching for something to eat, you mean, do n''t you? |
46798 | Shall I crawl out and fetch in some of that wood, Dick? |
46798 | So he would,admitted the other boy, reluctantly;"but what are we going to do about it, Dick?" |
46798 | So, it was all a dream after all, and mother was not calling me to get up or the griddle cakes would be cold? |
46798 | So, zis is ze young Armstrongs zat I haf ze pleasure to entertain? |
46798 | Stop and consider, did you hear anything said that might give the slightest clue concerning the identity of the thieves? |
46798 | That is easy to say, but where can we go that would be better? |
46798 | That was lucky, at any rate; how came you to have it with you? |
46798 | Then he is n''t down there with you? |
46798 | Then he is still in the camp? |
46798 | Then we may break through at any time; is that it? |
46798 | Then we mean to keep up a blaze all night, no matter what the risk? |
46798 | Then why have we failed to see a single elk, or a lone buffalo? |
46798 | Then why not answer it? |
46798 | Then you did n''t see the jack- rabbit, Roger? |
46798 | There is a gaping hole yonder, you see, Roger? |
46798 | There, did you hear it, Dick? |
46798 | There, did you see him that time? |
46798 | This is an exposed camp, do n''t you think, Roger? |
46798 | We have a short time still before the sun sinks,remarked Dick;"shall we go on further or spend the night here?" |
46798 | We have our guns, it is true, and that I count a fine thing, but of what use are they to us without our powder horns? |
46798 | We know, for have n''t we made use of one when overtaken by a storm? 46798 Well?" |
46798 | Were they English, or frontiersmen, or French? |
46798 | Were you attacked on the way? |
46798 | Were you in camp at the time? |
46798 | What are the prospects, Dick? |
46798 | What business have you trying to make us prisoners? 46798 What can we do, Dick?" |
46798 | What did you think you heard? |
46798 | What does Beaver Tail mean to do? |
46798 | What does he say, Mayhew? |
46798 | What does this mean, Mayhew? |
46798 | What had we better do, Mayhew? |
46798 | What is it, Mayhew? |
46798 | What is it? |
46798 | What is it? |
46798 | What is that? |
46798 | What sort of fresh meat do you mean? |
46798 | What was it happened to make them pass by, and not start up here to see how that stone started to roll down? |
46798 | What will cross our path next, I wonder? |
46798 | When you last examined the tracks left by Jasper Williams and his party, Benjamin, how old did you make them out to be? |
46798 | When? |
46798 | Where are going, Dick? |
46798 | Where else could I take you, except to some place I had seen before? |
46798 | Where is Jasper Williams? |
46798 | Where is Mayhew? |
46798 | Where the rocks seem to drop straight down, you mean? |
46798 | Who knows how that may work out? |
46798 | Why are you so certain of that? |
46798 | Why go that way instead of straight into the West, or turn toward the Southwest? |
46798 | Why should it be considered so? |
46798 | Why, were there white men with the Indians? |
46798 | Why, what happened then? |
46798 | Will he remember us, do you think? |
46798 | Yes, and what did you see? |
46798 | Yes, but tell me how they could have picked_ you_ out as the one bearing it? |
46798 | You did not see anything to tell you the Indians might be camped near here, I suppose, Dick? |
46798 | You do n''t think it feels much like snow, do you, Dick? |
46798 | You do not know certainly, then, that Jasper was captured or killed? |
46798 | You feel sure the lake lies to the east of us, Mayhew, do you not? |
46798 | You have guessed the answer, Dick? |
46798 | You heard me ask Hardy about the exact place they were set upon by the Blackfeet? 46798 You heard what Mayhew just said, and how the man who looked was wounded in the shoulder? |
46798 | You know why we are here in this strange land, then? |
46798 | You mean that Jasper Williams is a prisoner, do you? |
46798 | You mean we''ve got a general idea where that valley they are heading for lies, and might get there even without following their trail; is that it? |
46798 | You recognize the name, then, do you? |
46798 | Zat sounds very good, but how am I to know zat you vill not try to escape if ze bonds zey are remove? |
46798 | And do you think we can recover them again?" |
46798 | And will he take us there, and help us rescue Jasper?" |
46798 | Are you depending on Mayhew to come to our rescue? |
46798 | Are you starting to work your hands free, Dick? |
46798 | But go on, Mayhew, have you other distressing news for us? |
46798 | But what are the men running to the other side of the camp for, do you suppose?" |
46798 | But where can we get such a thing now?" |
46798 | But why should Dick show signs of satisfaction; for that was clearly expressed in his tone? |
46798 | But, Dick, do you believe this was the cause of that heavy rumbling we heard some time back?" |
46798 | CHAPTER IX SURROUNDED BY MYSTERIES"WHAT about the swivel gun in the camp; could it be heard as far away as this, do you think, Dick?" |
46798 | CHAPTER XVII THANKS TO THE WOLF PACK"WHAT have you on your mind now, Roger?" |
46798 | CHAPTER XXI BINDING UP AN ENEMY''S WOUNDS"DO you believe him, Dick?" |
46798 | Could they read that those tracks had just been made, since blades of brown grass were still springing up after being pressed down? |
46798 | Dick, can those be the men who pursued Mayhew?" |
46798 | Dick, what can it mean? |
46798 | Did that Indian favor you when he fastened us up the last time; or was it through an accident?" |
46798 | Do you intend to lend me your gun, and let me finish him?" |
46798 | Do you not recognize eet? |
46798 | Do you not think that is reasonable, Captain?" |
46798 | Do you think any of our men are out after fresh meat to- day?" |
46798 | Do you understand what I am saying?" |
46798 | Had n''t we better spread out, so as to surround him?" |
46798 | Hardy tried to describe the place to us, and I suppose you think you can recognize it from the way the trees hang out over the water?" |
46798 | How about that, Dick?" |
46798 | How about that, Mayhew?" |
46798 | How about you, Mayhew?" |
46798 | How were they to keep warm as they slept? |
46798 | Look back at some of our experiences, and tell me if we have not done that more than once when in the forest?" |
46798 | Perhaps, who knows? |
46798 | Roger commenced;"yet not one of us ever thought of such a thing, did we?" |
46798 | Shall I give him another call?" |
46798 | Shall we make signs in the snow, and tell him that way?" |
46798 | Surely, you could not have had any signal from him?" |
46798 | There must be a fire of some kind deep down in the earth?" |
46798 | Was he not himself fighting against the same depression, and conquering it only because he would not give in? |
46798 | Was that Mayhew trying to let them know he was close by? |
46798 | Was the ground actually trembling underneath, or did his own shaky condition deceive him? |
46798 | Was there some sort of a trap beyond, into which they might fall? |
46798 | We brought nothing of the sort from the camp?" |
46798 | Were hostile eyes watching them from some rocky covert; and would a signal be given to launch an attack? |
46798 | What can have become of Williams? |
46798 | What can it be?" |
46798 | What could a horse be doing here? |
46798 | What could we do if that happened?" |
46798 | What do you think about it, Mayhew?" |
46798 | What do you think is the reason all big game is lacking about here?" |
46798 | What has happened? |
46798 | What if one of us had fallen in here, and could not get out?" |
46798 | What if the steel blade did give him several scratches and slight cuts? |
46798 | What kind of a beast have we run across? |
46798 | What of your two companions; I hope they did not meet their fate there in the darkness?" |
46798 | What will you do with the Frenchmen?" |
46798 | What would be the result? |
46798 | What would become of them should they be caught in this open camp, without any fire, and destitute of robes or blankets? |
46798 | Where do you reckon he is striking out for now, Dick?" |
46798 | Where was his rifle? |
46798 | Who was the man you saw, Roger?" |
46798 | Why do you not order these warriors to set us free? |
46798 | Why should Jasper Williams count any more with the hostile Blackfeet than the other two explorers? |
46798 | You said a while ago, did n''t you, Mayhew, that he could only be fifteen minutes or so ahead of us?" |
46798 | can it be possible that they were carried down with that avalanche when the slip occurred? |
46798 | do you think so?" |
46798 | gasped Roger, as he turned his face, filled with perplexity, toward the other,"did you see what it was, Dick?" |
46798 | how came it there?" |
46798 | vat does it matter to me? |
46798 | was that what happened?" |
46798 | what if he runs across us here?" |
46798 | where are they, Dick? |
46798 | why did I let my gun fall when I stumbled that time? |
46797 | And I suppose he was the biggest of the whole lot? |
46797 | And is this salt- lick far away from here? |
46797 | And just as you say, Dick, we have been through a good many hard scrapes together, have n''t we; and always, up to now, managed to come out on top? 46797 And that we are right now closer to the exploring party than ever before; that would be just fine, eh, Dick?" |
46797 | And when it comes,Roger returned, with a shake of his head,"do you know what I intend to do? |
46797 | And will you tell me, Dick? |
46797 | Are they fireflies, Dick? |
46797 | Are we going on now? |
46797 | But answer my question, please, Dick; if not by boat, then how shall we overtake the expedition, which must be a hundred or more miles away by now? |
46797 | But do n''t you see that, if they can breast that current, they will be able to get us off this island trap? |
46797 | But even if that rushing water only covers the island, where will we be then, I''d like to know? 46797 But how are we to know which are the tracks of the led animal, Dick?" |
46797 | But we never knew the Missouri to rise at this late time in the summer, did we, Dick? |
46797 | But what about the horses? |
46797 | But what is going to be the end of all this running about? |
46797 | But what will happen when we get there, Dick? 46797 But will they come this way; and ought we saddle up so as to be ready to make a run for it?" |
46797 | But will they put us to the torture, as they do their red enemies whenever they make them prisoner? |
46797 | But you really think we will have to, do n''t you, Dick? |
46797 | But, Dick, if they have to go, poor things, why make it harder for them? |
46797 | But, Dick, what if the river should rise, and cover this island; do n''t you think we''d better be getting ashore? |
46797 | But, Dick--"Yes, what idea has come into your mind now? |
46797 | But, father, why should you feel that way? |
46797 | But, if you thought this would happen, why did n''t we do something? |
46797 | Can we do anything? |
46797 | Can we make it, Dick? |
46797 | Can you not trust me in the woods? 46797 Did you ever see anything to beat that? |
46797 | Did you ever see such a sight, Roger? 46797 Did you hobble him the way we had the other animals fixed?" |
46797 | Do we have to keep on the jump all night? 46797 Do you expect to hear them give tongue when they find the nest empty?" |
46797 | Do you think he''s in, right now, Dick? |
46797 | Do you think it will keep on increasing all day, Dick? |
46797 | Do you think one side wants to put us to the torture right away, and the other is for holding out till they get back to their village? |
46797 | Do you think you see anything ahead there, Dick? |
46797 | Does that mean rain? |
46797 | Does winter come so early in this northwestern country? |
46797 | Dove Eyes, she said her name was; and perhaps it was all right, though I never yet saw a turtle- dove with such black eyes; did you, Dick? |
46797 | Have we got everything, do you think? |
46797 | Have you seen the one you are seeking among the men here? |
46797 | He just stuck his snout into the hole as if he smelled us; and look there, will you? 46797 He says all or none, does he? |
46797 | How about cover? |
46797 | How can we sleep when all this noise is going on? |
46797 | How do you suppose they will say we ought to follow the expedition, Dick? |
46797 | How lucky that you noticed where the trees grew along the river,said Roger;"because that will be our best chance, do n''t you think, Dick?" |
46797 | How much longer will we have, Dick? |
46797 | I hope it is nothing serious; do you come with a message for me from the President? 46797 I suppose it''s no use throwing out a line again?" |
46797 | I wonder if they are good to eat? |
46797 | I? 46797 In what way, may I ask, sir?" |
46797 | Indians? |
46797 | Is it any evil that has befallen our good friend, Captain Lewis, and his gallant command? |
46797 | Is that all? |
46797 | Is that you, Dick? |
46797 | Jasper Williams-- is he away, then? |
46797 | No, not that, father,replied the boy;"but, would you believe it? |
46797 | Not at home, is he, Dick; or do you think I could have been lucky enough to have killed him by a chance shot? |
46797 | Now, how about a fire? |
46797 | Ready, Roger? |
46797 | See any sign of the old rascal? |
46797 | Shall we carry our blankets, and some food, besides our guns? |
46797 | Shall we climb up, then? |
46797 | Thank you, Dick; you feel for a fellow, do n''t you? 46797 The proof is everything that any honest man would ask to back up your claim,"Dick continued;"but what were you offering to do when I came up? |
46797 | Then it is n''t Indians? |
46797 | Then perhaps our man_ has_ been here, and gone again? |
46797 | Then we must cross over that divide; is that the way, Dick? |
46797 | Then you still have a little idea we were seen by that lone brave, Dick; and that he may bring the rest of the hunting party down on us to- night? |
46797 | There, what did I tell you? |
46797 | They know now that we''ve given them the slip, do n''t they, Dick? |
46797 | They''re making headway against even that powerful current, do n''t you see, Dick? |
46797 | Two hours is n''t much time, is it, Dick? |
46797 | We have nothing to regret in deciding to make this trip, have we, Dick? |
46797 | We might as well make camp here at this lower end, eh, Dick? |
46797 | Well, how can we blame him for picking up a stray animal that seemed to be wandering around without an owner? |
46797 | Well, what is it, Dick? |
46797 | What about him? |
46797 | What about them? |
46797 | What are we going to do now? |
46797 | What can they do that for? |
46797 | What do you mean? |
46797 | What do you suppose they''ll do with us? |
46797 | What have you found-- did Peter break his hobble rope? 46797 What if we run on to an Indian village, because we are now in the country of the Shoshones, you know?" |
46797 | What is it, Dick? |
46797 | What is it, Dick? |
46797 | What is it, Dick? |
46797 | What is it? |
46797 | What new idea has struck you? |
46797 | What''s all this about, Roger? |
46797 | When would he be going out to find Jasper Williams? |
46797 | Which one of you caught my runaway horse before he got fairly started? 46797 Who are these Mandan Indians the captain was telling us about, Dick?" |
46797 | Who are you, and how did you come there? |
46797 | Who''s there? |
46797 | Why should we try to stop the old squaw if she thought it best to leave us in this way? 46797 Why would n''t it?" |
46797 | Why, what can that he, Dick? |
46797 | Why, what could it be then? |
46797 | Will daylight ever come? |
46797 | Will it ever stop? |
46797 | Will our fish be safe here, do you think? |
46797 | Will they be drowned, do you think? |
46797 | Would you mind telling us what caused you to take this daring journey, my lads? |
46797 | Yes, I heard it; but what are we going to do? |
46797 | You claim that as your arrow, do you? 46797 You have n''t seen any sign of Indians around, I hope?" |
46797 | You mean that we did n''t care very much for old Peter, after all; is that it, Dick? |
46797 | You saw them, did you? |
46797 | [ 5]That''s a fact, it does; and they came near being drowned in that same flood, too, did n''t they?" |
46797 | Am I right, Dick?" |
46797 | And if in those days you and Uncle Sandy could face the perils of the wilderness, and win out, why should not Roger and I do the same now? |
46797 | And it could all be changed, you say, if only that one man''s signature might be obtained to a certain paper?" |
46797 | And now, who may you be? |
46797 | And see him fight, will you? |
46797 | And the wonderful mission that beckoned them forward, was not that enough to pay for any trouble and suffering they might meet? |
46797 | And will Jasper Williams be there to sign that paper?" |
46797 | And, Dick, do you think we will succeed? |
46797 | And, Roger, do you know what I have been thinking of all this day, while we sat, and fished, and watched the coming of the storm?" |
46797 | And, even if we did, what would two shots mean among twenty foes?" |
46797 | And, if we can see our way clear to do it honorably, without feeling that we are wrong, perhaps--""You will say stay?" |
46797 | And, sure enough, he is n''t here, is he, Dick? |
46797 | Are the Indians going on the warpath; or has that precious wampum belt been lost again, as father told me once happened when he was a boy? |
46797 | But are we going to risk it out there on the river just yet, Dick?" |
46797 | But do you really think that Indian saw us, and perhaps followed us?" |
46797 | But how far down do you think the hole goes, Dick? |
46797 | But look there, is n''t that a rattlesnake lying in the sun outside that burrow?" |
46797 | But what does a little delay matter, when we know that we are going to take the great trip? |
46797 | But what shall we do?" |
46797 | CHAPTER VI BAD NEWS"HAVE you come to tell me what they have decided, Dick?" |
46797 | CHAPTER VIII THE TRACK OF THE MARKED HOOF"WHAT''S gone wrong, Roger?" |
46797 | CHAPTER XVI THE PERILS OF THE WILDERNESS"I WONDER if he saw us?" |
46797 | CHAPTER XVIII BROUGHT TO BAY BY THE WOLF PACK"WHAT does this mean, Dick?" |
46797 | Ca n''t you think up something to get us out of this scrape?" |
46797 | Can we overtake Captain Lewis, after he''s had so long a start? |
46797 | Coming down, now?" |
46797 | Dick, what shall we do? |
46797 | Did n''t we see one scoop a fish out with his paw, once, as he squatted on a log that ran down into the water? |
46797 | Did you ever see such a savage fighter? |
46797 | Did you hear what a whistling noise it made as it passed over?" |
46797 | Do n''t you think, Roger, that we''d make pretty good- looking Sioux braves? |
46797 | Do you think it can be game he scents? |
46797 | Do you think they''ll crowd down to the water before we can get above the edge of the drove? |
46797 | Do you think you can get us off, Captain Lewis?" |
46797 | Father, what I am saying is all true, is n''t it?" |
46797 | Had n''t we better bring them in close by, Dick? |
46797 | Have I ever failed to take every precaution, and up to now has anything serious ever happened to me?" |
46797 | How about it, Dick?" |
46797 | How come here? |
46797 | How does that suit?" |
46797 | How?" |
46797 | I do n''t suppose your name is Lascelles, is it?" |
46797 | I trust he has not seen fit to recall the expedition, and abandon the plan for exploring the Great Northwest country?" |
46797 | If he was with François Lascelles we must have given them the slip nicely, do n''t you think, Dick?" |
46797 | If it can bring down an elk, why not a buffalo? |
46797 | Is there any end to it, Dick?" |
46797 | Must we push on again, do you think?" |
46797 | Nothing could make us do that, could it?" |
46797 | Only for that little happening what might not have been their fate on this morning that saw them started back toward the Mandan town? |
46797 | See him pull, will you? |
46797 | Seventeen, you say; what could two boys do against that many braves? |
46797 | Shall I bring the horses in now, Dick, so we can load up?" |
46797 | Shall we start on, now, Dick?" |
46797 | Shall we try it?" |
46797 | So what''s the use of turning them loose now?" |
46797 | Supposing they had never left the bank of the Missouri, what would have been the fate of Karmeet and little Dove Eyes? |
46797 | Tell me, would such an idea ever enter the head of so cautious a fellow as Dick Armstrong when it might seem to be only fit for a madcap like myself?" |
46797 | That was a time when I had my head about me, eh, Dick?" |
46797 | Three boats, Dick-- wasn''t that what Captain Lewis had with him when he started away from St. Louis? |
46797 | To lose a horse would ruin our chances for overtaking the expedition, would n''t it, Dick?" |
46797 | Was n''t that thunder I heard? |
46797 | We want fish for supper, do n''t we, Dick?" |
46797 | Well, how can we tell but what the same thing may happen to us now, and that out of this capture by the Sioux great good may come?" |
46797 | What business you have here in hunting land of Shoshones? |
46797 | What did I tell you?" |
46797 | What if lightning should strike here? |
46797 | What if one of the buffalo chose to turn and gore the nearest horse with its wicked horns? |
46797 | What if the water does keep on coming up and up all day; wo n''t it cover this little island and perhaps wash it away?" |
46797 | What is that for?" |
46797 | What next, Dick? |
46797 | What will we do about it, Dick; wait over and spend the best part of a day looking for him; or divide up the stuff, and get on?" |
46797 | What would be the use of firing after him, when we''d be just as apt to hit the running animal? |
46797 | What''s a little rain to a furry coat like his, after sleeping all winter? |
46797 | What''s that lying on top of the blanket, Dick?" |
46797 | When can we start, Dick? |
46797 | Where would the meat come from, Sam? |
46797 | Who may you be, sir, I''d like to know?" |
46797 | Who would do the hunting and fishing then, while father worked the farm? |
46797 | Why did you run away?" |
46797 | Why, what could be easier than that? |
46797 | Williams?" |
46797 | Williams?" |
46797 | Would they discover any kind of wild animal there, licking the salty rock; or were they fated to be disappointed? |
46797 | Yes, it wo n''t be such a fine day for Monsieur Lascelles when he meets the Armstrong boys face to face; eh, Dick?" |
46797 | You will not object to hearing what he has to say, father, I hope?" |
46797 | did you ever see such big bear tracks, Dick?" |
46797 | do n''t it seem good to be back once more close to our old friend, the river? |
46797 | he asked, nervously fingering his gun, which he kept in his hand as he rode along;"did you see any one skulking in the shadows?" |
46797 | how would that little island do, Dick? |
46797 | is that so?" |
46797 | is that your dodge, then?" |
46797 | look at the river, will you? |
46797 | repeated the other, in sheer astonishment, while his ruddy face lost a little of its color;"why, what can you mean, Dick? |
46797 | then we did n''t start away from our second camp any too soon, did we, Dick?" |
46797 | you mean in the direction of our first camp, do n''t you, Dick? |
46797 | you''re off, are you? |
44621 | A CASE OF INSUBORDINATION? |
44621 | A RESEARCH PROBLEM: INERT(?) |
44621 | A RESEARCH PROBLEM: INERT(?) |
44621 | A TREE IS A TREE IS A TREE? |
44621 | A TREE IS A TREE IS A TREE? |
44621 | AGAIN? |
44621 | ARE OUR SCHOOLS UP- TO- DATE? |
44621 | ARE POETS PEOPLE? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO ASK THEM TO BUY? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO ASK THEM TO BUY? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO ASK THEM TO BUY? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO MANAGE OTHERS? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO MANAGE OTHERS? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO MANAGE OTHERS? |
44621 | ARE YOU LISTENING? |
44621 | ARE YOU LISTENING? |
44621 | ARE YOU THE ONE? |
44621 | ARE YOU THE ONE? |
44621 | ART: WHAT IS IT? |
44621 | ASSIGNMENT K. Mea Productions, Inc. WHO''S BEEN SLEEPING IN MY BED? |
44621 | American Diabetes Assn., Inc. HOW SURE ARE YOU? |
44621 | CAN YOU HEAR ME? |
44621 | CAR 54, WHERE ARE YOU? |
44621 | COMPANY OF COWARDS? |
44621 | COMPANY OF COWARDS? |
44621 | COMPANY OF COWARDS? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND HISTORY: WHY IS MY NAME ANDERSON? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND HISTORY: WHY IS MY NAME ANDERSON? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND HISTORY: WHY IS MY NAME ANDERSON? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND HISTORY: WHY IS MY NAME ANDERSON? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND TRANSPORTATION: WHAT''S A POCKET FOR? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND TRANSPORTATION: WHAT''S A POCKET FOR? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND TRANSPORTATION: WHAT''S A POCKET FOR? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND TRANSPORTATION: WHAT''S A POCKET FOR? |
44621 | French, Warren G. ARE POETS PEOPLE? |
44621 | Georgia Textile Manufacturers Assn., Inc. WHERE''S THE SAFETY CATCH? |
44621 | Gibraltar Productions, Inc. MAN''S FAVORITE SPORT? |
44621 | HALT, WHO GROWS THERE? |
44621 | HOOK LINE AND WHAT KNOT? |
44621 | HOOK LINE AND WHAT KNOT? |
44621 | HOW BIG? |
44621 | HOW DO I LOVE THEE? |
44621 | HOW DO I LOVE THEE? |
44621 | HOW DO I LOVE THEE? |
44621 | HOW DOES A GARDEN GROW? |
44621 | HOW DOES MY CHILD LEARN TO READ? |
44621 | HOW GOOD IS A GOOD GUY? |
44621 | HOW MANY 1/2''S IS 3/2? |
44621 | HOW MUCH HOMEWORK IS ENOUGH? |
44621 | HOW MUCH LOVING DOES A NORMAL COUPLE NEED? |
44621 | HOW SOFT IS A CLOUD? |
44621 | HOW SOFT IS A CLOUD? |
44621 | HOW SOLID IS ROCK? |
44621 | HOW SOLID IS ROCK? |
44621 | HOW SURE ARE YOU? |
44621 | HOW VAST IS SPACE? |
44621 | HOW VAST IS SPACE? |
44621 | HOW WAS THAT AGAIN? |
44621 | HOW WAS THAT AGAIN? |
44621 | IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | IS SMOKING WORTH IT? |
44621 | IS SMOKING WORTH IT? |
44621 | IS THERE A DOCTOR IN THE MOUSE? |
44621 | JOBS FOR MEN: WHERE AM I GOING? |
44621 | JOBS FOR MEN: WHERE AM I GOING? |
44621 | JOBS FOR MEN: WHERE AM I GOING? |
44621 | JOBS FOR MEN: WHERE AM I GOING? |
44621 | JUSTICE FOR ALL? |
44621 | LONELY, OR A LONER? |
44621 | LONELY, OR A LONER? |
44621 | LSD, THE TRIP TO WHERE? |
44621 | LSD, THE TRIP TO WHERE? |
44621 | Lance Productions, Inc. WHAT WILL THEY THINK OF NEXT? |
44621 | Laurel Productions, Inc. MAN''S FAVORITE SPORT? |
44621 | MAN''S FAVORITE SPORT? |
44621 | MARRIAGE: WHAT KIND FOR YOU? |
44621 | ME IN MEDIA? |
44621 | ME IN MEDIA? |
44621 | METROPOLIS-- CREATOR OR DESTROYER? |
44621 | METROPOLIS-- CREATOR OR DESTROYER? |
44621 | METROPOLIS-- CREATOR OR DESTROYER? |
44621 | MY LIFE TO LIVE? |
44621 | Marianne Productions, S.A. IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | Menninger Foundation, Topeka, Kan. WHO CARES ABOUT JAMIE? |
44621 | NARCOTICS-- WHY NOT? |
44621 | Nonnenmacher, Nicholas T. PEACE OR COMMUNISM? |
44621 | OR? |
44621 | OR? |
44621 | PEACE OR COMMUNISM? |
44621 | Peeler, Richard E. CERAMICS, WHAT, WHY, HOW? |
44621 | Phillips, Roger M. HOW WAS YOUR EVENING? |
44621 | REDWOODS-- SAVED? |
44621 | REDWOODS-- SAVED? |
44621 | REMEMBER EDDIE SIMPSON? |
44621 | SANTO DOMINGO, WHY ARE WE THERE? |
44621 | SANTO DOMINGO, WHY ARE WE THERE? |
44621 | SHOULD I KNOW MY CHILD''S IQ? |
44621 | SILENT NIGHTS? |
44621 | SILENT NIGHTS? |
44621 | SMOKE, ANYONE? |
44621 | SMOKE, ANYONE? |
44621 | Sib Tower 12, Inc. IS THERE A DOCTOR IN THE MOUSE? |
44621 | THE MAKING OF THE PRESIDENT, 1960. WHO IN''68? |
44621 | Transcontinental Films, Inc. IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | WATCHA WATCHIN''? |
44621 | WATCHA WATCHIN''? |
44621 | WHAT ABOUT SEX? |
44621 | WHAT ABOUT SEX? |
44621 | WHAT ABOUT THE''61 CHEVY''S? |
44621 | WHAT ABOUT THE''61 CHEVY''S? |
44621 | WHAT ARE FOSSILS? |
44621 | WHAT ARE FOSSILS? |
44621 | WHAT ARE STARS MADE OF? |
44621 | WHAT ARE TEACHING MACHINES? |
44621 | WHAT ARE THINGS MADE OF? |
44621 | WHAT CAN I CONTRIBUTE? |
44621 | WHAT CAN I CONTRIBUTE? |
44621 | WHAT CAN I CONTRIBUTE? |
44621 | WHAT COLOR ARE YOU? |
44621 | WHAT DID YOU DO IN THE WAR, DADDY? |
44621 | WHAT DID YOU DO IN THE WAR, DADDY? |
44621 | WHAT DIRECTION? |
44621 | WHAT DIRECTION? |
44621 | WHAT DOES HUCKLEBERRY FINN SAY? |
44621 | WHAT DOES OUR FLAG MEAN? |
44621 | WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? |
44621 | WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? |
44621 | WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? |
44621 | WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? |
44621 | WHAT FINER PURPOSE? |
44621 | WHAT FINER PURPOSE? |
44621 | WHAT FIRST? |
44621 | WHAT FIRST? |
44621 | WHAT HAPPENS NEXT? |
44621 | WHAT HOLDS SATELLITES IN ORBIT? |
44621 | WHAT HOLDS SATELLITES IN ORBIT? |
44621 | WHAT IS A BIRD? |
44621 | WHAT IS A FISH? |
44621 | WHAT IS A FORCE? |
44621 | WHAT IS A GLACIER? |
44621 | WHAT IS A GLACIER? |
44621 | WHAT IS A MAMMAL? |
44621 | WHAT IS A NEIGHBORHOOD? |
44621 | WHAT IS A PAINTING? |
44621 | WHAT IS A PAINTING? |
44621 | WHAT IS A PAINTING? |
44621 | WHAT IS A REPTILE? |
44621 | WHAT IS A VOLCANO? |
44621 | WHAT IS A VOLCANO? |
44621 | WHAT IS ACTIVE AND CREATIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS ACTIVE AND CREATIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS ACTIVE AND CREATIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS ACTIVE AND CREATIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS AN AMPHIBIAN? |
44621 | WHAT IS AN ECLIPSE? |
44621 | WHAT IS AUTOMATION? |
44621 | WHAT IS ECOLOGY? |
44621 | WHAT IS EFFECTIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS EFFECTIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS EFFECTIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS EFFECTIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS ELECTRIC CURRENT? |
44621 | WHAT IS EROSION? |
44621 | WHAT IS EROSION? |
44621 | WHAT IS MEANING? |
44621 | WHAT IS POETRY? |
44621 | WHAT IS RHYTHM? |
44621 | WHAT IS SCIENCE? |
44621 | WHAT IS SPACE? |
44621 | WHAT IS UNIFORM MOTION? |
44621 | WHAT KIND OF GOVERNMENT HAVE WE? |
44621 | WHAT MAKES CLOUDS? |
44621 | WHAT MAKES CLOUDS? |
44621 | WHAT MAKES THE WIND BLOW? |
44621 | WHAT MAKES THE WIND BLOW? |
44621 | WHAT MAKES WEATHER? |
44621 | WHAT ON EARTH? |
44621 | WHAT''S IMPORTANT? |
44621 | WHAT''S IMPORTANT? |
44621 | WHAT''S IN A STORY? |
44621 | WHAT''S IN SIGHT? |
44621 | WHAT''S IN SIGHT? |
44621 | WHAT''S INSIDE THE EARTH? |
44621 | WHAT''S IT GOING TO COST YOU? |
44621 | WHAT''S IT GOING TO COST YOU? |
44621 | WHAT''S LEFT? |
44621 | WHAT''S LEFT? |
44621 | WHAT''S MY LION? |
44621 | WHAT''S NEW PUSSYCAT? |
44621 | WHAT''S NEW PUSSYCAT? |
44621 | WHAT''S NEW PUSSYCAT? |
44621 | WHAT''S SO IMPORTANT ABOUT A WHEEL? |
44621 | WHAT''S SO IMPORTANT ABOUT A WHEEL? |
44621 | WHAT''S SO IMPORTANT ABOUT A WHEEL? |
44621 | WHAT''S THE BIG ATTRACTION? |
44621 | WHAT''S THE DIFFERENCE? |
44621 | WHAT''S THE GOOD OF A TEST? |
44621 | WHAT''S THE GOOD OF A TEST? |
44621 | WHAT''S THE GOOD OF A TEST? |
44621 | WHAT''S UP DOWN UNDER? |
44621 | WHAT''S UP DOWN UNDER? |
44621 | WHERE DOES OUR MEAT COME FROM? |
44621 | WHICH IS WITCH? |
44621 | WHICH IS WITCH? |
44621 | WHICH WAY IS NORTH? |
44621 | WHICH WAY IS PARADISE? |
44621 | WHICH WAY IS PARADISE? |
44621 | WHICH WAY? |
44621 | WHICH WAY? |
44621 | WHO CARES ABOUT JAMIE? |
44621 | WHO DO VOODOO? |
44621 | WHO IN''68? |
44621 | WHO IS DRIVING? |
44621 | WHO IS DRIVING? |
44621 | WHO KILLED ROY BROWN? |
44621 | WHO KILLED ROY BROWN? |
44621 | WHO SCENT YOU? |
44621 | WHO SHALL LIVE? |
44621 | WHO SHALL LIVE? |
44621 | WHO WAS THAT LADY? |
44621 | WHO WAS THAT LADY? |
44621 | WHO WAS THAT LADY? |
44621 | WHO''S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF? |
44621 | WHO''S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF? |
44621 | WHO''S BEEN SLEEPING IN MY BED? |
44621 | WHO''S BEEN SLEEPING IN MY BED? |
44621 | WHO''S BEEN SLEEPING IN MY BED? |
44621 | WHO''S MINDING THE STORE? |
44621 | WHO''S MINDING THE STORE? |
44621 | WHO''S MINDING THE STORE? |
44621 | WHO, WHAT, WHEN, WHERE, WHY? |
44621 | WHOM SHALL WE FEAR? |
44621 | WHY BRACEROS? |
44621 | WHY BRACEROS? |
44621 | WHY COMMUNICATION SATELLITES? |
44621 | WHY DO WE STILL HAVE MOUNTAINS? |
44621 | WHY DO WE STILL HAVE MOUNTAINS? |
44621 | WHY EAT OUR VEGETABLES? |
44621 | WHY IS IT? |
44621 | WILL WE HAVE YEAR''ROUND SCHOOLS? |
44621 | Whirlpool Corp. HOW MANY MEALS TO THE MOON? |
44621 | YOU CHALLENGE ME TO A WHAT? |
44621 | YOU SAW A WHAT? |
44621 | YOU WANNA KNOW WHAT REALLY GOES ON IN A HOSPITAL? |
44621 | YOU''RE WHAT? |
44621 | YUGOSLAVIA: BRIDGE OR TIGHTROPE? |
7131 | Are your men loaded? |
7131 | But what if necessaries of life should be taxed? |
7131 | Does thee call it freedom, Friend Winthrop,says he,"to fear contact with such as believe otherwise than thee does? |
7131 | Hast thou the proclamation there in thy doublet, Simon? |
7131 | How, for treason? |
7131 | May we not restrain the church from apostasy? |
7131 | Maybe we''ll get a better chance at''em out here, colonel-- eh? |
7131 | Ought the government of Massachusetts to submit to the pleasure of the court as to alteration of their charter? 7131 Shall he who commissioned us to protect the country from the heathen, betray our lives?" |
7131 | The civil liberties of New England are part of the inheritance of their fathers; and shall we give that inheritance away? 7131 Well, my lad,"says Paul,"are you ready to fight to- morrow?" |
7131 | What did they want? |
7131 | Who shuts the door against his majesty''s commissioners? |
7131 | Why is the devil so loth to have testimony borne against you? |
7131 | Will you violate the law of Parliament? |
7131 | --"By what authority?" |
7131 | A window was thrown open above:"Who''s there?" |
7131 | All stared at one another: what had happened? |
7131 | Americans were as well off as these Englishmen; on what ground could they demand to be better off? |
7131 | And fear, is it not bondage? |
7131 | And here was Colonel Robinson of Westford too, a volunteer to- day: but what was his opinion? |
7131 | And how many pounds of tobacco was a good wife worth? |
7131 | And is it not well that it should be so? |
7131 | And might the people of Virginia be free from any tax not approved by their assembly? |
7131 | And why all this uproar about the stamp tax? |
7131 | Are we a decadent fruit that is rotten before it is ripe? |
7131 | Beggars could have faith; princes and prelates might lack it; of what avail was it to gain the whole world if the soul must be lost at last? |
7131 | But could it really be true that these men meant to kill American farmers in sight of their own homes? |
7131 | But of what profit was it? |
7131 | But so far as her brief past may serve as a key wherewith to open the future? |
7131 | But was it enough, indeed? |
7131 | But what if England were to meet this move by laying a duty on some necessary of life, and then forbid Americans to manufacture it at home? |
7131 | But why may they not have believed they were in the right? |
7131 | By what agency did they perish, and when? |
7131 | Camden confessed that he did not know what to do; the law must be executed: but how? |
7131 | Can truth fear aught? |
7131 | Clarendon?" |
7131 | Did any of them wish they had not come? |
7131 | Had they harmed their killers? |
7131 | Has any one seen him go? |
7131 | How can devotion to liberty co- exist in the mind with advocacy of servitude? |
7131 | How many mothers felt that pang in the pale dawn of that frosty morning in Deerfield? |
7131 | How was a governor to govern people who refused to be governed? |
7131 | How, then, is the early prosperity of Virginia to be explained? |
7131 | If a witness simply by holding his peace can hang a minister of blameless life, who may escape hanging by a witness who will talk? |
7131 | If the law it made could be disregarded, what could stand? |
7131 | If the mother country allowed the colony to fix the amount it should pay, what guarantee could she have that it would pay anything? |
7131 | If the word of Parliament was not law, what was? |
7131 | Is Sir Edmund afraid? |
7131 | Is it objected that we shall be exposed to great sufferings? |
7131 | It was the warning of our Lord--"I am not come to bring peace? |
7131 | Might it not then be wiser to yield? |
7131 | Might the colony, they concluded, be permitted to buy itself out of the hands of its new owners, at their own price? |
7131 | Nay, how does thee know that the atheist, whom thee excludes, is further from the truth than thee thyself is? |
7131 | No doubt they might prevail: but would not the moral defeat counterbalance the gain? |
7131 | None could compete with the Pilgrims on their own ground; for were they not growing up with the country, and the Lord-- was He not with them? |
7131 | She was bound for Europe; but whither is Hudson bound? |
7131 | The English fleet was impending; what was to be done? |
7131 | The commissioners finally wanted to know, yes or no, whether the colonists meant to question the validity of the royal commission? |
7131 | The history of the United States does mean something: what is it? |
7131 | The men began to ask one another whether it was not incumbent on them to march to the rescue of their town? |
7131 | The people may be incompetent to frame laws: but what if they decline to fight for you when called upon? |
7131 | The protection of a colony was expensive: why should not the protected one bear a part at least of the expense? |
7131 | These misgivings might now be dismissed; if the ruler of so many tribes was willing to stand their friend, who should harm them? |
7131 | They are dear to us as ourselves, as how should they not be, since what, other than ourselves, are they? |
7131 | They must help themselves, since no man would help them; and why not-- since they had God on their side? |
7131 | They were halted by the gruff"Who goes there?" |
7131 | They were in the house of God: would He provide help for His people? |
7131 | They would not be taxed without representation; why should they submit to any legislation whatever without representation? |
7131 | This was excellent for such as could afford to become patroons; but what about the others? |
7131 | Was it the purpose to provoke one? |
7131 | Were English soldiers really enemies of their own flesh and blood? |
7131 | What can less than threescore minute- men do against them? |
7131 | What could be done then? |
7131 | What could they do? |
7131 | What easier, more equitable way could be devised to get the financial tribute required without pressing hard on any one? |
7131 | What is death to him who has already triumphed over the fetters of the flesh, and tasted the drink of immortality? |
7131 | What is to be said of these tragedies? |
7131 | What right had England to enforce the Navigation Acts? |
7131 | What said Captain Barrett-- and Isaac Davis of Acton, and Buttrick? |
7131 | What says our poet?--"How am I theirs, When they hold not me, But I hold them?" |
7131 | What was crossing the Delaware( almost exactly twenty- three years afterward) compared to this? |
7131 | What was that root?--or, let us say, the mother lode, of which these were efferent veins? |
7131 | What was the explanation of this extraordinary step? |
7131 | What was their home? |
7131 | What was to be the result? |
7131 | What were the commissioners, that they should venture to call a public meeting in the town of a free people? |
7131 | What would have been the political result had the absence of all artificial pressure indefinitely continued? |
7131 | Where''s our charter?" |
7131 | Where, indeed? |
7131 | Why not take them to America? |
7131 | Why should they complain of the Navigation Acts? |
7131 | Why should they feel aggrieved at the restriction on their manufactures? |
7131 | Why should they sever themselves from these? |
7131 | Why were they killed? |
7131 | Would England repeal the act? |
7131 | and how shall he call his conviction the truth, since all truth is one, but the testimony of no man''s private conscience is the same as another''s? |
7131 | demanded a citizen, stepping up to Preston; and when the latter nodded--"Will they fire upon the inhabitants?" |
7131 | did any doubt in his or her heart whether a cold abstraction was worth adopting in lieu of the great, warm, kindly world? |
7131 | ejaculated the good parson, between his set teeth,"are n''t they going to shoot?" |
7131 | he calls out in a harsh, peremptory voice:"Ye rebels-- why do n''t you lay down your arms and disperse?" |
7131 | or are we the bud of the mightiest tree of time? |
45804 | Ah, Elsie wanting to do some shopping, too? |
45804 | Ah, Ned, Ned, is that all you care about in seeing your only brother? |
45804 | Ah, little chap, you seem to be good at guessing,laughed Mr. Lilburn;"a bit of a Yankee, are n''t you?" |
45804 | Ajax, what are you doing with those little monkeys? 45804 All of them, papa?" |
45804 | And He could have struck them all dead without a word, could n''t He, grandma? |
45804 | And I am quite sure of it,said Lucilla;"and as my husband is a distant relative of yours, Zoe, you and I can claim kin, ca n''t we?" |
45804 | And as my Aunt Elsie, Grandma Elsie''s oldest daughter, is sister to your husband, ca n''t you and I claim kin, Zoe? |
45804 | And can we see all these things when we get there-- to Key West, I mean? |
45804 | And did the Indians kill them, papa? |
45804 | And did they bury all those seven hundred folks that they killed, papa? |
45804 | And did they hang him? |
45804 | And did they kill her, Cousin Ronald? |
45804 | And did they kill him at last, papa? |
45804 | And did they stop there, papa? |
45804 | And does n''t it seem that that was what God preserved him for, grandma? |
45804 | And home victuals poor and tasteless? |
45804 | And how soon do you think father and his party will join us? |
45804 | And how soon shall we start? |
45804 | And if we are really His disciples we will be forgiven, too, wo n''t we, grandma? |
45804 | And in more ways than one, has n''t it, grandma? |
45804 | And is n''t he some relation to you, grandma? |
45804 | And it was just you, Cousin Ronald, was n''t it? |
45804 | And leave Lu alone all day while Chester is away at his office? 45804 And men go down into deep water to get them, do they?" |
45804 | And now can you tell me what to buy for Sister Grace? |
45804 | And that could n''t be true,remarked Elsie wisely,"for nobody could live half as long as that without eating anything, could they, Uncle Harold?" |
45804 | And the sight of your new grandchild, your first grandson, might help the cure, might it not? |
45804 | And those thirteen colonies were all there was of our country at the time of the Revolutionary War, were n''t they? |
45804 | And were n''t you kindly trying to make a bit of fun for me? |
45804 | And were the French and their Indians hiding in those ravines, grandma? |
45804 | And what about Queen Mary? 45804 And with all those you can do without papa and mamma for a few days, ca n''t you, sonny boy?" |
45804 | And would n''t you like to see the place where all that is said to have happened? |
45804 | And you think I''m your Cousin Ronald, do you? 45804 And you think you have to obey him, do you?" |
45804 | And you will help me with frequent letters, papa dear, wo n''t you? |
45804 | And you will stay with us between this time and that, and tell us your nice true stories, wo n''t you, grandma? |
45804 | And you will, too, wo n''t you, uncle? |
45804 | And you, father? 45804 Are Chester and Lu coming with the other party, uncle?" |
45804 | Are n''t we getting pretty near to Louisiana, papa? |
45804 | Are you glad to be at home again? |
45804 | Are you? |
45804 | Are you? |
45804 | As you two are so glad to get your tee- tees back again, do n''t you feel sorry for Lily and Laurie, that they had to part with them? |
45804 | At the Great Meadows, grandma? |
45804 | But Sister Lu can go, ca n''t she? |
45804 | But could not you trust her to the care of her nurse for a half hour or so? |
45804 | But do you think you could be wrong or foolish in following your father''s advice? |
45804 | But does Cousin Violet like it? 45804 But how did France get so much?" |
45804 | But how did they know that the Indians were there and doing such dreadful deeds? |
45804 | But they killed Braddock, did n''t they? |
45804 | But what did Mrs. Jones do while that fight was going on? |
45804 | But who are you? |
45804 | But who of our folks took possession now that it was bought from the French, and just when did they do it? |
45804 | But why not? |
45804 | But you and Baby Mary will go with us, wo n''t you, Eva? |
45804 | But you do n''t want to get worse, do you? |
45804 | But you use different colors, so that they will always know which is which, do n''t you, mamma? |
45804 | But, papa, have not the Natchez always been considered superior to other tribes in refinement, intelligence and bravery? |
45804 | But, papa, was what is now the State of Louisiana all we bought from France by that treaty of 1803? |
45804 | But, papa,turning to his father,"ca n''t we get in a boat and have a row on the bayou?" |
45804 | Ca n''t you let him have a little rest now? |
45804 | Can you tell us in what town and castle she made her home? |
45804 | Colonial, grandma? |
45804 | Dear me, where in the world is he? |
45804 | Did n''t anybody at all get away from them, uncle? |
45804 | Did n''t know much about geography, did they? |
45804 | Did she love him, Cousin Ronald? |
45804 | Did they kill him, papa? |
45804 | Did you buy it for her, uncle? |
45804 | Do n''t we, Lu and Eva? |
45804 | Do n''t you think, Cousin Ronald, that it''s all right for her to want to know what has made little Mary talk so well to- night? |
45804 | Do they grow down under the water, and are they nice and clean when they are brought up, uncle? |
45804 | Do you know how deep the water is on this coast, Harold? |
45804 | Do you plead guilty, Cousin Ronald? |
45804 | Do you remember, mother, what Grant said of him when asked,''Who is the greatest single figure in civil life developed by the Civil War?'' |
45804 | Do you suppose they had any money to buy with, grandma? |
45804 | Do you think she really wanted to die, and was courting death, Cousin Ronald? |
45804 | Go to Viamede? 45804 Grandma, I want to belong to Him,"said Alie Leland;"how shall I get to be His, and know that I am?" |
45804 | Grandma, could n''t Jesus have hindered those wicked men from treating Him so? 45804 Grandma, did Tom Fausett''s shot kill Braddock at once?" |
45804 | Had he never any children at all, grandma? |
45804 | Had not Logan something to do with Kenton''s rescue by that Canadian trader Drewyer? |
45804 | Had she any right to do that? |
45804 | Have n''t you a map of Florida, Harold? |
45804 | How could anybody want to have him for a friend? |
45804 | How far is that, grandma? |
45804 | How far, Harold? |
45804 | How long may you stay with us this time, Max? |
45804 | How on earth does he manage to disappear so quickly? |
45804 | I hope you are willing to trust me, Sister Eva? |
45804 | I must set off at once for Sunnyside,he said;"Lucilla is ill. Will you go along?" |
45804 | I suppose we will all go ashore directly, or at least pretty soon after breakfast, wo n''t we, Harold? |
45804 | I thought he was your brother; he''s married to your sister, is n''t he? |
45804 | If you did n''t want to be cured? |
45804 | In 1540, papa? 45804 Is it a story, papa, and will you tell me about it?" |
45804 | Is she too curious? |
45804 | Is there a town there, uncle? |
45804 | Is there any more story about Jasper, grandma? |
45804 | Is there some more story about Nast and his pictures? |
45804 | It was a slave State, was n''t it, papa, and one that seceded in the time of the Civil War? |
45804 | It was very, very wonderful, grandma, was n''t it? |
45804 | It( Key West) is considered an important military station, is it not? |
45804 | Just what I think,said Elsie;"and you will be here, wo n''t you, grandma and uncle?" |
45804 | May I come in? |
45804 | May I not count you and Lucilla among my grandchildren? |
45804 | May I trust you to take good care of my wife and daughter while they are left alone with you and Sister Lu? |
45804 | My dear,said Violet, addressing the captain,"do n''t you think we can make our arrangements to leave for Viamede by next Tuesday morning?" |
45804 | No, Cousin Ronald, I did n''t mean any harm; but have n''t you different kinds of voices for different times and occasions? |
45804 | No; you ai n''t one of the big folks, are you? |
45804 | Not go to Savannah, I suppose, as the British were there? |
45804 | Now shall we go upstairs and oversee the doings of Santa Claus with those stockings? |
45804 | Now, children, shall I tell you something about Lincoln? |
45804 | Now, little girls, what are your opinions in regard to the matter? |
45804 | Now, who are you talking that way about me? |
45804 | Now, who can tell me whether it is to the vegetable or animal kingdom sponge belongs? |
45804 | Oh, Sister Grace, will your dresses be done by that time? |
45804 | Oh, how can we help loving Him with all our hearts and serving Him with all our powers? |
45804 | Oh, how can we help loving Him with all our hearts? |
45804 | Oh, is it one for Sister Lu''s new baby? |
45804 | Oh, papa, ca n''t we have a voyage out in the ocean, too? |
45804 | Oh, that was good,said Elsie Dinsmore;"and was Louisiana made a State at once, captain?" |
45804 | Oh, that''s nice-- but-- oh, what can I do without papa and mamma? 45804 Oh, was it you who made her do it, Brother Max?" |
45804 | Oh, who are you now? |
45804 | Oh, yes, papa, and will we have a Christmas tree? 45804 Oh, you do, do you?" |
45804 | One of the Confederates, grandma? |
45804 | Papa and mamma, too? |
45804 | Shall we go to- morrow? |
45804 | She seceded in the time of the Civil War, did she not, papa? |
45804 | Show us what? |
45804 | So it was very bad for both armies, was n''t it, papa? |
45804 | Something historical? |
45804 | Something more of our Washington or of others of our Presidents? |
45804 | Texas is a very big State, is n''t it, papa? |
45804 | That''s high praise, grandma, is n''t it? |
45804 | The State went out of the Union in the time of the Civil War, did n''t it, papa? |
45804 | The climate is warm, is it not, papa? |
45804 | The scenery about there is said to be very fine, is it not? |
45804 | Then what did they all do, grandma? |
45804 | Uncle Harold, do you think I will be well enough to go? |
45804 | Well, Neddie boy, do n''t you think Mr. Sponge has talked enough now? |
45804 | Well, darling little daughter,he said,"I hope you have had a pleasant time at home with grandma and Ned and cousins while papa and mamma were away?" |
45804 | Well, dear child, what is it? |
45804 | Well, dears, what shall I tell of? |
45804 | Well, my dears, about which State do you wish to hear now? |
45804 | Well,cried Ned,"how in the world did he get up there? |
45804 | Were n''t the bad men wanting to do Jesus harm? |
45804 | Were there any other colonies that the Indians destroyed in that part of our country, papa? |
45804 | What do you think of buying with that large sum of money, Elsie? |
45804 | What do you think of them, Harold? |
45804 | What do you think of them, mother? |
45804 | What does it look like? |
45804 | What does that mean, grandma? |
45804 | What does that mean? |
45804 | What is a kraal, uncle? |
45804 | What is to be our lesson for to- day, captain? |
45804 | What of the weather, Harold? |
45804 | When was the war quite over, grandma? |
45804 | Which is it, grandma? |
45804 | Who am I? 45804 Who could suspect me of being so unfeeling a wife?" |
45804 | Who was Garibaldi, grandma, and what did Nast want to join him for? |
45804 | Who was that man, grandma? |
45804 | Why do n''t you come out of that stateroom and show yourself? |
45804 | Why, Neddie boy, do you think that is the kind of English I speak? |
45804 | Why, grandma, did he want his own men killed? |
45804 | Why, grandma, what did he do that for? |
45804 | Why, what does that mean, uncle? |
45804 | Why, who is it, and what does he want? |
45804 | Will the friends and relatives about there be expecting us, mother? |
45804 | Would not that suit you, Gracie dear? |
45804 | Yes, son, and I think you will not object to accompanying us in that, will you? |
45804 | Yes,said Lucilla,"''laugh and grow fat''is an old adage, and we''ll try to have our babies do it, wo n''t we, Eva?" |
45804 | You are not going to leave us to- night? |
45804 | You do not think it too fine for her, do you? |
45804 | You know what we mean when we say a vessel has been wrecked, do n''t you? |
45804 | ''Aye, what is it?'' |
45804 | And He sighed deeply in His spirit, and said, Why doth this generation seek after a sign? |
45804 | And the high priest asked him,''Art thou the Christ, the Son of the Blessed?'' |
45804 | And the high priest stood up in the midst and asked Jesus, saying,''Answerest thou nothing? |
45804 | And they have named him for you, have n''t they, Levis?" |
45804 | And, father, you will write frequently to me?" |
45804 | Another for Eva?" |
45804 | Are we going to stop at New Orleans, papa?" |
45804 | Be ye now?" |
45804 | But glancing at Cousin Ronald, Max laughed and replied:"Are you, daughter? |
45804 | But is n''t it natural that the joy of seeing her long absent father should loosen her tongue?" |
45804 | But to what particular passages in her history shall I call your attention now?" |
45804 | But, dear Dick and Rob, will it not make confusion to have two of the same name at Torriswood?" |
45804 | CHAPTER VII"Where are we now, uncle? |
45804 | Can you not invite them now through the''phone, and ask how soon they can be ready, if willing to go?" |
45804 | Can you tell him, Grace, what it was at that time?" |
45804 | Could n''t He have made them all die that minute if He had chosen to?" |
45804 | Did n''t you bring it along?" |
45804 | Did n''t you want to go along with the big folks?" |
45804 | Did they hurt her, Cousin Ronald?" |
45804 | Do I look like that old gent?" |
45804 | Do n''t you wish you''d been climbing those mountains along with him?" |
45804 | Have we come down to Florida yet?" |
45804 | Have you good news?" |
45804 | His promise is,''Him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out;''and who shall doubt His own word? |
45804 | How is my little grandson this morning?" |
45804 | I am not too old for that, am I?" |
45804 | I presume you all know something of the brutal murder of Rizzio?" |
45804 | I suppose you must have seen all the palaces and castles she ever lived in there in Scotland?" |
45804 | In the evening, after the fight, Braddock exclaimed,''Who would have thought it?'' |
45804 | It could n''t have been nearly enough, except by Jesus blessing it and making it more, could it, grandma?" |
45804 | Just then Grace''s voice at the door asked,"May I come in?" |
45804 | May n''t they be carried into the library, mamma? |
45804 | Mother, what do you say to seeing something of the sponging business?" |
45804 | Ned laughed at that, and turning to the other baby, asked:"How was it with you, Ray? |
45804 | Oh Brother Chester, ca n''t you get somebody else to manage your business while you go along with us?" |
45804 | Oh, are you going to give little Ray a carriage, too?" |
45804 | Or who could fail to rejoice in the prospect of soon seeing the sweet homes for which they were now bound and the tenderly loved ones there? |
45804 | Shall I give them?" |
45804 | Shall I never, never escape?''" |
45804 | Should you enjoy visiting St. Augustine and Fort Marion again, Elsie?" |
45804 | Thank God, a man can die but once, and why should we fear to leave this life in the way of our duty?'' |
45804 | Then I s''pose you''re brave enough to venture a row on the bayou without fear o''bein''drowned?" |
45804 | Then looking across the table at Mr. Lilburn,"Now that was just you talking, Cousin Ronald, was n''t it?" |
45804 | Then the high priest rent his clothes and said,''What need we any further witnesses? |
45804 | Then turning to her husband,"You can go too, ca n''t you, Chester?" |
45804 | This country belonged to the Indians; what right had the Spaniards to come here and try to take it from them? |
45804 | Violet, my dear, will you begin?" |
45804 | Was he an American, grandma?" |
45804 | Was it right for him to say that?" |
45804 | Well, how soon do you expect our kith and kin to come from Viamede to their more northern homes?" |
45804 | What can I do but lie down and die?" |
45804 | What is it which these witness against thee?'' |
45804 | What was that, grandma?" |
45804 | When will we go?" |
45804 | Where are you taking them?" |
45804 | Where was that, grandma?" |
45804 | Why did n''t they and Chester come?" |
45804 | Why, whose baby is it? |
45804 | Will Grace hang her stocking up, do you think?" |
45804 | Will you and Gracie take care of me?" |
45804 | Will you go along?" |
45804 | Will you tell me about it, grandma?" |
45804 | Wo n''t you come in and have a cup of coffee?" |
45804 | Ye have heard the blasphemy; what think ye?'' |
45804 | You are well?" |
41982 | A flare? 41982 A signal? |
41982 | Ai n''t one o''you fellers in the doctor line? |
41982 | Ai n''t this great, fellows? |
41982 | And so the sheriff is hunting that escaped convict, and you believe he must be the father of poor Andy? 41982 And trying to scare us out of this region for some purpose or other?" |
41982 | And what might that be, my boy? |
41982 | And what of it? |
41982 | And what was that? |
41982 | And when will you let me know? |
41982 | And who might he be when at home? |
41982 | And why? |
41982 | And you do n''t think it could be that Peters crowd? |
41982 | Andy, is that you? |
41982 | Any use of posting a sentry to- night? |
41982 | Are we ever going to camp out without that crowd pestering us like a flock of hornets? |
41982 | As much as a-- a thousand dollars? |
41982 | But do you still hang to your opinion that it''s some person playing a part? |
41982 | But how would he know this paper was in my locket? |
41982 | But what''s this about Bluff? 41982 But why should Andy want us to leave? |
41982 | But you have an idea, you said? |
41982 | Can you find out? |
41982 | Did n''t she act great? 41982 Did they hurt you?" |
41982 | Did you take some of the bear meat along with the hide? |
41982 | Did you try to tickle them with your shot? |
41982 | Do you mean to say you were down there? |
41982 | Do you really mean to say that the ghost appeared to both of you while we were away? |
41982 | Do you think Jed ought to go back to his cruel uncle? |
41982 | Do you think it can be a crazy man''s freak? |
41982 | Do you think so now? |
41982 | Do you think they''ll live through the experience? |
41982 | Eh, Bill? |
41982 | Find anything? |
41982 | For his hiding father? 41982 Frank, do you believe that possible?" |
41982 | Had he been accused of that before? |
41982 | Have you any idea about the matter? 41982 Have you got help?" |
41982 | Hey, Frank, if you''re getting out the arnica bottle, just remember that there are two of us in the same boat, will you? |
41982 | How about it, Will? 41982 How about it, Will?" |
41982 | How about that ghost racket, sir? |
41982 | How about the farmer? |
41982 | How about you, Will? |
41982 | How are you intending to get it? |
41982 | How deep? |
41982 | How long have you known Andy? |
41982 | How long was it, sir? 41982 How we a- goin''to get down?" |
41982 | How''s this? |
41982 | I wonder if they mean to follow us all the way and keep up this racket? |
41982 | I wonder what there is about that little gold locket that makes old Dobson want to get it in his possession so much? 41982 If I''d known that, do you suppose I''d have called you up to help? |
41982 | Is it long enough? |
41982 | It looks serious for Andy, do n''t you think? |
41982 | It was a great outing, eh, fellows? |
41982 | Jerry speaks our mind, eh, Will? |
41982 | Know old Farmer Dobson, Jerry? 41982 Let''s see, what have I got to look out for?" |
41982 | Meaning the two countrymen? 41982 Missed anything? |
41982 | No damage done, I suppose? |
41982 | No quicksand this time, eh? 41982 Not any of Pet''s crowd, returned?" |
41982 | Not the girls? |
41982 | Nothing happened while you were on deck, I suppose, Jerry? |
41982 | Now what do you suppose that fellow wants here? |
41982 | Of course; but why not let the others go along, Andy? 41982 Oh, they will, eh? |
41982 | S''pose you''ve got it all fixed now, and can tell us the name and antecedents of our ghost? 41982 Say, do n''t they look fine, though? |
41982 | Say, now, that kind of fits in real well, do n''t it? 41982 She did not tell you how it would be valuable?" |
41982 | So you''re here, youngster, be ye? 41982 Somebody, eh? |
41982 | Suppose it got caught the same way I did, and the horses were dragged down? |
41982 | Suppose you pass it along, then? |
41982 | Talk to me about that, will you? |
41982 | Tell me about that, will you? 41982 Tell me about that, will you? |
41982 | Tell me about that, will you? |
41982 | That happened hours ago, you say? |
41982 | The Consolidated Heckla, eh? |
41982 | The booty? |
41982 | Then who? |
41982 | Then you believe it ai n''t worth anything? |
41982 | Then you wo n''t stop over night with us, Andy? |
41982 | Then you wo n''t think of putting him on the rack? |
41982 | Then-- you know? |
41982 | Was it the ghost again? |
41982 | Well, what about it? |
41982 | Well, what would you expect after such a strenuous day? 41982 Well,"said Will, with a little laugh,"what d''ye think of that?" |
41982 | What ails you, Will? |
41982 | What ails you, old fellow? 41982 What are we going to do if the sheriff pops in on us?" |
41982 | What are you making? |
41982 | What are you so serious about, Frank? |
41982 | What can we do about it, Bill? |
41982 | What can we do, Frank? |
41982 | What date is that paper, Frank? |
41982 | What did I say, fellows, about keeping guard? 41982 What do I get for sticking the whole performance out?" |
41982 | What do you say, fellows, that we take the canoes and paddle across the lake to where he said the ruins of the old Fletcher home lie? |
41982 | What do you think about it, Frank? |
41982 | What do you think of the ghost now, Frank? |
41982 | What does this mean? 41982 What for?" |
41982 | What for? |
41982 | What gone-- the bear? |
41982 | What happened, Frank? 41982 What if they''re still lodged up in those trees, boys?" |
41982 | What is it-- a broken bone? |
41982 | What is it? |
41982 | What luck? |
41982 | What might that be? |
41982 | What time is it, Frank? |
41982 | What''s he standing in the middle of that dinky little stream for, up to his waist in water? 41982 What''s it all mean?" |
41982 | What''s that? |
41982 | What''s that? |
41982 | What''s the matter, Andy? |
41982 | What''s the matter? |
41982 | What''s the matter? |
41982 | What''s the racket I hear? |
41982 | Whatever would you have done if it had n''t been for that bully old tree, Frank? |
41982 | Where did you get this? |
41982 | Where was this found? |
41982 | Where''s my gun? |
41982 | Which might that be? |
41982 | Who do you think put it there? |
41982 | Who takes the first watch to- night? |
41982 | Why? |
41982 | Wo n''t you sit down, Andy? 41982 Would you mind telling us, Jed?" |
41982 | Yes, we heard about the red pepper dodge, sir, and thought it pretty clever; and that man has been at large ever since then? |
41982 | You are sure? |
41982 | You mean Andy Lasher? |
41982 | You never knew that the back of this locket could be detached-- that is, removed-- did you? |
41982 | You think, then, there is some connection between this hiding of Thaddeus Lasher in the hills and something that has puzzled us? 41982 You watched the thing carry on pretty closely, I suppose?" |
41982 | A dollar apiece if ye coax him off, d''ye hear?" |
41982 | Ai n''t they mad, though? |
41982 | Ai n''t yuh goin''to get that bull away? |
41982 | Air you comin''along with me, Jed?" |
41982 | And did the one- time actor, Thaddeus Lasher, have anything to do with this humbug of a ghost, seen so often along Oak Ridge by various people? |
41982 | And now what are we going to do to- day to amuse ourselves?" |
41982 | And that would have washed the footprint out completely, eh? |
41982 | And then what?" |
41982 | And where''s Jed?" |
41982 | And you let us snooze all that time while you sat here on deck to fend off the evil spirits? |
41982 | Are you badly hurt?" |
41982 | Are you hurt?" |
41982 | Are you paddling now?" |
41982 | Better fall in front and let the people of Centerville see the great hero, hey?" |
41982 | But what can Andy be thinking of? |
41982 | But what do you think he is doing up here?" |
41982 | But, Jerry, do you remember that we could n''t for our lives guess what was taking Andy up in this region?" |
41982 | But, look here, boys, have you missed anything last night?" |
41982 | CHAPTER VII THE UNEXPECTED HAPPENS"How long do we stay in this camp, fellows?" |
41982 | CHAPTER XV JERRY MAKES A GUESS"Frank, what about the other wagon?" |
41982 | CHAPTER XVI A TIME FOR QUICK ACTION"What would he want to play ghost for, Frank?" |
41982 | CHAPTER XXII PADDLING ACROSS LAKE SURPRISE"What do you think, Mr. Dodd? |
41982 | Can either of you describe the ghost?" |
41982 | Can he have seen me?" |
41982 | Can it?" |
41982 | Can this be the terrible ghost of Oak Ridge?" |
41982 | Can you give a guess what the escaped convict would be doing up here all this time?" |
41982 | Can you see anything yet?" |
41982 | Could it be in connection with that escaped convict? |
41982 | Could such a thing be done?" |
41982 | Did he ever do any better than that pard of mine? |
41982 | Did the ghost speak at all?" |
41982 | Did you ever hear the equal of that? |
41982 | Did you ever see such a writhing mass of snakes in your life?" |
41982 | Do n''t I know his voice? |
41982 | Do n''t you remember early last spring they were borrowed by the wardens of the penitentiary to track an escaped convict? |
41982 | Do n''t you think it would be better if I hid?" |
41982 | Do you believe me?" |
41982 | Do you know of any reason why this should be so?" |
41982 | Do you mean by that a waving lantern or a torch?" |
41982 | Do you think it fair to treat your own true chums that way?" |
41982 | Do you think that ghost was n''t real?" |
41982 | Do you think the old humbug has really gone home?" |
41982 | Do you think this can be his dad?" |
41982 | Dodd?" |
41982 | Dodd?" |
41982 | Frank, did you see anything?" |
41982 | Frank, do you think it''s safe for us to have the camp near such a snake den as this?" |
41982 | Frank, is it our last night in this camp?" |
41982 | Frank, you would n''t think of going down there to get that box, I hope?" |
41982 | Get that, son?" |
41982 | Ghost?" |
41982 | Had all Centerville gone crazy? |
41982 | Had the lion broken out of his cage, and was he coming down the street, looking for victims? |
41982 | Have any of you ever hunted through these mountains to any extent?" |
41982 | Have n''t I waked up many a time, thinking I heard it in my dreams? |
41982 | How about that Pet Peters crowd, eh?" |
41982 | How can I ever thank you for being so kind?" |
41982 | How did this wonderful thing vanish?" |
41982 | How did you happen to be bound out to him in the first place, Jed?" |
41982 | I do n''t hear the band playing, do you, Pet?" |
41982 | I wonder what he has found?" |
41982 | Is it gone?" |
41982 | Is n''t it so, boys?" |
41982 | Is n''t that so, sheriff?" |
41982 | Is n''t there some sort of a ghost story going the rounds about it?" |
41982 | Is that so?" |
41982 | It may come in handy; who knows?" |
41982 | It will be Adolphus, with the team, and what do you think he will be toting up there?" |
41982 | LOOK AT THE BUNCH, WILL YOU?"] |
41982 | Look at the bunch, will you? |
41982 | More power to your elbow, say I. Shall I paddle a bit, now, and give you a chance to straighten out your casting- arm?" |
41982 | Neither of the others answered, for, indeed, what could they say? |
41982 | Now what kind of people dislike to have strangers come prowling around their secrets? |
41982 | Now what?" |
41982 | Now, when I get out to a point just over the spot, one of you hand me the stick, will you?" |
41982 | Or, The Tyler Will If you had been poor and were suddenly left a half- million dollars, what would you do with it? |
41982 | Perhaps you''ll go further, and state which way those aroused suspicions of yours slant?" |
41982 | Room for two at your fire to- night, boys?" |
41982 | Say, Farmer, ai n''t there any way to sick the measly old bull on him?" |
41982 | So he''s a relative, eh? |
41982 | So the old thief did n''t fool you, after all? |
41982 | Somehow, I do n''t just like having such close neighbors, eh, Will?" |
41982 | Supper''s just ready, and we invite you to stay and share it, eh, fellows?" |
41982 | Supposing Thaddeus Lasher did go away, and has recently come back here, what brings him? |
41982 | Talk to me about that for bravery, will you? |
41982 | Talk to me about that, will you? |
41982 | Tell me about that, will you? |
41982 | The main point is that he got away, is n''t it?" |
41982 | Then why does n''t this escaped convict get away for good?" |
41982 | There was an asylum over at Merrick, but since when had its inmates broken loose and taken up quarters in Centerville? |
41982 | Think we would give you over to the tender mercies of that red- faced farmer, eh? |
41982 | Was he struck with anything? |
41982 | Was n''t that word''help''?" |
41982 | Was that story told by Fletcher the truth, or just the imagination of a dying man?" |
41982 | Was there ever such beastly luck?" |
41982 | We did n''t go far wrong, did we? |
41982 | Well, how about Farmer Dobson and his hired man? |
41982 | What better time than while we are eating breakfast, for there''s old Adolphus ready to bang the frying- pan as a summons?" |
41982 | What business is it of ours what he is doing up here? |
41982 | What could beat that?" |
41982 | What could equal the fight of a two- pound black bass in this ice- cold water up here in the mountains? |
41982 | What could happen in broad daylight? |
41982 | What d''ye think of that? |
41982 | What did I say, fellows? |
41982 | What do you lay at his door, Jerry?" |
41982 | What do you say, boys? |
41982 | What do you suppose that hard- headed brute would have thought if this pebble had struck him? |
41982 | What do you think it means? |
41982 | What do you want to ask me?" |
41982 | What do you want, Frank?" |
41982 | What does he mean to do here?" |
41982 | What good can they do me? |
41982 | What if one of them had struck you in the hand?" |
41982 | What if some of them were bitten by the beast, and he with a gun in his hands? |
41982 | What if we do have to make a half- way camp? |
41982 | What if we run across Andy again?" |
41982 | What is it?" |
41982 | What is there valuable up here that he should want to frighten people away?" |
41982 | What kin it be?" |
41982 | What odds if it is as tough as an old cow? |
41982 | What was that?" |
41982 | What would they have thought of me running away, and with this thing in my hands? |
41982 | What''s happened? |
41982 | What''s that Dobson is saying? |
41982 | Where are you?" |
41982 | Where are you?" |
41982 | Where is your camera?" |
41982 | Where''s your sporting blood? |
41982 | Who but an actor would ever think of playing ghost up here in this lonely region? |
41982 | Who knows what a fellow might find in a hole like that?" |
41982 | Who was to stop this mad dog in his career? |
41982 | Who would be making one, do you suppose?" |
41982 | Who would n''t? |
41982 | Who''s that taking his bath at such an unseemly hour?" |
41982 | Why did n''t you come straight into camp and tell us, if you were hungry? |
41982 | Why should any one play such a silly game? |
41982 | Why should any one want to make people keep away from Oak Ridge?" |
41982 | Why should they want to get others to run? |
41982 | Why, if I believed in such supernatural appearances, do you imagine for a minute I''d come up here hunting experiences? |
41982 | Will and I agree to umpire the race without the least leaning toward either contestant, wo n''t we, Will?" |
41982 | Will you bring him, Jerry?" |
41982 | Will you come along, Bluff? |
41982 | Will you?" |
41982 | Without it how can he take any more pictures of our wonderful deeds? |
41982 | Wonder if it could be another bear''s den?" |
41982 | Wonder what is going to happen next?" |
41982 | Wonder what is up now? |
41982 | Would it be fun, or not, to camp out in that range of hills and run down this story of a ghost?" |
41982 | You do n''t think he''s in another quicksand, do you, Frank?" |
41982 | You intend to fish for the camera, eh, Frank?" |
41982 | You know the old story about Columbus and the egg, and how easy it seemed to stand it on end after being shown? |
41982 | You say that they''re all well at home? |
41982 | ai n''t they mad, though? |
41982 | is this fair, waking the whole camp up in the dead of night, for a lark?" |
41982 | look at''em, will you? |
41982 | what shall I do, Frank? |
41982 | wo n''t you take it, and keep it for me, please?" |
5311 | ----------------"McGill? 5311 And apple sauce?" |
5311 | Andrew, is there any-- any message from Mr. Mifflin? 5311 Are you Miss McGill?" |
5311 | Are you the Phoebus Apollo I scuffled with down the lane last night? 5311 But how often does any one come round here to sell you books? |
5311 | Ca n''t you see that I want a little adventure of my own? 5311 Can she travel on it?" |
5311 | Common sense? |
5311 | Did you ever go to Brooklyn? |
5311 | Did you sleep at all last night? |
5311 | Do you know him, too? |
5311 | Do you know this part of the country? |
5311 | Do you know who wrote it? |
5311 | Do you really make it pay? |
5311 | Father Time, what o''clock is it? |
5311 | Goin''back to prosecute him, I guess? |
5311 | Hello? |
5311 | How about Peg''s foot? |
5311 | How about putting him off the scent? |
5311 | How about your wife-- wouldn''t she enjoy a good book? 5311 How do you know that_ a m_ stands for ten cents?" |
5311 | How do you like that? |
5311 | How do you like the wild life of a bookseller? |
5311 | I guess youse thought we was n''t covering our trail? 5311 I say,"he rejoined,"how old do you think I am, anyway? |
5311 | I wonder if there is n''t something you need? |
5311 | In what relationship do you stand to this Roger Mifflin? |
5311 | Is it Carlyle? |
5311 | Is this where Andrew McGill lives? |
5311 | Look here, Helen,said Andrew,"do you think I propose to have my sister careering around the State with a strolling vagabond? |
5311 | Madam,he said,"''Funeral Orations''( bound in sackcloth, I suppose?) |
5311 | May I get in? |
5311 | Oh, Brooklyn? |
5311 | See here,he said,"I hope you''re not making a bad bargain? |
5311 | Shall I see you in the morning? |
5311 | Tell me first,I said,"where in the world are we, and what time is it?" |
5311 | Tell me,I said,"does your Parnassus--_my_ Parnassus, rather-- contain everything I''m likely to need? |
5311 | That''s the bus that pedlar sold you, ai n''t it? |
5311 | Then do you withdraw the charge? |
5311 | This your own bread, Miss McGill? |
5311 | Thought you could bully us, did you? 5311 Want to buy any books?" |
5311 | Was that Bock barking? |
5311 | We''re almost there, are n''t we? |
5311 | Well, sweetheart,said Roger,"shall we go and see what sort of rooms the hotel has?" |
5311 | Well,I said,"what''s happened to Andrew?" |
5311 | What did you say? |
5311 | What do you do in winter? |
5311 | What do you mean by a great book? |
5311 | What do you mean? |
5311 | What do you say, Emma, think we better buy a book or two? 5311 What do you want with Andrew?" |
5311 | What have you done with the dog, you swine? |
5311 | What on earth for? 5311 What on earth is this nonsense, Helen?" |
5311 | What on earth shall I do? |
5311 | What''s the matter? |
5311 | What''s the matter? |
5311 | Where and whom did you govern? |
5311 | Where are you? |
5311 | Where did Andrew go? |
5311 | Where were you while I was at Pratt''s? |
5311 | Where''s Andrew? |
5311 | Where''s the Perfessor? |
5311 | Whereabout do you come from, Miss McGill? |
5311 | Which way are you going? 5311 Which way do you think you''ll go?" |
5311 | Will you just step this way a moment? |
5311 | Will you marry me? 5311 You any kin to that writer that lives up that way?" |
5311 | You be back to denner? |
5311 | You going away in that-- that''bus, Mis''McGill? |
5311 | You going driving? |
5311 | You have a prisoner here called Roger Mifflin? |
5311 | You mean Andrew McGill? |
5311 | You remember Abe Lincoln''s joke about the dog? 5311 You''re not another publisher, are you?" |
5311 | ( Remember how Bacon said that reading poets makes one witty? |
5311 | A book of fairy tales for the little girl I see on the porch? |
5311 | A horrible, condoling voice( have you ever talked to an undertaker over the telephone?) |
5311 | A kidnapper? |
5311 | And now-- had I lost it forever? |
5311 | And now-- what was I to do? |
5311 | And then the horrible noises I had heard in the night; had some tramp been hanging about the van in the hope of robbing me? |
5311 | And where''s Mr. Mifflin? |
5311 | And who is this-- this person you''re driving with?" |
5311 | Are you always fighting?" |
5311 | But after all, why should he mention it? |
5311 | But where was the shoe? |
5311 | CHAPTER ONE I wonder if there is n''t a lot of bunkum in higher education? |
5311 | Did he get his money?" |
5311 | Did he give you the autograph?" |
5311 | Do I have to sit here any longer? |
5311 | Do you suppose your husband would buy the outfit-- Parnassus, Pegasus, and all? |
5311 | Do you think Mr. McGill will give chase?" |
5311 | Does the Sage of Redfield ever run on like that?" |
5311 | Down in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania....""Well, how about the horse?" |
5311 | Each letter stands for a figure, from 0 up to 9, see?" |
5311 | Finally he said,"Is there another town between Greenbriar and Port Vigor?" |
5311 | Got a lift, did you?" |
5311 | Had the tramp attacked Mifflin? |
5311 | Has he sandbagged somebody for reading Nick Carter and Bertha M. Clay? |
5311 | Have you taken over Parnassus?" |
5311 | He''s fond of books, is n''t he? |
5311 | How about some fairy tales for the children?" |
5311 | How about that, parson?" |
5311 | How could I learn the truth? |
5311 | How do you expect to get back to Brooklyn?" |
5311 | How much profit do you make out of it? |
5311 | I guess we all fell asleep over his poetry, so then he started on readin''that''Treasure Island''story to us, was n''t it, Mother? |
5311 | I guess we''d better sell them some books-- hadn''t we? |
5311 | I hesitated a moment, thinking just how to phrase my attack, when the elderly gentleman called out:"Where''s the Professor?" |
5311 | I see that several of you are fond of reading, so perhaps the topic will be congenial?" |
5311 | I suppose this village ahead is Greenbriar?" |
5311 | I suppose you''ll sell her when you return to the Sage?" |
5311 | I wonder who cooked for Stevenson-- Cummy? |
5311 | I''m doing the John Bunyan act, see? |
5311 | If you call a tail a leg, said Abe, how many legs has a dog? |
5311 | If you''re so afraid of your brother taking a fancy to her, why do n''t you buy her yourself and go off on a lark? |
5311 | Is it stocked up with food and so on?" |
5311 | Is there any good books we ought to read? |
5311 | May I show you a copy?" |
5311 | Mr. McGill, is he coming after you?" |
5311 | Not very eloquent, was it? |
5311 | Now is n''t that just like a medico? |
5311 | Or a book about road making for your husband? |
5311 | Or had Mifflin attacked the tramp? |
5311 | Or stories of inventors for that boy who is about to break his neck jumping from the barn loft? |
5311 | Pratt?" |
5311 | Pratt?" |
5311 | Seems kind of a shame, with a famous author at the next farm, not to read more, do n''t it, now?" |
5311 | Shall we cart him over to the jail in Port Vigor, or shall we let him go?" |
5311 | She used to mutter something about"Adventures in Discontentment"and ask why Harriet''s side of the matter was never told? |
5311 | Suppose he had been in the wreck? |
5311 | Surely that was the Professor, just disappearing round the corner with another man? |
5311 | Surely the Professor would not leave without saying good- bye? |
5311 | Surely there is something here you need? |
5311 | Tell the Governor that, will you, when you see him?" |
5311 | That wreck yesterday-- he might have been on that train-- I''ve been so frightened; do you think he was-- hurt?" |
5311 | The mandarins of culture-- what do they do to teach the common folk to read? |
5311 | The''Child''s Garden of Verses''was really a kind of kitchen garden, was n''t it? |
5311 | They ca n''t be far off; you have n''t been away more than an hour, have you? |
5311 | To bring it home to his business and bosom, as somebody says? |
5311 | Was it just homesickness for Parnassus? |
5311 | Was it you skulking around this wagon then?" |
5311 | Was that the train the Professor had taken? |
5311 | Well, I said to the Professor-- to myself I mean-- let''s see: what_ is_ a good book? |
5311 | What I say is, who has ever gone out into high roads and hedges to bring literature home to the plain man? |
5311 | What did he mean by prowling after me like a sleuth? |
5311 | What did they think he was, anyway? |
5311 | What do you mean by following me this way? |
5311 | What if I had known him only-- how long was it? |
5311 | What if he did n''t love me after all? |
5311 | What if that should be the Professor? |
5311 | What librarian can surpass us? |
5311 | What on earth will Andrew do for breakfast?" |
5311 | What right had Andrew to do that? |
5311 | What the hell''s the matter?" |
5311 | What was I doing-- a fat, middle- aged woman-- trapesing along the roads with a cartload of books I did n''t understand? |
5311 | What''s he here for?" |
5311 | Where is he now? |
5311 | Which way do you want to go?" |
5311 | Who had got the better of it? |
5311 | Who was that doctor man who recommended anaesthetics for us at that age? |
5311 | Why had all this been hidden from me before? |
5311 | Why had the transcendent mystery of baking bread blinded me so long to the mysteries of sun and sky and wind in the trees? |
5311 | Why not?" |
5311 | Will that be all right?" |
5311 | Will you come with me and make me the happiest bookseller in the world?" |
5311 | was n''t her coffee awful? |
46622 | Ah,said the magistrate,"does he so? |
46622 | And this is really your intention? |
46622 | And what,said I, trembling with fear,"what sum will pay your debts?" |
46622 | Art thou hurt? |
46622 | Augh-- well; and who are you? |
46622 | Augh-- who is Missie Ann? |
46622 | But how shall this happy object be effected? 46622 Do tell me-- do you intend to lie a- bed for ever?" |
46622 | Does thee say so? |
46622 | Ebenezer,said I,"thee is my friend-- does thee know I am on the brink of ruin?" |
46622 | Fellow,said I,"hast thou no human feeling in that breast of thine? |
46622 | Friend,said I,"can thee tell me what the doctor did with that body?" |
46622 | Hast thou no house to cover thy nakedness? |
46622 | Have n''t I been swindled? |
46622 | How came you to owe such a sum? 46622 How can the oldest child of nine be only six years old?" |
46622 | How is this? |
46622 | How was all this change brought about? |
46622 | I am very glad to hear it,said he;"but what are you doing with so much paper in the market? |
46622 | I am,said I;"but what shall I say of thee?" |
46622 | I say, you nigga Tom, what you doin''? 46622 I will do any thing,"said I;"_ what_ shall I do to save you? |
46622 | I''ll be de great man, and I shall hab my choice ob de women: what you say_ dat_? 46622 My neck?" |
46622 | Not even to save my life, father? |
46622 | Pray, madam, be so good as to inform me who you are, and-- augh-- what you want in my chamber? |
46622 | Relieve the poor afflicted creatures, then.. And hark thee, Abel Snipe, does thee consider me a rich man? 46622 Sure,"said I,"I have heard that name?" |
46622 | Surely,said I,"the young man Jonathan is not averse to deeds of charity?" |
46622 | Thy name is Abel Snipe? |
46622 | Verily and surely, it is Abel Snipe, and no other,said he;"I hope thee do n''t forget me?" |
46622 | Verily, and of a truth,said I, not a whit frighted at this communication,"and why should that chill us in the good work, Abel Snipe? |
46622 | Verily,said I,"but dost thou find nothing against them in thine own spirit?" |
46622 | Well,said Jonathan, opening his eyes,"what then?" |
46622 | What do you mean, Tibbikens? |
46622 | What does it mean? |
46622 | What for book say dat? |
46622 | What is it that makes it wretched? |
46622 | What you gwying to be, den, but old Massa Jodge''s nigga- boy Tom? 46622 What you say dah, Gub''nor?" |
46622 | What, Jonathan,said I,"does thee refuse to save me from ruin--_me_, who have been a father to thee, and given thee all that thou hast?" |
46622 | What_ you_ speak faw, pawson? |
46622 | Whaw dat? |
46622 | Whaw dat? |
46622 | Where? |
46622 | Where? |
46622 | Who art thou, friend? |
46622 | Who is massa? |
46622 | Whose cow''s dead_ now_? |
46622 | Why didst thou not relieve them, Abel Snipe? |
46622 | Why scourgest thou this man? 46622 Wonder if we ha''n''t a better right to work than Massa Jodge to make us?" |
46622 | Yah, yah, yah!--what dat? 46622 You are Zachariah Longstraw?" |
46622 | You must know, my dear Sheppard,said he,"that, when we found you were so far gone--""How,"said I, in surprise,"how did you know I had gone far? |
46622 | You wo n''t, then? |
46622 | Abram Skinner, the money- lender?" |
46622 | An''t_ I_ slave, hah? |
46622 | And so, Jonathan--""And so,"said Jonathan,"thee wants me to sell the house, does thee? |
46622 | And then another--"Lorra- gorry, what he- ah? |
46622 | Are these people slaves or freemen? |
46622 | Art thou oppressed with years as well as poverty? |
46622 | Art thou suffering from lack of food? |
46622 | As faw de oder niggas he- ah, what faw use ob quar''lin? |
46622 | But art thou certain I am no longer Abram Skinner?" |
46622 | But how comes it thou wert seen in that wicked place, the theatre?" |
46622 | But how didst thou come by four hundred dollars and a dozen silver spoons? |
46622 | But my neck was not broken; and he listened to my eager inquiry--"whether there were no dead bodies in the house?" |
46622 | But what did the villains mean? |
46622 | But what was he doing-- what could be his object going about the country with petrified legs, arms, and heads? |
46622 | But where was I now to look for a dead body? |
46622 | But where will thee get twenty thousand dollars?" |
46622 | But, of a surety, Abel Snipe, this business will be as gambling?" |
46622 | Compared with these, what is wealth? |
46622 | Dat all? |
46622 | Dat all? |
46622 | Dem hard massa dat- ah, heh? |
46622 | Did not you faint last night when they were galvanizing the bodies? |
46622 | Do you think I will believe you? |
46622 | Does de book say_ dat''s_ de luck for nigga? |
46622 | Does thee feel better, Zachariah, my friend and patron? |
46622 | Dost thou know what it is to have thy stomach stuffed, like an ostrich''s, with old iron hoops and brickbats-- or feeling as if it were? |
46622 | Had I entered the body of the most generous and humane of men only to be hanged? |
46622 | Hast thou no conscience? |
46622 | Hast thou no family or friends? |
46622 | Hast thou no fear of death and judgment? |
46622 | Have n''t I been as a son to thee for eighteen long years? |
46622 | Have you not lost all muscular power, so that you do nothing but lie on a bed or sofa all day long? |
46622 | How come Massa Cunnel to be massa den?" |
46622 | How could you incur such a debt? |
46622 | How much better that he should endure a fancied ill, than that a hundred afflicted families should be given up to actual want? |
46622 | How you neck feel now?" |
46622 | I heard the horseman cry to my jailer,"what white man''s that you''ve got locked up thaw?" |
46622 | I rather estimate that you''re Mr. Zachariah Longstraw?" |
46622 | I say, uncle, does thee know of any command in Scripture to speak bad grammar?" |
46622 | I say, whaw Pawson Jim? |
46622 | I say, you Pawson Jim, wh- wh- wh- what_ you_ say dat doctrine?" |
46622 | Is he a murderer? |
46622 | Is not money, bagged up in stocks and other investments, as merchandise? |
46622 | It was to this personage and his punishment that Governor alluded, when he cried,"What he- ah? |
46622 | Moreover, uncle, does thee know Ellen Wild is of opinion we Friends do n''t speak good grammar? |
46622 | My gorry, what''s dat? |
46622 | My misery was read on my face; and some one present, perhaps with a motive of humanity, cried out,"Why persecute the young man? |
46622 | Now I ask thee whether thou dost not think it thy duty to make me, thy loving nephew, happy, as well as a stranger?" |
46622 | Now, when I meet a Frenchman or a German unacquainted with the English tongue, in what language does thee suppose I address him?" |
46622 | Of a surety, all that I possess, is it not the property of the poor?" |
46622 | Suppose his scull should prove to be broken; who was to stand the woes of trepanning? |
46622 | The difficulty was solved by an old negro, who rolled his quid of tobacco and his eyes together, and said,"Whaw de debbil''s de difference? |
46622 | The poets speak of vipers in the bosom; what are they compared to a bug in the ear? |
46622 | Then pausing a moment and turning a leaf of the book, he fell to leaping again, crying--"What_ dat_? |
46622 | Then seizing upon his hat, and stepping to where I stood, transfixed with grief and indignation, he said,--"You wo n''t take the bargain, then?" |
46622 | These-- riches and greatness, power and renown-- are the possessions of the Old World; yet what have they availed her? |
46622 | Thou canst not be so poor as to prove an object of charity?" |
46622 | Thou hast made money, but what good hast thou done with it? |
46622 | Uncle Zachariah, a''n''t you satisfied Abel Snipe is a rascal?" |
46622 | Was there no other situation in life sufficiently wretched, but that I must take up my lot in the body of a miserable negro slave? |
46622 | What aw you doing, toting a white man off in this style, like a wild baw?" |
46622 | What cared I for youth, when it opened only a longer vista of living wretchedness? |
46622 | What had I gained by forsaking the lot to which Providence had assigned me? |
46622 | What have you been doing?" |
46622 | What is the pain of a broken heart to that of the toothache? |
46622 | What is the world around us but a great concert- hall, echoing with the music of bird and beast, of wind, water, and foliage? |
46622 | What mattered it to my captors if, after all, I was_ no_ abolitionist? |
46622 | What mode of existence then was most likely to secure the content I sought? |
46622 | What shall I do?" |
46622 | What shall we do, Abel Snipe, to make the one talent three, and thereby increase our means of doing good?" |
46622 | What then in the whole world had Mr. Megrim to trouble him? |
46622 | What then is the crime for which thou art punishing him so bitterly? |
46622 | What to me was the wealth which I could not enjoy? |
46622 | What was to become of me now? |
46622 | What you git up faw, ha?" |
46622 | What you git up faw, ha?" |
46622 | What-- augh-- what is the man''s name?" |
46622 | Where was I to look for a dead body, at such a time of night? |
46622 | Where''s the harm in these things? |
46622 | Who can appreciate the delightful luxury of repose so well as the labourer released from his daily toil? |
46622 | Who chains Gubbe''nor? |
46622 | Who ebber hear of lash a nigga, escept nigga sassbox, nigga thief, nigga drunk, nigga break hoss''leg?" |
46622 | Who enjoys health-- who is so sensible of the rapture of being well, as he who has just been relieved from sickness? |
46622 | Who say me_ no_ dah?" |
46622 | Who say me_ no_, hah? |
46622 | Who says chain nigga in Vaginnee? |
46622 | Who then can say the calling of the quack is not honest-- nay, even philanthropic? |
46622 | Who''ll hab you? |
46622 | Who, in fine, tastes of the bliss of happiness like him who is introduced to it after a probation of suffering? |
46622 | Why den, wh- wh- wh-_who''s_ slave? |
46622 | Why for dey do dat? |
46622 | Why should the folly of a feudal aristocracy prevail under the shadow of a purely democratic government? |
46622 | Wilt thou sell me to violent men and madmen, who will wrongfully take my life? |
46622 | Yes, uncle, would you believe it? |
46622 | You run away, ha? |
46622 | _ De fat ob de slave_--what he mean, heh? |
46622 | _ I_ use bad language? |
46622 | a blasphemer? |
46622 | a house- burner? |
46622 | a ravisher? |
46622 | a thief? |
46622 | and does thee open thee eyes again? |
46622 | and give thee back the money? |
46622 | and had my fate brought me to this grievous pass? |
46622 | and what is that_ thy_ business?" |
46622 | and why dost thou conduct them thus in chains through the free state of Pennsylvania?" |
46622 | and why dost thou hold him in bonds? |
46622 | and, as merchandise, shall it not be lawfully bought and sold?" |
46622 | can you not refrain from this dreadful indulgence? |
46622 | confessed what? |
46622 | cried my jailer,"never heard of Zachariah Longstraw, the famous abolitionist?" |
46622 | cried the beldam, regarding me with surprise and contempt;"what you do when you run away, ha? |
46622 | cried the old woman, roused by the noise I made;"whaw dat, you nigga Tom? |
46622 | dat_ you_, Rose? |
46622 | did you ebber see de debbil? |
46622 | for Heaven''s sake,"said I, wringing my very hands in despair,"_ what_ will tempt you to quit this horrid practice?" |
46622 | have n''t I given up Ellen Wild to please thee? |
46622 | have n''t I humoured all thy foolish old notions, even to the point of giving alms, talking about virtue and philanthropy, and so on? |
46622 | he cried;"hab a right to fr- fr- fr- freedom,''case Gorra- matty no s- s- s- sell me? |
46622 | if a nigga break a neck, ca n''t a nigga hold- a still?" |
46622 | is de nigga mad?" |
46622 | is it a true, right up- and- down, no- mistake abolitionist?" |
46622 | it do n''t look so well as the others; but who would believe it was solid stone? |
46622 | of the devil and the world of torment?" |
46622 | old Slabsides,"said he,"ar''n''t you past grumbling?" |
46622 | or,"What_ will_ become of them?" |
46622 | said Governor, interrupting him, and looking round with the air of a lord;"I be king, hah? |
46622 | said Governor;"Decoration of Independence say_ dat_? |
46622 | said Governor;"de chain and de cowhide? |
46622 | said I, as he swallowed the vile potion;"have you neither respect nor shame? |
46622 | said I, filled with virtuous indignation, and thrusting my head from the cart so as to address the foremost rider,"what does thee mean, friend? |
46622 | said I, jumping on my hind legs, and dancing about to avoid his lashes,"what do you mean?" |
46622 | said I, recollecting myself;"I wonder what I was talking about? |
46622 | said I, taking about thirty seconds to gape out each word, it seemed such tiresome work to articulate;"what do you want?" |
46622 | said I,"am I sick?" |
46622 | said I,"does thou strive to conceal it?" |
46622 | said I,"have I so much property?" |
46622 | said I,"how canst thou look me in the face, having ruined me?" |
46622 | said I,"will you sell my life for money?" |
46622 | said I;"how could he leave a legacy to a man universally considered dead?" |
46622 | said I;"is it true?" |
46622 | said I;"is thee a friend of that villain, Abel Snipe?" |
46622 | said he,"and what are thy distresses? |
46622 | said my friend Ebenezer,"do n''t you know my little Ellen?" |
46622 | sell him low price, send Mississippi-- what den? |
46622 | stealin''sugah? |
46622 | thought I,"does a slave ever eat too much?" |
46622 | thy head filled with achings, dizziness, and streaks of lightning? |
46622 | to have it now drowned in vinegar, now scorched as with hot potatoes? |
46622 | two white men whip a nigga? |
46622 | vat shall I do mit de great discoaver? |
46622 | whar you larn to read?" |
46622 | what aw the use of carrying the crittur so faw? |
46622 | what but a great gallery of pictures, painted by the hand of Providence? |
46622 | what den?" |
46622 | what did they design doing with me? |
46622 | what even are power and glory? |
46622 | what is grandeur? |
46622 | what was their object in carrying me off? |
46622 | what you been doin? |
46622 | what you doin''dah? |
46622 | which had been given me only to tantalize? |
46622 | who licks Gubbe''nor? |
46622 | who says cowhide nigga in Vaginnee? |
46622 | who says_ no_ to dat? |
46622 | who''ll feed you? |
46622 | who''ll own a good- fo''-nothin''runaway nigga, I say, ha? |
46622 | who''ll take care of you? |
46622 | why you no come down work?" |
40525 | Adheres? |
40525 | And have you proved it otherwise? |
40525 | And how does Kathie bear it? |
40525 | And what puzzles you? |
40525 | And what troubles you? |
40525 | And why does not Mrs. Wilder interfere, or is she on the patrician side? |
40525 | And you will forgive that-- revenge? 40525 And you would like to have her come?" |
40525 | And you would not have done this? 40525 Are you asked to give up always?" |
40525 | Are you going to Belle Hadden''s party? |
40525 | Are you going to keep Kathie all the afternoon? |
40525 | Are you sorry that you did it? |
40525 | Are you sure you''ve been here all the time? 40525 Are you well? |
40525 | Aunt Ruth,she said, in a little perplexity,"why is it that a person is not always willing to try to do right first of all? |
40525 | Belle,she began, sharply,"how could you have committed such a blunder as to omit that pretty little Miss Alston from your party- list? |
40525 | But O, did n''t you miss Rob? |
40525 | But O, is n''t it lonely? |
40525 | But he wo n''t go,she sobbed;"do you think he will? |
40525 | But how can you tell? |
40525 | But how did you come to visit the Strongs? |
40525 | But how to come? |
40525 | But if I were drafted? |
40525 | But if education should make Sarah discontented and unhappy? |
40525 | But if you were a man and had a wife, as well as bairnies, three or four, or half a dozen, and were compelled to leave them to poverty? |
40525 | But what are you doing over here? 40525 But what if-- she_ should_ be ashamed of her home, after all? |
40525 | But what makes you-- what keeps you in such a heaven of content? 40525 But what_ is_ it?" |
40525 | But, Kathie-- what has happened, little one? |
40525 | Can I help you? |
40525 | Can such blossoming bring forth good, wholesome fruit? |
40525 | Child, are you one of God''s own-- Heaven- sent? 40525 Child,"he asked,"how did you stand fire last winter when you were so suddenly brought to the front? |
40525 | Could n''t I? |
40525 | DO you think we could go to Middleville to- day? |
40525 | Did he? |
40525 | Did it surprise you when you heard that you were drafted? |
40525 | Did they live here then? |
40525 | Did you have a nice visit? |
40525 | Did you mean to enlist any way? |
40525 | Do n''t you get dreadfully dull sometimes? |
40525 | Do n''t you have a little too much in- doors and study? |
40525 | Do n''t you like tableaux? |
40525 | Do you love me so well, my child? 40525 Do you not find it easier than you did two years ago?" |
40525 | Do you not? |
40525 | Do you really wish me to? |
40525 | Do you suppose it is really true? |
40525 | Do you suppose there is anything in it? |
40525 | Do you want to put the lichen up in your room? |
40525 | Does not God leave a little to us? 40525 Girls, have n''t you asked Kathie Alston?" |
40525 | Has he been in any scrapes yet, Miss Kathie? |
40525 | Has n''t he? 40525 Have you brought her?" |
40525 | Have you heard bad news? |
40525 | Have you sold anything? |
40525 | Here,--to Brookside? |
40525 | Home- guard? |
40525 | How can_ she_ help it? |
40525 | How did you come to take it? |
40525 | How do you do, Sarah? |
40525 | How do you make them''ere things? |
40525 | How is Miss Jessie to- night? |
40525 | How much fur these caliker aperns? |
40525 | I heard Sarah ask if she might write to you; what did you answer? |
40525 | I wonder if there is n''t something better to this life than the clothes one wears? |
40525 | I wonder if you will be homesick? |
40525 | I wonder why it is, Kathie? 40525 In what respect?" |
40525 | Injudicious, I suppose you mean? 40525 Is it about Uncle Robert?" |
40525 | Is it discouraging to eat when you are hungry? |
40525 | Is it true that there is a scarcity of substitutes? |
40525 | Is it? 40525 Is n''t it dreadful?" |
40525 | Is n''t it odd,Mr. Meredith said, in a lower tone, taking his wife''s hand,"that it was through Kathie we came to know each other? |
40525 | Is n''t your uncle willing that you should have a chambermaid? |
40525 | Is that_ all_ you''ve taken in? |
40525 | Is this Middleville? |
40525 | Is your brother anywhere about? |
40525 | It is discouraging,--isn''t it, Aunt Ruth? |
40525 | It is right to have the cultivation, the pretty houses, the beautiful furniture and pictures and-- dresses? |
40525 | It is too bad,--isn''t it? 40525 It is very good of them,--isn''t it?" |
40525 | It seems hard, does n''t it, just for one little thing? 40525 It was n''t merely your regard for your mother or Uncle Robert?" |
40525 | Mamma, why did not we, when we were very poor, grow careless? 40525 Miss-- Kathie-- Alston?" |
40525 | No? |
40525 | Not particularly,--why? |
40525 | Now, Sary Ann, where''s the picter you want? |
40525 | Now, which is the back road, I wonder? |
40525 | O mamma, why? |
40525 | O, have n''t you heard? |
40525 | Our other soldier--"Mr. Morrison-- O child, what tidings of him? |
40525 | Pasted on? |
40525 | Shall I read it aloud? |
40525 | So you are not quite convinced that it is wisest to sow beside all waters? |
40525 | So you really wo n''t do that little favor? |
40525 | So you think it rather funny to be forced to do what you would not choose of your free- will? |
40525 | Suppose we should drive out to see her on some Saturday? 40525 The being drafted as well?" |
40525 | Then I suppose I ought to try and make some one happy? |
40525 | Then he is not sorry that he re- enlisted? |
40525 | Then you think I may? |
40525 | Then you think I ought to volunteer? |
40525 | There_ can not_ be any mistake? |
40525 | To assist you in learning your lessons? |
40525 | Uncle Robert, would it be rude to send Sarah a pretty blue hair- ribbon, and tell her a little about contrasting colors? 40525 Uncle Robert,"Kathie said, as they were riding homeward,"could a drafted man offer a substitute just the same?" |
40525 | Uncle Robert,he began, presently,"do n''t you think it fair that I should follow out my own wishes_ sometimes_? |
40525 | Uncle Robert,she said,"do you believe there is any hope that Mr. Morrison may still be alive?" |
40525 | WELL, Kathie, was the visit a success? |
40525 | Was Santa Claus good to you, Miss Kathie? |
40525 | Was it really lost time? |
40525 | Was it some more Christmas? |
40525 | Was my letter all right? |
40525 | Well, Miss Thoughtful, what is it now? 40525 Well, should you know me?" |
40525 | Well? |
40525 | What about the cowardice of the proceeding? |
40525 | What did Ada say? |
40525 | What did he do? |
40525 | What has happened among you girls? 40525 What is it?" |
40525 | What is it? |
40525 | What is it? |
40525 | What is that, Lottie? |
40525 | What is the matter now? 40525 What is the matter? |
40525 | What ought I to do, little one? |
40525 | What perplexes you then, Kitty? |
40525 | What should you do, Kathie Alston, if you had been intimate with her? |
40525 | What then? |
40525 | What will there be so jolly about it, Rob? |
40525 | What will you do? |
40525 | What will you give me for a letter with a grand seal as if it came from the very Commander- in- Chief or the President? 40525 What''s the price of this?" |
40525 | What? |
40525 | When there is no company? 40525 When will you go?" |
40525 | Where does Mr. Jotham Strong live? |
40525 | Where is he? |
40525 | Where is your uncle? |
40525 | Where shall we drive? |
40525 | Where were you going gypsy fashion? |
40525 | Where_ do_ people make a distinction? 40525 Whether it would be proper,--is that what you mean?" |
40525 | Which is the back road? |
40525 | Which way you goin''? |
40525 | Which would give you the most satisfaction,--to know that you had made two or three people happy, or to enjoy some pleasure alone by yourself? 40525 Who is_ she_?" |
40525 | Who of us has? 40525 Why did you do it at all then?" |
40525 | Why did you not speak of it, Kathie? |
40525 | Why not, to be sure? |
40525 | Why, Miss Weston,he said, softly,"where''s your specs? |
40525 | Why, what else could I do? 40525 Will you try?" |
40525 | Would a thousand dollars be too much? |
40525 | Would you like me to accompany you? 40525 Would you mind running out? |
40525 | Would you take the buggy? |
40525 | Yet when one means to try-- is trying-- will it never come easy? |
40525 | You are going over to Mrs. Coleman''s,--are you not? |
40525 | You are going to the Darrells''? |
40525 | You believe, Miss Kathie, that what we do at home is just as good in God''s eyes as if we did it for a stranger? 40525 You did n''t ask him to do it?" |
40525 | You find, then, that no one is quite exempt from the warfare? |
40525 | You have heard the news, Kitty? |
40525 | You still go to school? |
40525 | Your side? |
40525 | Ah, was it not true that God restored fourfold? |
40525 | Ai n''t your feet half froze?" |
40525 | And if he never came back--""But, Uncle Robert, do n''t you think it right for a man to be patriotic?" |
40525 | And was Sarah having a bright Christmas? |
40525 | And was there not something grander and finer in this last act of heroism than many people were capable of? |
40525 | And why is n''t your hair done up in queer little puffs?" |
40525 | And why would n''t she be just as good and just as much of a lady if she did take it? |
40525 | Any new gift for Sarah?" |
40525 | Are the ponies in good order?" |
40525 | Are they really rich,--the Alstons?" |
40525 | Are you not satisfied to have me stay, or am I less of a hero in your eyes?" |
40525 | Are you quite sure?" |
40525 | Are you really going to have them?" |
40525 | Been in the Dutch kitchen?" |
40525 | But O, will he never get well? |
40525 | But she said, rather gayly,"In what respect?" |
40525 | Can you crochet?" |
40525 | Did n''t that make her blood a little blue? |
40525 | Did you finish your shopping?" |
40525 | Did you make the frames?" |
40525 | Do n''t you keep servants? |
40525 | Do n''t you s''pose I could put''em up? |
40525 | Do n''t you suppose he is just aching to be at home?" |
40525 | Do n''t you suppose you shall ever go to Saratoga?" |
40525 | Do they think Mr. Meredith will-- never get well?" |
40525 | Do you believe that your God_ could_ love and pity me a little?" |
40525 | Do you ever go chestnutting?" |
40525 | Do you go to school there? |
40525 | Do you know Indian pipe?" |
40525 | Do you know how to make''em?" |
40525 | Do you like her?" |
40525 | Do you think He will accept me, Kathie?" |
40525 | Does not your teacher correct you?" |
40525 | Does-- Miss Jessie know?" |
40525 | Had she been challenged at the outpost and found without a countersign? |
40525 | Has she offended you? |
40525 | Have they found his body?" |
40525 | Have you begun gardening yet, Kathie? |
40525 | How can we spare him?" |
40525 | How could she direct another? |
40525 | How did you do it?" |
40525 | How is your uncle? |
40525 | How much duty did a man or a woman owe to these great life questions? |
40525 | I thought it quite hard to be treated so unjustly at school, but what was it compared with giving up one''s life?" |
40525 | I wonder if we do not sometimes forget the One who died eighteen hundred years ago? |
40525 | I wonder what makes it?" |
40525 | I''ll be sure to remember that,"Sarah answered, with great earnestness;"and what else?" |
40525 | If he do it bravely, is it not a little of the good fruit? |
40525 | If his friends should not have heard, will you please inform them? |
40525 | If she could have chosen for him, like Charlie, she would have desired his return; but if every wife and every mother felt so about their soldiers? |
40525 | Is it a natural gift or grace?" |
40525 | Is it not unjust to ask me to give up always?" |
40525 | Is it wrong for everybody to look as pretty as he or she can?" |
40525 | Is it_ quite_ right?" |
40525 | Is n''t it delightful to have this sofa? |
40525 | Is n''t it hideously ugly? |
40525 | Is n''t there something very unjust about girls,--some girls, I mean?" |
40525 | Is that the uncle you wrote about in your letter?" |
40525 | Is there a standing quarrel?" |
40525 | It seemed that she knew so little herself, how then could she direct another? |
40525 | Kathie, how_ can_ you bear everything so patiently?" |
40525 | Kathie, will you run over to the Lodge and ask Mr. Morrison to drive me to the station by six?" |
40525 | Need it occupy all one''s time and one''s desires? |
40525 | Now she made sundry mysterious confidences, prefaced with,"Would you have believed it?" |
40525 | Now what do you think we ought to give him?" |
40525 | Now, mother, you wo n''t let Freddy meddle with them while I am gone,--will you? |
40525 | Once in a while we can do larger things; but is n''t it the little deeds that require the most patience? |
40525 | She hated to be considered mean or shabby, or, worst of all, deficient in taste; yet how much of it was right? |
40525 | So you came near losing your dear uncle, my child?" |
40525 | That Lottie should be vexed with her she did not so much wonder at, but why should the other girls shun her? |
40525 | That looks rather unjust, does n''t it?" |
40525 | The grace of God; but then how was one to get this grace? |
40525 | Then he said,"Of what are you thinking, my darling?" |
40525 | Then, looking into her eyes,"You have heard--""About Mr. Meredith? |
40525 | There''s no one here, so why ca n''t you shut up shop?" |
40525 | They like a rambling, restless life, and care little for danger, little for death; but is it an intelligent courage,--the highest and noblest kind? |
40525 | Was Rob fighting the good fight? |
40525 | Was death only an interruption to pleasure? |
40525 | Was he growing more serious, clearer- eyed? |
40525 | Was it God''s love and grace that brought human souls so near together and made them one great family? |
40525 | Was it because Ada was more gracious than usual? |
40525 | Was it because Kathie always had some good work in hand? |
40525 | Was it selfish not to want to stay here? |
40525 | Was n''t it sad?" |
40525 | Was this the love of God,--the grace which was promised to well- doing? |
40525 | Well, Sary Ann? |
40525 | Were all the rest of the world to have their own way and pleasures, and he never? |
40525 | What can we ever do to merit them?" |
40525 | What correspondent have you in Washington, we would all like to know?" |
40525 | What could Kathie say,--blame her brave comrade? |
40525 | What could she do of her own self? |
40525 | What good could he do?" |
40525 | What had she done to these girls? |
40525 | What if he should be homesick? |
40525 | What is the inside of their house like?" |
40525 | What is your opinion, Dora?" |
40525 | What other mistakes were there?" |
40525 | What was it that helped his mother, and Uncle Robert, and Kathie? |
40525 | What was the man''s life? |
40525 | What was there about this family that charmed so insensibly? |
40525 | What was there to cry about? |
40525 | What will Ada say? |
40525 | What would Miss Jessie say? |
40525 | What''s the price of that?" |
40525 | What_ is_ it?" |
40525 | What_ was_ Miss Weston doing in the Dutch kitchen all this while? |
40525 | When he came back to her he said, softly,"Kathie, will you not come and keep her table for a little while? |
40525 | Where do you find such beautiful specimens?" |
40525 | Where is Middleville?" |
40525 | Who_ is_ Kathie Alston, anyhow? |
40525 | Whose could it be? |
40525 | Why could n''t he remember? |
40525 | Why could n''t the girls have stayed on the balcony and talked? |
40525 | Why did n''t God make the wrong so that you could see it plainly?" |
40525 | Why did n''t she put blue, by way of contrast?" |
40525 | Why did n''t some one think of her? |
40525 | Why had it been so hard a moment ago? |
40525 | Why had it not been as easy to be good and pleasant to- night as some other times when mamma did not think a coveted indulgence necessary? |
40525 | Why have n''t you asked her and Kathie Alston?" |
40525 | Why should the Alstons be ashamed of it? |
40525 | Why-- isn''t it delightful?" |
40525 | Will it make her coarse and vulgar?" |
40525 | Will you go?" |
40525 | Wo n''t it be jolly?" |
40525 | Would it answer?" |
40525 | Would one really grand action make amends for all?" |
40525 | Yet what could be left out? |
40525 | Yet, if she lost her fortune, would they let her drop out of sight and out of mind? |
40525 | You do n''t have to work,--do you?" |
40525 | You do not think mamma would object?" |
40525 | You remember Mrs. Duncan? |
40525 | You remember the day he was so elated about the draft?" |
40525 | You think it was not right for me to tell?" |
40525 | _ Can_ you answer my question? |
40525 | a lady like you? |
40525 | asked Uncle Robert,"or is it a secret?" |
40525 | exclaimed Kathie, with a cry,"is there any news? |
40525 | exclaimed Uncle Robert;"are you ready?" |
40525 | the latter exclaimed, fretfully,"are n''t you half tired to death, Kathie Alston? |
40525 | with a quick cry,"did you read this?" |
31524 | Ai n''t it awful about the Saline country? |
31524 | All about me? 31524 Am I, Marjie? |
31524 | And after that? |
31524 | And by the way, did you settle it with the widow, too? 31524 And do you mean to say that because Amos Judson turned you off and cut you out of his will, you had to come out to this forsaken land? |
31524 | And if he really wants to do better, what have we all been told in the Sunday- school? 31524 And take some girl along? |
31524 | And what''s below you? |
31524 | And when the campaign''s over,queried O''mie,"will you stay in the army?" |
31524 | And you told him good- bye at your own door? |
31524 | And you would let that other girl take care of herself, would n''t you, while I was there? 31524 And you''ll be sure to keep still about my dad, too, wo n''t you?" |
31524 | Are n''t you willing to right the wrongs you''ve done, and save yourself, too? |
31524 | Are you afraid of Indians? |
31524 | Are you afraid of them, Candace? |
31524 | Are you going out West to stay? |
31524 | Are you leaving us? |
31524 | Are you mine once more? |
31524 | Are you tired after your journey? |
31524 | Are you waiting for me here? |
31524 | Better now? 31524 Bud, you tow- headed infant, how the dickens and tomhill did you manage to break into good society out here?" |
31524 | But had n''t ye heard? 31524 But whose flower wreath could it have been?" |
31524 | But why did n''t you stay there? |
31524 | But why leave here? |
31524 | But,Tell persisted,"how do the Injuns themselves feel?" |
31524 | Ca n''t you, ca n''t you put us to work? |
31524 | Can they do better than that, Grover? |
31524 | Can we have a room downstairs? 31524 Can ye picture what would be down there now? |
31524 | Could anything have happened to him? |
31524 | Could it be an Indian camp- fire? |
31524 | Could you, Phil? 31524 Did Amos Judson tell you all this, Mother?" |
31524 | Did I know Judson? 31524 Did he tell you about his girl here?" |
31524 | Did n''t find any dead dogs nor children next mornin'', did ye, O''mie? |
31524 | Did n''t ye hear,''four A. M. sharp''? 31524 Did she have on a red blanket too, Saturday afternoon?" |
31524 | Did you follow it? |
31524 | Did you go near the cabin? |
31524 | Did you know her or her husband? |
31524 | Did you see any one, or is it just a wayside camp for movers going out on the trail? |
31524 | Did you see him again that night? |
31524 | Did you see him first? |
31524 | Do n''t you really care for Lettie, Phil? 31524 Do n''t you think he will be good now, Phil?" |
31524 | Do you know how Jean Pahusca came to carry a knife for years with the name,''Jean Le Claire,''cut in the blade? 31524 Do you mean to say, Thomas O''Meara--?" |
31524 | Do you really think he will be good now? |
31524 | Do you remember the day Judge Baronet took his squad out av Springvale, Phil? 31524 Father Le Claire, can you tell me anything about Jean Pahusca, and where he is now?" |
31524 | Father Le Claire, how do the Injuns feel about this fracas now? |
31524 | Father, am I a fool, or is it in the Baronet blood to love deeply and constantly even unto death? |
31524 | Father, must that trip be made to- day? 31524 Father, you remember when you were twenty- one?" |
31524 | Father,I began hesitatingly,"Father, do you still love my mother? |
31524 | For goodness''sake, who goes there? |
31524 | Had n''t we better turn back now? 31524 Had n''t you heard?" |
31524 | Has anybody seen him this morning? |
31524 | Has he been flirting with some one, Mr. Tillhurst? 31524 Has he given you cause?" |
31524 | Has n''t that Indian massacre been avenged yet? |
31524 | Have ye talked wid Father Le Claire? |
31524 | Have you come to the cross- roads, Phil? |
31524 | Have you heard the news? |
31524 | Have you talked to O''mie of this? |
31524 | He did? 31524 He took you home from the Andersons''party the night Dave Mead was at Red Range?" |
31524 | His will? 31524 How about Brother Dodd?" |
31524 | How about that island, Grover? |
31524 | How can anybody help lovin''her? |
31524 | How can you get some, Bud? 31524 How come the rid flowers stuck with the little burrs on your dress? |
31524 | How did you get here, O''mie? |
31524 | How do you do? |
31524 | How does this concern you, Phil? |
31524 | How much cause have you given her? 31524 How much time will it require to get your counsel and come here again?" |
31524 | I will see you again; may I? |
31524 | I''ll guess that''s petticoats going up there,I said mentally,"but who''s hunting wild flowers out here alone this time of night? |
31524 | I, strolling? 31524 I? |
31524 | I? 31524 I? |
31524 | In no way, then, has Philip ever done you any wrong? 31524 Is it whiskey?" |
31524 | Is n''t that all? |
31524 | Is that the biggest hostler you''ve got? |
31524 | Is that the lilac that is so fragrant? |
31524 | Is the town safe? |
31524 | Is this your story? |
31524 | It must be movers, and as to that red flash of color, are you real sure it was not just a part of the rose- hued world out there? |
31524 | Look at the ould man, now, would ye? 31524 Marjie, can it be you? |
31524 | Marjie,I said gently,"will you kiss me and tell me that you love me?" |
31524 | May I ask you one favor? |
31524 | May I see you just a minute? 31524 May I take something else to Aunt Candace, too, Marjie?" |
31524 | May I take you home, Marjie, and tell you how sweet that letter was? |
31524 | Mr. Mapleson, will you repeat to Le Claire what you have just told me and show him your affidavits and records? |
31524 | Mrs. Gentry,Le Claire asked abruptly,"where did you find O''mie?" |
31524 | Now what the deuce can you do in the army, O''mie? |
31524 | Now''d ye ever see a finer- lookin''couple? |
31524 | Now, Cam, has anybody ever heard her say she was engaged? 31524 Now, Phil, where did you get that knife?" |
31524 | Now, as to this half- breed, why the devil did n''t you kill him when you had the chance? 31524 Now, how did he ever get to that place, O''mie?" |
31524 | Now, will you tell us what you know of this case? |
31524 | Nowhere, is she? 31524 O''mie, we know, and Father Le Claire knows, but how can we make those foolish girls understand? |
31524 | O''mie, you heard Dr. Hemingway''s prayer last night? |
31524 | Of his own choice? |
31524 | Oh, Marjie, my Marjie, what is wrong? |
31524 | Oh, O''mie, what are you forever tagging me for? |
31524 | Oh, Phil, Phil, are you here again? 31524 Oh, Phil, what shall we do? |
31524 | Or you? |
31524 | Phil Baronet, you thon of a horthe- thief, where have you been keeping yourthelf? 31524 Phil, did Le Claire suggest any property?" |
31524 | Phil, do ye remimber that May mornin''when ye broke through the vines av the Hermit''s Cave? 31524 Phil, when did you see Jean Pahusca last?" |
31524 | Phil, why do you hate me? |
31524 | Phil,Aunt Candace was at the door now,"have you thought of the Hermit''s Cave?" |
31524 | Philip, why do you consider the cave possible? |
31524 | Phwat can I do? 31524 Really, is there?" |
31524 | Say, Clate, where''s Bud going? |
31524 | Settle it? 31524 Shall I do it, little sister? |
31524 | Shall we tell Le Claire? |
31524 | Something else now? |
31524 | Spakin''of bein''paupers and bein''kept by Judson, Lettie-- who is payin''the wages of sin, in money and fine clothes, right now? 31524 Stands to reason a boy who can live in Kansas would go back to Massachusetts, does n''t it?" |
31524 | Tell me, O''mie, what''s he done? |
31524 | Tell me, O''mie,I said at last,"how you happened to find me up there two hours ago?" |
31524 | That means we''ll never get across either, does n''t it? |
31524 | Them horses dangerous? |
31524 | There is no stain somewhere, no folly of idle flirtation, no weakness? 31524 They call that being''locoed''out on the Plains, do n''t they?" |
31524 | Tobacco? |
31524 | Uncle Cam, where is O''mie? 31524 Until when?" |
31524 | Was she never heard of again? |
31524 | Well, an''phwat did somethin''do to you? |
31524 | Well, little sweetheart, honest now, and I wo n''t tell, and it''s none of my doggoned business neither; but be you goin''to marry Amos Judson? |
31524 | Well, what ever did become of that Jean, anyhow? 31524 Well, what is it you want?" |
31524 | Well, what is it? |
31524 | Well, what took her to the-- to the old cabin out there? |
31524 | Well, what was it, O''mie? |
31524 | Well, who be thaid lady? |
31524 | Well, why not set your cap fur the widder? 31524 Well,"I said,"will I do?" |
31524 | Well? |
31524 | Were you waiting for me, dearie? 31524 What are you doing, Pete?" |
31524 | What are you going to do, Phil? |
31524 | What are you going to do? 31524 What brought you out here, Bud?" |
31524 | What can I do for you, Lettie? |
31524 | What do you mean? |
31524 | What does he come here so much for, anyhow? |
31524 | What else? |
31524 | What for? |
31524 | What has happened, Philip? |
31524 | What is it, Marjie? |
31524 | What is it, Phil? 31524 What is it, Phil?" |
31524 | What is it? |
31524 | What is your name, and what do you want? |
31524 | What makes you call me''Star- face''? 31524 What makes you lonesome, O''mie?" |
31524 | What makes you think so, John? |
31524 | What news? |
31524 | What part of town did he have, Philip? |
31524 | What was it your business? |
31524 | What was it, Marjie? |
31524 | What was it, a rattlesnake? |
31524 | What were you doing there? |
31524 | What will you do with him? |
31524 | What''s Tell Mapleson after this year, d''ye reckon? 31524 What''s that?" |
31524 | What''s the matter down there? |
31524 | What''s the matter with these critters, Phil? |
31524 | What''s the matter, Baronet? 31524 What''s the matter, Baronet?" |
31524 | What''s the matter, O''mie? 31524 What''s the matter, Phil?" |
31524 | What''s these Kansas men with their capital letters got to do with it? |
31524 | What''s your name? |
31524 | What''th going to be done? |
31524 | When are you going to leave? |
31524 | When do you go home? |
31524 | When shall I call? |
31524 | When was that one night? |
31524 | Where are you going, Marjie? |
31524 | Where does he live? |
31524 | Where has he been? 31524 Where is your home, your tepee?" |
31524 | Where was he at that time? |
31524 | Where was he? |
31524 | Where will you go now? |
31524 | Where will you go, my boy? |
31524 | Where''s Aunt Candace? |
31524 | Where''s O''mie? |
31524 | Where''s my evidence? |
31524 | Where? 31524 Who is he, daughter?" |
31524 | Who taketh your plathe, O''mie? |
31524 | Who told you he was there, father? |
31524 | Who took you home the second time? |
31524 | Whose business? |
31524 | Whose business? |
31524 | Why ca n''t he stay Injun? 31524 Why did n''t I get a letter, dearie?" |
31524 | Why did n''t you come home with the crowd, handsome giant? |
31524 | Why did n''t you say so? |
31524 | Why did you leave Massachusetts? |
31524 | Why do you ask? |
31524 | Why not tell me now what father knows? |
31524 | Why should it be small? |
31524 | Why should you care? |
31524 | Why, O''mie? |
31524 | Why, boys, what''s all this delegation mean? |
31524 | Why, what did he fear? |
31524 | Why, where was Uncle Cam? |
31524 | Why? |
31524 | Will you and Judson kill time down here? |
31524 | Will you help us out of this, Le Claire? |
31524 | Will you sign a relinquishment to your claim, and trust to me that it is the best for us to do? |
31524 | Will you stay with me, Bud, till I get up there? |
31524 | Will you take this young lady home for me? 31524 Will you wear it again for me, dearie?" |
31524 | With Phil? |
31524 | Would n''t a Injun look funny with my thcalp? |
31524 | Would you know it, Marjie, if you thaw it again? |
31524 | Would you really do that, O''mie? |
31524 | Yes, you narrow, grasping robber of orphans, why? |
31524 | You Judge Baronet''s son? |
31524 | You are safe still? |
31524 | You care so much for another man''s wife? 31524 You did n''t see who was on the horse, did you?" |
31524 | You go at sunrise? |
31524 | You know that rich Melrose girl''s gone back to Topeka? |
31524 | You know the purpose of Amos Judson''s visit with your mother yesterday? |
31524 | You say you wo n''t? |
31524 | You sleep well? |
31524 | You two gettin''ready to elope? 31524 You wanted to see me, Phil?" |
31524 | You wanted to see me? |
31524 | You will look after them, John? 31524 You''ll go to prayer meeting, Phil?" |
31524 | You''ll never let the Indians get you, will you, Phil? |
31524 | Ai n''t you sometimes?" |
31524 | An''what more could a man do? |
31524 | And a voice, Marjie''s sweet voice, called anxiously:"Is that you, Phil? |
31524 | And his pleading voice,"Phil, ye''ll come soon, wo n''t ye?" |
31524 | And now, what else?" |
31524 | And phwat''s to be nixt?" |
31524 | And second, is the young man we call O''mie heir to the same? |
31524 | And when King Lear asked,"What''s that?" |
31524 | And who is his beneficiary?" |
31524 | Any old waterproof cloak to lend me, girlie?" |
31524 | Anybody here seen him for five years?" |
31524 | Anything except a pretty girl?" |
31524 | Are n''t we pretty near the edge? |
31524 | Are n''t you proud of the name, John?" |
31524 | Are they?" |
31524 | Are you afraid of ghosts?" |
31524 | Are you goin''to quit it? |
31524 | Are you scared or sick?" |
31524 | Are you the man to get it?" |
31524 | At the supper table my host went directly to my case by asking,"Have you come out here to prospect or to take hold?" |
31524 | Besides, who wants to back out? |
31524 | But how about her?" |
31524 | But tell me, Father,"I had dropped down beside him again,"do you still love my mother? |
31524 | But the query,"Where''s Phil, now?" |
31524 | But what is the matter, Phil?" |
31524 | But what took you to the top of the cliff at midnight? |
31524 | But where is Philip?" |
31524 | But where was he after that? |
31524 | But who has spoken out for these-- the women and the young? |
31524 | But who is this shadow of Jean Pahusca''s-- a priest in civilization, a renegade on the Plains? |
31524 | But you''ll promise, wo n''t you, for the sake of my husband? |
31524 | CHAPTER X O''MIE''S CHOICE And how can man die better Than facing fearful odds For the ashes of his fathers And the temples of his gods? |
31524 | Cam groaned,"can anything have happened to him?" |
31524 | Can a career like this be atoned for with a bank check and interest at eight per cent?" |
31524 | Can you imagine what his mother felt when she found her boy was stolen? |
31524 | Can you picture the joy of that reunion? |
31524 | Could I be deceiving her by putting Rachel off in her presence? |
31524 | Could I be the same boy that watched that line of blue- coats file out of Springvale and across the rocky ford of the Neosho that summer day? |
31524 | Could I? |
31524 | Could it be that her mother was trying to influence my father in her favor? |
31524 | Could she be in league against me? |
31524 | Could twenty- four hours of distrust and misunderstanding displace these fourteen years of happy thinking? |
31524 | Could you care for anybody else? |
31524 | Could you go out again to- morrow?" |
31524 | D''ye just notice Phil''s hair, layin''in soft thick waves? |
31524 | D''ye see?" |
31524 | D''ye''s lief come into town that way?" |
31524 | Did I know her?" |
31524 | Did I remember? |
31524 | Did a merciful God forget the Plains in those days of prairie conquest? |
31524 | Did he iver decaive? |
31524 | Did he iver do a cruelty to a helpless thing, or fight a smaller boy? |
31524 | Did he iver turn coward in a place where courage was needed? |
31524 | Did his manner please Marjie? |
31524 | Did my love for her spring into being at that instant? |
31524 | Did n''t they have their full swing at you?" |
31524 | Did n''t we settle that in those days together at dear old Rockport? |
31524 | Did you ever feel as if you were near somebody you could n''t see?" |
31524 | Do I love the woman who gave you birth? |
31524 | Do you know the writing?" |
31524 | Do you prefer any witness or counsel, or shall we settle this alone?" |
31524 | Do you remember how I would always get on your side of the game when Jean Pahusca played with us?" |
31524 | Do you remember when we played hide- and- seek in there?" |
31524 | Do you see now?" |
31524 | Do you see?" |
31524 | Do you think he is safe?" |
31524 | Do you want it?" |
31524 | Does a man love the same woman always?" |
31524 | Ever thee a tow- headed flying thquirrel?" |
31524 | Faintly, just beside me, came the reply:"Phil, you''ve come? |
31524 | First, did O''Meara give up the land he entered? |
31524 | For suddenly came the query"How can I best take care of her? |
31524 | For why? |
31524 | Fur why? |
31524 | Goin''northwest? |
31524 | Had I not seen the unselfish, kindly, generous spirit that had marked all his business career? |
31524 | Had he told me that to give me courage in my hour of shrinking? |
31524 | Had we not lived on this Kansas border in all those plastic years when the mind takes deepest impressions? |
31524 | Had we not sworn our fealty to the flag, and protection to our town in our boyish patriotism the Summer before? |
31524 | Has he been a young man of double dealing, coarse and rude with some company and refined with others? |
31524 | Have you and Marjie quarrelled? |
31524 | Have you any answer to my claim?" |
31524 | Have you ever known him to deceive anybody? |
31524 | He was no coward, nor laggard; but where could he have kept himself? |
31524 | He''s an Osage, is n''t he?" |
31524 | Honest, now, what''s what?" |
31524 | Honestly, now, was there iver anything in all the years we run together that was n''t square and clane and fearless and lovin''?" |
31524 | How can a man as good and holy as I am manage the obstreperous girls? |
31524 | How can a man live who has lost his wife, or his sweetheart, in that way?" |
31524 | How can the Good Bein''permit it?" |
31524 | How could God permit it? |
31524 | How could I ever care for a girl so mean- spirited and cruel as she had been to me? |
31524 | How could I meet this woman now? |
31524 | How could he be so good to me and then deceive me so? |
31524 | How did you ever get back?" |
31524 | How is your mother to- day?" |
31524 | How long will you care for her?" |
31524 | How much is it going to take to settle it? |
31524 | I did not notice him until he said slowly:"Baronet?" |
31524 | I know now it was only a boy''s patriotic foolishness, but who shall say it was ignoble in its influence? |
31524 | I s''pose you''ve heard the news?" |
31524 | I shall see you again-- to- morrow?" |
31524 | If by blood ties, why does the priest not own, or entirely disown him? |
31524 | If not, why does the priest protect him? |
31524 | Is Jean hidin''out round here again? |
31524 | Is Uncle Cam being imposed on? |
31524 | Is n''t it Longfellow who speaks of"the lovely stars, the forget- me- nots of the angels,"blossoming"in the infinite meadows of heaven"? |
31524 | Is n''t that true, Brother Dodd?" |
31524 | Is that fair to Marjie?" |
31524 | Is that the kind of a priest you are?" |
31524 | Is there any?" |
31524 | It was a lovely stroll though, was n''t it, Philip?" |
31524 | It was just Marjie''s imagination, was n''t it?" |
31524 | Le Claire, you are just back from the Osage Mission?" |
31524 | Let''em go? |
31524 | Mapleson, will you renounce your retainer''s fees in your interest in the orphaned?" |
31524 | Marjie, I''m goin''to kape these flowers till-- well, now, Marjie, shall I tell you whin?" |
31524 | Marjie, do you remember the time Jean Pahusca nearly got you? |
31524 | Marjory Whately, did anybody iver catch him in a lie? |
31524 | May I go to him? |
31524 | May I? |
31524 | Maybe the hole had something in it, one of Phil''s letters to Marjie, who knows? |
31524 | Mr. Baronet and I have recollections of two delightful years when he was in Harvard, have n''t we?" |
31524 | Mr. Dodd who married you to the Kiowa squaw? |
31524 | Now ai n''t that right? |
31524 | Now what had he to leave? |
31524 | Now, Lettie, what else?" |
31524 | Now, Marjie, why''d you run off? |
31524 | Now, why do I have to bear all of it?" |
31524 | O say, does that star- spangled banner yet wave O''er the land of the free and the home of the brave? |
31524 | O''mie? |
31524 | Of course, I would go to Topeka, but might she not come to Springvale? |
31524 | Oh, Phil, I''m so-- what? |
31524 | Oh, what can it all mean? |
31524 | Or did you think His Excellency, the Reverend Dodd was right, an''I''d cut for cover till the fuss was over? |
31524 | Phil, d''ye reckon this will iver be a dacent civilized country? |
31524 | Phil, whin does your padre and his Company start to subdue the rebillious South?" |
31524 | Presently she said,"May I come up to your office pretty soon? |
31524 | Satisfy me? |
31524 | See the name?" |
31524 | Settle this in court or out of it?" |
31524 | Shall I believe Lettie, or O''mie?" |
31524 | Shall I stay with her in the light, or go into the dark and strike the danger out of it?" |
31524 | Shall I tell you why?" |
31524 | Shall we clinch the bargain now, or do you want to think about it a little while? |
31524 | Shall we take this money at her father''s death?" |
31524 | She may be scared o''him, an''he knows it; but bedad, I''d not want to be the border ruffian that went prowlin''in there uninvited; would you?" |
31524 | So Marjie concluded mentally and then she asked innocently:"How can Amos Judson''s visit make this call here necessary?" |
31524 | Suddenly O''mie gave a start and in a voice low and even but intense he exclaimed:"For the Lord''s sake, wud ye look at that? |
31524 | Tell me the truth now, as you must answer for yourself sometime before the almighty and ever- living God, has Philip Baronet ever wronged you?" |
31524 | Tell me truly, have you done wrong? |
31524 | Tell me, do you care for her still? |
31524 | That''s fair, is n''t it?" |
31524 | That''s what you lawyers want, ai n''t it?" |
31524 | The Judge has asked two questions:''Did Patrick O''Meara ever give up his title to the land?'' |
31524 | The first time I saw Marjie she asked,"Are you afraid of Indians?" |
31524 | The old tree is shapely, is n''t it?" |
31524 | Thee that thaplin''on the bank? |
31524 | Then it was that I heard O''mie''s low words:"Bedad, Phil, an''that''s how it is wid ye, is it? |
31524 | They had gone-- but whither? |
31524 | To the others it was a wasted bit of heroism, for if none of us had yet found the way to this retreat, why should we look for O''mie there? |
31524 | Was Le Claire a villain in holy guise? |
31524 | Was it inherited courage, or was it the spirit of power in that letter, Marjie''s message of love to me, that gave me grace there? |
31524 | Was it the will of Providence made O''mie appeal to them at the right moment? |
31524 | Was that a trick of Lettie''s to put Marjie out of my thought, I wondered, or did she really know my heart? |
31524 | Was the foolish girl attracted by this picturesque creature? |
31524 | We might as well get this matter between us settled here as over in the court- room, eh?" |
31524 | What a careless set av young idiots we were then?" |
31524 | What boy after that would not have braved any danger to explore the depths of this hiding- place? |
31524 | What business had she robbin''folks of letters, stealin''''em out, and givin''''em into wicked hands? |
31524 | What could I do but leave town? |
31524 | What could have happened to bring all this about? |
31524 | What did it ever grow for?" |
31524 | What did it mean? |
31524 | What did you see? |
31524 | What do I think? |
31524 | What do they know of the old Puritan blood, and the strength of the grip of a Massachusetts man? |
31524 | What does it mean, Phil? |
31524 | What else could it be? |
31524 | What else could that look on her face last night have meant? |
31524 | What else could this terrified horse with its flying harness ends mean? |
31524 | What else?" |
31524 | What else?" |
31524 | What had I done to be so lovingly and reverently welcomed home? |
31524 | What have I to fear?" |
31524 | What have you done with Marjie''s letter that you stole before it got to Phil?" |
31524 | What is that long, narrow, red light down by the creek?" |
31524 | What makes some folks so precious, I wonder? |
31524 | What word may I take to Phil for you?" |
31524 | What''ll he do wid the greatest common divisor an''the indicative mood an''the Sea of Azov, an''the Zambezi River, when he''s learned''em, anyhow? |
31524 | What''s been the matter?" |
31524 | What''s in gray hair and baldness, anyhow? |
31524 | What''s the least will satisfy you?" |
31524 | What''s the matter?" |
31524 | What''s the tariff due on this junk?" |
31524 | What''s yours?" |
31524 | When shall I call?" |
31524 | When shall I lave off?'' |
31524 | Where did he come from?" |
31524 | Where have you been?" |
31524 | Where is it you are going, Phil?" |
31524 | Where were Custer, and Moore, and Forsyth, and Pliley, and Stillwell, and Morton, if such as I be called a hero? |
31524 | Where were you, Lettie, whin I was spyin''and what were you doin''at the time yoursilf?" |
31524 | Where''s Bud going?" |
31524 | Where''s O''mie?" |
31524 | Whin? |
31524 | Who are you, anyhow? |
31524 | Who begun it? |
31524 | Who do you reckon come to Springvale last month?" |
31524 | Who knows how soon we may need strong men in this town, men who can do the short- range work? |
31524 | Who says I''ve been talking about you?" |
31524 | Who''d want to have hair like a girl''s? |
31524 | Whose business was it?" |
31524 | Whose escort were you?" |
31524 | Why do n''t you go too, Phil? |
31524 | Why not tell me now what you know?" |
31524 | Why should he hesitate so now? |
31524 | Why should she be forever haunting my way, though?" |
31524 | Why should she go out there?" |
31524 | Why? |
31524 | Why?" |
31524 | Wid them Missouri raiders on the east and the Injuns in the southwest where''ll anybody down there be, begorra, betwixt two sich grindin''millstones? |
31524 | Will ye be av us, boys? |
31524 | Will ye stay wid us?" |
31524 | Will ye take''em?" |
31524 | Will you come up to Topeka?" |
31524 | Will you go over and see how Mary Gentry''s arm is, and come up to the courthouse in about half an hour?" |
31524 | Will you go too?" |
31524 | Will you go with us, Baronet? |
31524 | Will you help me?" |
31524 | Will you ride the pony?" |
31524 | Will you sign the papers now?" |
31524 | Wo n''t you?" |
31524 | Would I? |
31524 | Would this man lie now to please Judge Baronet? |
31524 | You are pretty tired, are n''t you?" |
31524 | You could like somebody else just as well, could n''t you, Phil?" |
31524 | You know that woman you and Bud found in Satanta''s tepee on the Washita? |
31524 | You said, in conclusion, that I was trackin''you, and you ask, am I goin''to quit it? |
31524 | You see it, do n''t you? |
31524 | You who have had a wife to love, a son to cherish?" |
31524 | You will let me feel when I am far away that you are shielding my little girl from evil, wo n''t you, Phil?" |
31524 | You''ll come of course?" |
31524 | You''re sure you know just which crevice of the rock it is?'' |
31524 | and where was he going?" |
31524 | and''Is O''mie his heir, and therefore the rightful owner?'' |
31524 | but I wish we could have been in that fight; do n''t you?" |
31524 | or tend to somethin''else besides your own business? |
31524 | or what''s to be gained by it? |
31524 | so that''s how it is wid ye, is it? |
8459 | ''Garçon,''says he,''if I ask you a question will you tell me the truth?'' 8459 ''What are these fireworks for?'' |
8459 | ''What do you want of me?'' 8459 ''_ Oui, monsieur; certainement._''"Well, how much was the largest tip you ever received?" |
8459 | As they were coming away the great Mr. Lamar said to the poor landlady,''Madam, have you lived long in Washington?'' 8459 But,"says Bill,"did you see him?" |
8459 | Did you ever hear The Frenchman tell that story about Sophonisba? |
8459 | Did you see that? |
8459 | Do you think that the committee have found you out? |
8459 | How so? |
8459 | How you expect an old sport like me to bet upon a certainty? |
8459 | I understand,I said in an address to the assembled delegates,"that you are all for Grover Cleveland?" |
8459 | If,I ended my sketch,"out of the mouths of babes and sucklings, why not out of the brain of this crazed old woman of the South?" |
8459 | In what way do you consider it unfair, your Majesty? |
8459 | Is it a free fight? |
8459 | Is that all? |
8459 | Lamar,he exclaimed,"do n''t you think you have heard the greatest speech to- night that was never delivered?" |
8459 | My God,without a pause he continued,"is n''t that great?" |
8459 | That is good, is n''t it? 8459 The first thing I want to ask,"said he,"is whether that old woman was a real person or a figment of your imagination?" |
8459 | To whom are you referring? |
8459 | What do you take me for-- confidence man? |
8459 | What do you think of that? |
8459 | What do you think of this vintage? |
8459 | What was it? |
8459 | What would you do,he once said,"if you owned the Herald?" |
8459 | What would you suggest? |
8459 | What-- at the d''Orient? |
8459 | Where do I come in? |
8459 | Why,I answered,"I would stay in New York and edit it;"and then I proceeded,"but you mean to ask me what I think you ought to do with it?" |
8459 | ''Ace high,''says the Jedge;''what you got?'' |
8459 | ''Do you remember,''the statesman, soldier and orator continued,''a young and handsome Mississippian, a member of Congress, by the name of Lamar?'' |
8459 | ''What you got?'' |
8459 | ''Will you,''he abruptly interjected,''accept the chairmanship of the board of visitors to the academy this coming June?'' |
8459 | A little group of such men formed itself about Schurz-- then only forty- three years old-- to what end? |
8459 | And how?" |
8459 | And then life tenure after the manner of the Caesars and Cromwells of history, and especially the Latin- Americans-- Bolivar, Rosas and Diaz? |
8459 | Are they willfully dense? |
8459 | Are we on the way to another terrestrial collapse, and so on ad infinitum to the end of time? |
8459 | But before her time what had he been, what had he done? |
8459 | But what was he to do? |
8459 | But which among us keeps or has ever kept the middle of the road? |
8459 | But which page of the court calendar made you a plural? |
8459 | Could mortal ask for more? |
8459 | Could there be a stronger argument in favor of a world to come than may be found in the brevity and incertitude of the world that is? |
8459 | Could you not substitute some other expression?" |
8459 | Did Washington, when he was angry, swear like a trooper? |
8459 | Do the people grow degenerate? |
8459 | Does this make me a Baptist, I wonder? |
8459 | He came down from the Castle on the hill to the marketplace in the town and says he:"What do you galoots want, anyhow?" |
8459 | He stood quite at the head of our literature, giving the lie to the scornful query,"Who reads an American book?" |
8459 | He was, for all his self- sufficiency and pride, short- sighted; and yet, until they arrived, how could he foresee the developments of artillery? |
8459 | How could such a mà © nage last? |
8459 | How much does old Sam Johnson owe of the fine figure he cuts to Boswell, and, minus Boswell, how much would be left of him? |
8459 | I wonder if that can be justly said of the President? |
8459 | I wonder shall we ever get any real truth out of what is called history? |
8459 | I wonder where they got it? |
8459 | In what was he a black sheep, for that he had been one seemed certain? |
8459 | Mr. Barksdale said:"Would not the words''We have received with the deepest sensibility Mr. Tilden''s letter of withdrawal,''answer your purpose?" |
8459 | Neither shall I make apology for this long quotation by myself from myself, for am I not inditing an autobiography, so called? |
8459 | On one occasion I said to her:"Ellen, why do you pursue this man in this cruel way? |
8459 | Once after a concert he suddenly exclaimed:"Do n''t you think Wagner was a---- fraud?" |
8459 | Once out of the White House-- what else and what----? |
8459 | Only names? |
8459 | Pryor?" |
8459 | Senator Gwin of California, the eighth of February, 1858?'' |
8459 | Ten minutes later,"Is it still a free fight?" |
8459 | Ten thousand heads were chopped off during the Terror in France to make room for whom? |
8459 | The challenge underlying prohibition is twofold: Does prohibition prohibit, and, if it does, may it not generate evils peculiarly its own? |
8459 | Then he asked:"What do you want for Winchester?" |
8459 | Then it appeared that the designated thesis read:"Which political party offers for the workingman the best solution of the tariff problem?" |
8459 | To what end? |
8459 | Was it for this that he had fought with tongue and pen and sword? |
8459 | Was it for this that oceans of patriotism, of treasure and of blood had been poured out? |
8459 | We owe a great debt to Washington, because if a third why not a fourth term? |
8459 | We sat together at table and suddenly he turned and said:"How are you getting on with your bill?" |
8459 | What are you hanging round Washington for anyhow? |
8459 | What boots it? |
8459 | What did the President know or care about foreign appointments? |
8459 | What do they know or care about the origins of wealth; about Venice; about Cadiz; about what is said of Wall Street? |
8459 | What do you want?" |
8459 | What else and what next? |
8459 | What had he done to be ashamed about or wish to conceal? |
8459 | What is CÃ ¦ sar to us, or we to CÃ ¦ sar? |
8459 | What is to be done about it? |
8459 | What of that?" |
8459 | What possible good can it do you?" |
8459 | What was it I was saying about statues-- that they all look alike to me? |
8459 | What was the matter with Nero? |
8459 | What was there for Webster, what was there for Clay to quibble about? |
8459 | When I had finished he said:"What are you doing about Winchester?" |
8459 | When will the world learn to discriminate? |
8459 | When, having failed to provoke a fight, he had taken himself off, an onlooker said:"Bill, I thought you were going to do him up?" |
8459 | Where must an old- line Democrat go to find himself? |
8459 | Where this side of heaven shall we look for the court of last resort? |
8459 | Where will it end? |
8459 | Who among us has the single right to claim for himself, and the likes of him, the divine title of a workingman? |
8459 | Who shall tell us the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, about Hamilton; about Burr; about CÃ ¦ sar, Caligula and Cleopatra? |
8459 | Who that heard them shall ever forget them? |
8459 | Who this side of the grave shall be sure of anything? |
8459 | Whom do you mean by"we"?'' |
8459 | Why did n''t you hold back your statement a bit? |
8459 | Why might I not put a head and tail to this-- a foreword and a few words in conclusion-- and make it meet the purpose and serve the occasion? |
8459 | Why not?" |
8459 | Why should not you and I call him Master and kneel together in love and pity at his feet?" |
8459 | Wo n''t you manage it for me?" |
8459 | Yet have we the record of any moment when it was not so? |
8459 | Yet how could I accept it with the work ahead of me? |
8459 | Yet, to come again, d''ye mind? |
33498 | ''When first I put this uniform on''--how did that go? 33498 ''Whom has he robbed? |
33498 | A noseguard? 33498 A snake? |
33498 | A specialty of thine? |
33498 | Ah!--Won''t you... get down? |
33498 | Ah, señor, you eshame me that I am not so hospitabble, ees eet not? |
33498 | Ai n''t he the Latin scholar? |
33498 | All this while? 33498 An''before? |
33498 | And how about the little eohippus? |
33498 | And now what? 33498 And tell him to come break Jeff out o''jail?" |
33498 | And who''s to be the judge of whether it''s a good law or not? 33498 And you hardly able to walk? |
33498 | And you wo n''t sing about Sandy to any one else? |
33498 | And you''ll tell me about it? |
33498 | Any of you know what it is? |
33498 | Anything else? |
33498 | Anything of yours you want''em to bring, Bransford? |
33498 | Are you lame at all? |
33498 | Are you lame? |
33498 | Are you lame? |
33498 | Are you sure that Bransford, or any one else, came in here at all yesterday, or did you dream it? 33498 Are you sure?" |
33498 | Besides, why did he run away? 33498 Blonde or brunette?" |
33498 | Bransford? |
33498 | Brother,he said cordially,"will you please go to-- home?" |
33498 | But I''ll see you again----"_ Never!_"----when you''re not so-- cross? |
33498 | But ca n''t Jeff prove where he was, maybe? |
33498 | But has the law no defenders? |
33498 | But one worse than the others-- one he hates most? |
33498 | But we''re friends? |
33498 | But what possible motive could the robber have for going to the dance at all? |
33498 | But why suspect young John?--why not old John? |
33498 | By a good man, in this connection, you mean a bad man, I presume? |
33498 | Ca n''t I? |
33498 | Ca n''t we turn off the road and hide? |
33498 | Ca n''t you write to that one? |
33498 | Cross in a boat then? |
33498 | Cut out from the inside-- then carried out there? 33498 Did n''t I jest tell ye? |
33498 | Did n''t I, now? |
33498 | Did n''t I? 33498 Did n''t see Gibson, did you? |
33498 | Did you rob the post- office at Escondido-- really? |
33498 | Do you intend to start up a correspondence with me without even the formality of asking my consent? |
33498 | Do you mean to tell me you two puling infants are out hunting down a man you never saw? 33498 Does he?" |
33498 | Eh? 33498 Ever read the''Fool''s Errand''?" |
33498 | Fine day, is n''t it? |
33498 | Fine large day, is n''t it? |
33498 | Friend of yours? |
33498 | Get out? 33498 Goin''to talk turkey to me?" |
33498 | Good dinner? 33498 Got a string?" |
33498 | Got that? 33498 Has n''t he a fierce and warlike appearance, though?" |
33498 | Has n''t she gone back to New York, I''d like to know, and left you to get out of it the best way you can? 33498 Have you anything to say?" |
33498 | Have you got any papers for me? |
33498 | He''ll shoot back on proper occasion, then? 33498 Hey? |
33498 | Him? 33498 Hot toddy, this weather? |
33498 | How can I tell? 33498 How could you-- how_ could_ you say that?" |
33498 | How dare you? |
33498 | How does thee like my gray gown? |
33498 | How far is it from here, Jeff? |
33498 | How long has this Lake got to do his filing in, Pappy? |
33498 | How many robbers were there? 33498 How''d you get your clothes so wet?" |
33498 | How''s he making it, Jimmy? |
33498 | Hurt those boys? 33498 Hurt?" |
33498 | I do n''t want to make a bally fool of myself-- do I, old Grasshopper? 33498 I thought you were not coming?" |
33498 | If he-- if he does n''t love you,sobbed the stricken witch,"then you''ll come back to me-- won''t you? |
33498 | If the robbers are frontiersmen they may be easier to get track of, as you suggest; but wo n''t they be harder to get? |
33498 | If you will sing for me afterward? |
33498 | Indeed? 33498 Is he in town?" |
33498 | Is it serious? |
33498 | Is it thou indeed, my son? 33498 Is she blonde or brunette?" |
33498 | Is thee lame? |
33498 | Is this an arrest, or do you just give me this_ in_-vite semi- officiously? |
33498 | Is your friend here? 33498 Jeff,"said Jeff soberly,"are you going to be a damned fool all your life? |
33498 | Jeff,said the mystified Ballinger, spurring up beside him,"what has the gray- haired Register done? |
33498 | John Wesley, do you or do you not believe Stephen W. Lake, of Agua Chiquite, to be a low- down, coniferous skunk by birth, inclination and training? |
33498 | Lake is one talkative little man, is n''t he? 33498 Lake?" |
33498 | Look? 33498 Mad? |
33498 | Maybe Jeff can prove he was somewhere else? |
33498 | Me? |
33498 | Meester Jeff,he demanded,"what you been a- doin''now?" |
33498 | Melting eyes-- and that sort of thing? 33498 Might I ask before or after exactly what fact Monte was an accessory?" |
33498 | No? 33498 Nor take stock of each new masker to see if he possibly was n''t the expected Mr. Bransford? |
33498 | Not Jeff Bransford-- up South Rainbow way? |
33498 | Now... how did Buttinski''s noseguard get into this bank? 33498 Oh!--did he speak?" |
33498 | Oh, I did n''t_ say_ anything? 33498 Oh, I_ do_ know you, do n''t I? |
33498 | Oh, are you hurt? |
33498 | Oh, come ye in peace here or come ye in war? |
33498 | Oh, it''s you, Jimmy? 33498 Oh, old Lars Porsena? |
33498 | Oh, that reminds me-- how''s old Lars Porsena? |
33498 | Oh, the cuckoo is a pretty bird; she comes in the spring----"What do you s''pose that night- hawk thinks about the majesty of the law? |
33498 | Oh, yes, that''s all right; but what makes you think I''m innocent? |
33498 | On the contrary, what made your Billy think it was Lake? |
33498 | One of my guests? |
33498 | Per- rhaps you have some papers for heem? |
33498 | Pretty good article of plain thinking, was n''t it? |
33498 | Ride the sorrel horse then, why do n''t you? 33498 S''pose I thought you''d wait until I come to get it?" |
33498 | Say, Jeff, she''s pretty easy to get acquainted with, what? 33498 See a man on a sorrel horse?" |
33498 | So you believe in doing evil that good may come, do you? |
33498 | So you''ll actually tell a lie to keep from being thought a liar? 33498 So you''ve no objection to make, if I''ve got a few dollars? |
33498 | So_ that''s_ the way of it? 33498 Sure? |
33498 | Thank you,he said; and then, quite directly:"Are you rich?" |
33498 | That one from the Land Office, too? |
33498 | That would be the devil? |
33498 | That? 33498 The Latin, you mean? |
33498 | The first thing you did was to ask me if I was lame? 33498 Then I did n''t beguile you to come? |
33498 | Then why do n''t you get out? |
33498 | There''s really no doubt but that they decided for Lake, I suppose? |
33498 | They got any theory about the robber? |
33498 | Think we can make it? |
33498 | This way, is n''t it? |
33498 | Thought you were going away, yourself, so wild and fierce? |
33498 | Tired, pardner? |
33498 | Travel? 33498 Travel?" |
33498 | Um-- you sing? |
33498 | Want to sell him? |
33498 | Well, anything turned up yet? |
33498 | Well, now, who''d''a''thought that? |
33498 | Well, what are you going to do? 33498 Well, what do you say?" |
33498 | Well? |
33498 | Well? |
33498 | Well? |
33498 | Well? |
33498 | Were you a good man before you became a banker? |
33498 | What Lake is it? 33498 What did he say?" |
33498 | What do they stand for? 33498 What is it that makes him such a dear? |
33498 | What made you so absurd? 33498 What shall I sing?" |
33498 | What sort of a man is this Bransford? 33498 What was it? |
33498 | What you going to do? |
33498 | What''ll you do, Jeff? 33498 What''s the matter with you going?" |
33498 | What? 33498 What?" |
33498 | When-- or if-- your friends find you, wo n''t it hurt you to ride? |
33498 | Where do you live, Hoffman? |
33498 | Who did it, Lars? |
33498 | Who did the holmesing-- John Wesley? |
33498 | Who''s got the gun now? |
33498 | Who, me?... 33498 Why Beebe?" |
33498 | Why Beebe? |
33498 | Why do n''t you ride one of our horses? |
33498 | Why else did you make up as a Friend then? |
33498 | Why not give him a chance? |
33498 | Why not? 33498 Why not? |
33498 | Why-- surely you''re not going now? 33498 Will he live, doc?" |
33498 | Will the watchman die, Alec, d''you think? |
33498 | Will you hold my garments while I stone Stephen? |
33498 | Will you stay here, if you marry her, Jeff? |
33498 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
33498 | Wo n''t your friend come too? |
33498 | Would n''t the railroads sound funny, though? 33498 You have n''t heard of it? |
33498 | You think it''s a put- up job? 33498 You think your secret safe, do n''t you? |
33498 | You wanted to see me, sheriff-- at the hotel? |
33498 | You was n''t lyin'', was you? |
33498 | You were an-- old- timer yourself, were you not? |
33498 | You wo n''t sing it to any one else-- Ellinor? |
33498 | You''re not deputies, then? |
33498 | You''re sure Lake did it? 33498 You''ve been away, have n''t you?" |
33498 | _ Did_ you have a chill, Jeff? |
33498 | _ Quien sabe?_Gibson drew rein. |
33498 | _ We?_ And who''s_ we_? 33498 _ We?_ And who''s_ we_? |
33498 | _ Who the hell wants to live?_A noose flew back from the darkness. |
33498 | ***** Have I leave for a slight digression, to commit a long- delayed act of justice-- to correct a grievous wrong? |
33498 | *****"How on earth did you manage it? |
33498 | ----what Lake says about us?" |
33498 | A frame- up?" |
33498 | A good sport? |
33498 | A rattlesnake?" |
33498 | After your masked ball, then what?" |
33498 | An Englishman''s house is his castle-- that sort of thing? |
33498 | And I could n''t very well go round asking folks after you''re gone-- could I? |
33498 | And ca n''t you scare up another operator?" |
33498 | And do you suppose I''d have that courthouseful of fools buzzing and whispering at her? |
33498 | And if you ca n''t prove it-- who the hell cares what you suspect?" |
33498 | And those eyes of hers-- a little on the see- you- later style, are n''t they?" |
33498 | And yet, if they were there, we''d hear them laughing-- don''t you think?" |
33498 | Any good? |
33498 | Anything else?" |
33498 | Are n''t you absurd? |
33498 | Are n''t you afraid you''ll get into trouble?" |
33498 | Are n''t you ever coming back?" |
33498 | Are n''t you forgetting that?" |
33498 | Are n''t you hurt-- truly? |
33498 | Are you still mad at me?" |
33498 | Be a great, tall, handsome beast, With hoofs to gallop on? |
33498 | Beebe?" |
33498 | Before you and Leo hit Rainbow?" |
33498 | Besides being an enemy of Lake''s, I mean?" |
33498 | Bransford?" |
33498 | But say, Johnny, if the money had n''t been there would n''t that have been awkward?" |
33498 | But, why Beebe?" |
33498 | By the way, Monte, would you mind if I sent some men to look through your place? |
33498 | CHAPTER VIII ARCADES AMBO"What means this, my lord?" |
33498 | CHAPTER XIV FLIGHT"Keep away from that wheelbarrow-- what the hell do you know about machinery?" |
33498 | Can I borrow some boiling water to mix a small prescription, or maybe seven? |
33498 | Can you keep it to yourself?" |
33498 | Changed your mind again?" |
33498 | Did Jeff-- Mr. Long-- did Mr. Long now attempt to escape? |
33498 | Did he know any of them?" |
33498 | Did n''t they know you?" |
33498 | Did you know him?" |
33498 | Did you want me to stand there like a stuffed Egyptian mummy? |
33498 | Do n''t the men at the other side know him either? |
33498 | Do n''t this head feel better now?" |
33498 | Do we have to go down the same trail again?" |
33498 | Do you know, Mr. Monte, I think you are quite right?" |
33498 | Do you live far away? |
33498 | Do you want to hang? |
33498 | Does Lake pay you by the day or by the job?" |
33498 | Does that mean, by any chance, that I invited you?" |
33498 | E. P.? |
33498 | Echo answers-- why?... |
33498 | Ellinor opened her basket and spread its tempting wares with pretty hostly care-- or is there such a word as hostessly? |
33498 | Ever hear about it, Sagittarius?" |
33498 | Exactly who is Stratton, anyhow?" |
33498 | Fifty? |
33498 | Fight?" |
33498 | Forty? |
33498 | Get him? |
33498 | Got that? |
33498 | Got that? |
33498 | Got your outlaw yet? |
33498 | Griffith?" |
33498 | Had she gone to New York according to the original plan? |
33498 | Had she heard yet? |
33498 | Had we better drop it with a dull, sickening thud?" |
33498 | Happily, either these people are insincere or they reconsider the matter-- else what should we do for families? |
33498 | Has Lake any bitter enemies?" |
33498 | Has he got any close friends here?" |
33498 | Has murder stained his hands with gore?" |
33498 | Have n''t I seen how she bosses her mother round? |
33498 | He sang amid the wind and rain; My wet sands gave his feet delight-- When will that traveler come again?" |
33498 | Her eyes were brimming sorcery; her lips looked saucy challenge; she leaned close for a whispered word in his ear:"How would you like to tackle me?" |
33498 | Here, read this insolent note, will you?" |
33498 | Hobart?" |
33498 | Hope so.... And I shot him? |
33498 | How am I to know this thing ai n''t some more of your funny streaks? |
33498 | How are you going to get home? |
33498 | How can I ever repay you?'' |
33498 | How come you fellows to be chasin''him?" |
33498 | How did you know so pat where the little black horse was? |
33498 | How many times did they shoot old Lars-- does anybody know? |
33498 | How old are you, sir? |
33498 | How should I know what you would do? |
33498 | How was I to know you''d stop to fight for her with the very rope round your neck? |
33498 | How would you like to describe that? |
33498 | How''d you get in this game?" |
33498 | How''ll you get to El Paso? |
33498 | How''re you going to get him? |
33498 | I chose my costume solely to trap Mr. Bransford''s eye? |
33498 | I had no idea you thought so much of the girl----""Shut up, will you?" |
33498 | I had to say something-- didn''t I? |
33498 | I just looked an invitation, I suppose?" |
33498 | I really ought to see you safe back to your camp; but-- you''ll understand-- under the circumstances-- you''ll excuse me?" |
33498 | I want only just to ask you----""Why did you come then? |
33498 | I''m on the other side-- see? |
33498 | I''m under obligations to you, and so on-- but I''ve heard all of that kind of talk that''s good--_sabe_?" |
33498 | If I was dodgin''in here like him-- know what I''d do? |
33498 | If I was lying about the money-- how about it then? |
33498 | If I''m Bransford what the deuce am I doing here? |
33498 | If he gets the money and the insurance, too-- see? |
33498 | If you can prove this, why do n''t you cinch me and Felix both? |
33498 | If you''d just said at first that you were in the garden----Oh, why did n''t you? |
33498 | Is it far?" |
33498 | Is it worth while? |
33498 | Is n''t it rather unusual to go uninvited to a ball?" |
33498 | Is n''t that queer? |
33498 | Is that it? |
33498 | Is there any ford, do you know?" |
33498 | Is there any idea what time it was done?" |
33498 | Know anything about this one?" |
33498 | Lake? |
33498 | Lake?" |
33498 | Most actions are the result of mixed motives, you say? |
33498 | My stars, but wo n''t he get the horse- smile when the boys find out?" |
33498 | No hard feelings?" |
33498 | No small leetle cr- rime? |
33498 | Nor drag you into the garden? |
33498 | Nor squeeze your arm?" |
33498 | Not a yeep of protest from you now? |
33498 | Not las''night? |
33498 | Now this Stratton party-- is he some aged and venerable? |
33498 | Of course, if they do n''t come at all----Is your camp far?" |
33498 | Or has he killed ony? |
33498 | Or mask as a Friend in the hope that you would identify me?" |
33498 | Or was it all a damfool kid joke? |
33498 | Or what''s the crime that he has done His foes they are so mony?''" |
33498 | Or, if he''s downtown, what''s his name? |
33498 | Remember me telling you about a girl I saw on Mayhill, the day Nigger Babe throwed you off? |
33498 | Rex-- that''s my partner-- is quite as hungry as I am, you see; but if you could give me something-- anything you have-- to take down there? |
33498 | Ribs or anything?" |
33498 | Say, Gibson, how do you come in this galley?" |
33498 | Say, what are your pardners at the other side going to do for grub?" |
33498 | See any one go by about two hours ago?" |
33498 | See here, who''d sold you your chips, anyway? |
33498 | See here-- if I give you the straight tip will you work it up and keep your head closed until you see which way the cat jumps? |
33498 | See it? |
33498 | Send Bassett in, will you, Billy? |
33498 | Seven days? |
33498 | Shall I bring it down to you or can you climb up if I help you? |
33498 | So he said carelessly:"Let''s see, Bransford went as a sailor, did n''t he? |
33498 | Something like that? |
33498 | Stand the gaff?" |
33498 | Stratton?" |
33498 | Stratton?" |
33498 | Tears in them, maybe? |
33498 | That so?" |
33498 | That squares everything all right, does it? |
33498 | That was a regular triumph of matter over mind, was n''t it?" |
33498 | That would be Lake''s bank? |
33498 | That would be to commeet a r- rudeness-- no?" |
33498 | That''s not very polite, is it?----Are-- are you-- mad to me?" |
33498 | The bank robbery, the murder-- yes, she would hear of them, perhaps; but why need she hear his name? |
33498 | The explorer? |
33498 | The sheriff? |
33498 | Then, in a far- off, hard, judicial tone:"How long, ma''am, if I may ask, have you known that the little black horse was tangled up?" |
33498 | Then:"How''d you get that cut on your head?" |
33498 | There''s your Mr. White, and Griffith, and Gibson-- did I tell you about Gibson?" |
33498 | They take their masks off at midnight-- don''t they? |
33498 | Want to know what I think?" |
33498 | Was I going to make her a target for such vile tongues as yours-- for me? |
33498 | Was ever a poor captain in such a predicament? |
33498 | Was n''t I having a heap of fun? |
33498 | Was n''t that question meant to find out who I was? |
33498 | Was that only a week ago? |
33498 | Were you expecting arrest? |
33498 | Were you told about the violated trunk? |
33498 | What are you going to do, Jeff? |
33498 | What can I know about good songs-- or anything else?" |
33498 | What can you expect? |
33498 | What else could I have said? |
33498 | What for?" |
33498 | What has he stole? |
33498 | What is it?" |
33498 | What is your name?" |
33498 | What kind of a girl is she, anyhow, to hold clandestine interviews with a stranger?... |
33498 | What kind of a sack- and- snipe trick is this, anyway? |
33498 | What made you be a goat, Jeff? |
33498 | What makes you act so?" |
33498 | What next? |
33498 | What''s he done?" |
33498 | What''s that?" |
33498 | What''s that?" |
33498 | What''s the story about?" |
33498 | What''s this?" |
33498 | When I answered,''Not-- very,''did n''t you know at once that it was me?" |
33498 | When did it happen?" |
33498 | Where are you?_""I must go!" |
33498 | Where are you?_"Miss Hoffman whipped off her mask. |
33498 | Where can I see any better time than I had here, or find better friends? |
33498 | Where do you live, Ellinor?" |
33498 | Where''s your pardner?" |
33498 | White?" |
33498 | Who cares how it looks? |
33498 | Who was it said life was a poor imitation of literature? |
33498 | Who was it then?" |
33498 | Who went as a football player, White? |
33498 | Who''re you? |
33498 | Why Beebe?" |
33498 | Why did n''t he come in?" |
33498 | Why did n''t you get out of the water, then, if you are not hurt?" |
33498 | Why do you want me to tell you what you already know? |
33498 | Why not?" |
33498 | Why should you go any farther, anyhow? |
33498 | Why-- why-- why does Policeman Lake pretend he did n''t see that football player? |
33498 | Why?" |
33498 | Why?" |
33498 | Will you tell me truly?" |
33498 | Wo n''t you come back to camp with me? |
33498 | Would he be able to clear himself? |
33498 | Would she lose faith in him? |
33498 | Yet those blasts-- the far- seen fire-- the hearty welcome-- this delivery of himself into their hands?... |
33498 | You ai n''t seen nothing of him, have you?" |
33498 | You fellows"--he turned briskly to the two superintendents--"can''t you hold up your payday, say, until Saturday? |
33498 | You know him?" |
33498 | You own the car, then?" |
33498 | You see how it is, do n''t you? |
33498 | You two? |
33498 | You will play hooky, will you? |
33498 | You''ll go to the hotel with me, gentlemen? |
33498 | You''ll help me, Thompson? |
33498 | You?" |
33498 | _ Un marinero?_""Oh, no; he was atir- re''lak one--_que cosa_?--what you call thees theeng?--_un balon para jugar con los pies_? |
33498 | _ Un marinero?_""Oh, no; he was atir- re''lak one--_que cosa_?--what you call thees theeng?--_un balon para jugar con los pies_? |
46795 | Alone? |
46795 | And Kate had disappeared? |
46795 | And did you notice any such mark about the track we have been following-- anything you would know again, no matter where you saw it? |
46795 | And you are also thinking of our mother, should the dreaded Indian attack come when we are away? |
46795 | And you will stick to us through thick and thin, Blue Jacket? |
46795 | And you, Blue Jacket, will you not join us? |
46795 | And, Reuben, tell us if even Shawanee moccasins may not be known apart by some peculiar mark? |
46795 | Are all here? |
46795 | Are you hurt much, Blue Jacket? |
46795 | Are you still thinking about father, Sandy? |
46795 | Blue Jacket-- where is he? |
46795 | Bob, what would you do? |
46795 | But can one of them be carrying our sister all this time? |
46795 | But dare he enter there, with Pontiac and all those other chiefs from distant tribes still present as guests of Kiashuta? |
46795 | But even if he lives hundreds of miles away he can come back, ca n''t he? 46795 But he has already told us he could see that the braves were Senecas, from the feathers in their scalplocks, and their manner of dress?" |
46795 | But how are we going to get at the honey, Bob? |
46795 | But how can we ever stand it? |
46795 | But how is it we do not see our good friend, Blue Jacket? |
46795 | But on this present expedition you did not venture to go in among the lodges, because of the added danger, I suppose? |
46795 | But tell us why he came out holding his hands above his head; and for what reason should he wave the white rag? |
46795 | But the Iroquois are the friends of the English? |
46795 | But the wind may die out by then; or something else might happen to upset all our plans? |
46795 | But they do find a hollow, do n''t they? |
46795 | But what about your plan for dressing us all up to look like the Indians? |
46795 | But what if we succeed in locating the bee tree, and cut it down; how are we to carry the honey home? |
46795 | But what is to hinder our securing torches, and continuing on as long as we can put one foot before the other? |
46795 | But what shall we do with these two men? |
46795 | But what would you do wiz us? |
46795 | But where could he have found a boat? |
46795 | But which do you think it will be? |
46795 | But why did n''t you let me shoot him? |
46795 | But you said that, after the cry, our mother saw Kate moving about? |
46795 | But, Bob, must we just stand here, and let them take us prisoners? |
46795 | But-- Armand Lacroix, what of him? |
46795 | But-- he walked over here with us to get the measure of meal father promised to give him, without accepting any pay? |
46795 | Can it be posseeble zat it ees real gold? |
46795 | Chief, did you discover where the wigwam of Black Beaver is situated in the village? |
46795 | Come, what ails you, Kate? |
46795 | Could it be Daniel Boone who has come, or perhaps that young ranger, Simon Kenton, whom you and I liked so much when we saw him long ago? |
46795 | Did any one see it done? |
46795 | Did you empty your powder- horn in that charge, Bob? 46795 Did you hear what old Reuben Jacks said, Bob?" |
46795 | Did you meet Pontiac? |
46795 | Do you hear them coming? |
46795 | Do you mean it might be Blue Jacket? |
46795 | Had we not better run for the house? |
46795 | Haf you more of ze same stuff? |
46795 | Haf you zen a compadre near by? 46795 Have you got the sugar and everything along?" |
46795 | He''s just sure to come nosing around, do n''t you think? |
46795 | How did it start? |
46795 | How do we know whether they are deceiving us? |
46795 | How do you know that? |
46795 | How does it go, Bob? |
46795 | How it is zat you come to zat conclusion? |
46795 | How long must we lie idle here? |
46795 | How many were there? |
46795 | How will this place do, Bob? |
46795 | I wonder how far he is on his way now? |
46795 | I wonder now if that firebrand, Pontiac, is up in this region? 46795 If our mother were ill you do not believe that both father and Kate would leave her alone, while they gossiped with the neighbors outside the doors? |
46795 | Is that so, Reuben? |
46795 | It comes from the other side of the settlement, does n''t it? |
46795 | Listen to zat, would you, Larue? |
46795 | Listen,said the cooler Bob;"why should he wish to attract our attention if he had done this deed? |
46795 | Look up into that sycamore tree and tell me if you ca n''t see them flying around? 46795 Look, Bob, what do you suppose all those people are doing around our home? |
46795 | Make noise-- tell Iroquois we here-- no good, see, Sandy? |
46795 | Nothing but the hum of a hive of bees could make that noise, Bob, could it? |
46795 | Now what is our next move? |
46795 | Now, tell us at once,he said, in his commanding way;"was it a letter?" |
46795 | Oui, I remember ze same, ver''well,said Armand;"but what may zat haf to do wif our young friends here? |
46795 | Perhaps it is a deer, and he means to get a shot with his bow and arrows? |
46795 | Perhaps they are even now carrying the scalps of our neighbors, the Bancrofts? |
46795 | Phat do yees think av that? |
46795 | Say you so, my leetle fire- eater? |
46795 | Shall we accept the offer of Pontiac,asked Sandy,"and make for the river under the guard of his men?" |
46795 | Shall we go on? |
46795 | Something''s happened then,cried Sandy;"something good, you say? |
46795 | Still, if the trail is washed out, how then are we to follow? |
46795 | Tell us, Mr. Harkness; is Kate lost; and do they only believe she has been carried off, or is it proved? |
46795 | The sun rose red this morning, you may have noticed? |
46795 | Then it will be necessary, if Kate is rescued, that the village be entered under cover of darkness? |
46795 | Then we can expect to get away from here, and start things moving at the village of Kiashuta? 46795 Then we must try to find Kenton, Pat and Blue Jacket?" |
46795 | Then what makes you frown and look so black? |
46795 | Then you could not know anything about our sister, or the location of Black Beaver''s lodge? |
46795 | Then you found a chance to talk with the maiden, did you, Blue Jacket? |
46795 | Three? |
46795 | True,replied his brother in the same guarded tone;"but should we be captured or killed what then would become of poor little Kate? |
46795 | Well, do we try for that bear to- night, Bob? |
46795 | Were they Shawanees, Reuben? |
46795 | What do you think they believed must have happened, Bob? |
46795 | What does this magic mean? |
46795 | What for you say zat, young monsieur? |
46795 | What has happened? 46795 What if he comes to tell us it is Our Kate?" |
46795 | What is eet ze young monsieur would say to us? |
46795 | What is it, Reuben; what have you found to give tongue that way? |
46795 | What is zis you tell us, hey? |
46795 | What makes you say that? |
46795 | What say you to that, Sandy? |
46795 | What were you two talking about just now? |
46795 | What worries you now, Bob? 46795 What would you do, hothead?" |
46795 | What''s going on here? |
46795 | What''s that you are saying? |
46795 | Whatever you think best, that will I do, Bob? |
46795 | Where could we have found a better friend, Bob? |
46795 | Where did you see the Indians, Reuben? |
46795 | Where? |
46795 | Who can say? |
46795 | Who saw the Indians? |
46795 | Who''ll go with me ter look''em up? |
46795 | Why does he turn his eyes up to the tops of the trees every little while? |
46795 | Why white boy shoot French trapper? |
46795 | Why, what else could be done? |
46795 | Will he desert us, then? |
46795 | Yes, yes, and when they arrived what did they learn? |
46795 | You ask why, great Pontiac? |
46795 | You do not think Pontiac suspected you, I hope? |
46795 | You mean Pat O''Mara? |
46795 | You mean about that Frenchman, Armand Lacroix? |
46795 | You mean the Great Lake, on the shore of which, somewhere, the Iroquois have their village-- is that it? |
46795 | You shoot at French trader? |
46795 | Yours? |
46795 | Zat if we let you go free, you take us to ze place where we can peek up much of zis same yellow sand in ze rock? 46795 A windy night may be a long time in coming; and how can we hold back? |
46795 | And I think we''re pretty lucky to get off as easy as we did, eh, Sandy?" |
46795 | And, while the forest is fairly alive with enemies, what chance would we have for getting clear?" |
46795 | Are you positive that Kate is with these Indians? |
46795 | Ask him if he will help us, wo n''t you, Bob? |
46795 | Bob winced under the sharp pain; but he had accomplished his end, and what mattered a trifling cut? |
46795 | Bob, can you make her stop dancing around like that, and speak? |
46795 | Bob, what can all that shouting mean?" |
46795 | But I got him, did n''t I? |
46795 | But how long a time must elapse before the excited owners of all these painted lodges would settle down into quiet, so that operations could begin? |
46795 | But how we know you keep your word? |
46795 | But what if, through some little misfortune, they were discovered? |
46795 | But what is this you tell us of Larue? |
46795 | But where can Kate be, do you think?" |
46795 | But why half a dozen of them; and what sort of business had brought them here to this tree, that must be a land mark in the neighborhood? |
46795 | But why should he have stolen her at all? |
46795 | But, Bob, have we not rested enough? |
46795 | But, remember, you said I was to have the first shot at the old honey thief, if he does make his appearance?" |
46795 | CHAPTER XVIII THE BIG WATER AT LAST"WILL we ever get there, do you think, Bob?" |
46795 | CHAPTER XXIV KENTON''S LIFE WITH THE INDIANS"MUST we wait for night to come, Bob, before we can make a move?" |
46795 | CHAPTER XXIX THE WORD OF AN INDIAN CHIEF"WHAT is he going to do, Bob?" |
46795 | CHAPTER XXVI THE WAR DANCE"WHAT of the weather?" |
46795 | Can you make it out still, Bob?" |
46795 | Did Blue Jacket know? |
46795 | Did it mean that the idle wish of Sandy was to be thus quickly fulfilled? |
46795 | Did n''t he prove that he was a true friend to us?" |
46795 | Do we go there next time, Bob?" |
46795 | Do you know him, Blue Jacket?" |
46795 | Does the paleface boy see the one who took tobacco and maize from the white man''s hand, and then stole his daughter?" |
46795 | First tell me what you seek, so far away from your home?" |
46795 | Four Iroquois say? |
46795 | Had Sandy been to blame? |
46795 | Had it not been for this paleface boy, where now would be your leader? |
46795 | Haf you not ze eye to see zat aftaire ze first fire ze buck he nevaire run far? |
46795 | Haf zey lost some one from zere family? |
46795 | Harkness?" |
46795 | Harkness?" |
46795 | Has any one been hurt like father was?" |
46795 | He has made the journey once, why not again?" |
46795 | How Bob, Sandy see um?" |
46795 | How could I attend to all the traps, and hunt in the bargain, without you? |
46795 | How could Pontiac strike the flint that will make the whole border blaze with fires, if he lay here on this ground, dead?" |
46795 | How did you manage it, you and dear Sandy? |
46795 | How know?" |
46795 | How long this pursuit would keep up, who could say? |
46795 | I wonder if that firebrand has been about again, trying to burn us out?" |
46795 | I''d be a pretty chap to go off unprepared, would n''t I? |
46795 | Is Pat O''Mara waiting for us to come in, so that we may all start out together?" |
46795 | Is it a very large place; are the Senecas feeling bitter against the white settlers; and what do they do when not on the warpath?" |
46795 | Is it not grant? |
46795 | Is it not splendid news, brothers?" |
46795 | Is it our sister, and those braves the Senecas who stole her away from our mother''s cabin?" |
46795 | Is there a fire? |
46795 | It keeps getting harder and harder; but nothing is going to stop us, is it, Bob?" |
46795 | It makes me out von liar, and think you I vill stand for zat from a boy like you? |
46795 | It was as if one said to his comrade:"Shall we listen to what he has to say?" |
46795 | May we go now?" |
46795 | Meanwhile, what of Bob? |
46795 | Now, tell me if you please, vat brings you up to zis country, so far avay from ze happy cabin on ze Ohio, la belle river?" |
46795 | Now, you remember how he looked at our sister Kate when he came in for a supply of tobacco and maize? |
46795 | S''pose we hold one like hostage till time come zat you carry out promise?" |
46795 | Sandy was not so ready a reader of human nature, and immediately exclaimed in a whisper:"What success did you have, Blue Jacket? |
46795 | Should the reckless boy have restrained his impulse to shoot down the wretch who would slay the great Indian leader in cold blood? |
46795 | Tell me, did the same foot make both prints?" |
46795 | That ought to help us greatly, Bob, do n''t you think?" |
46795 | This fellow thrust himself forward, and, scowling darkly, demanded in fairly good English:"What for you say zat ze game is yours? |
46795 | Was the wind really strengthening, or did Bob dream it simply because he wished for such a thing to come about? |
46795 | Was zat girl belong to zem, I would like to know?" |
46795 | What can it be, do you suppose, Bob?" |
46795 | What can we do then, Bob?" |
46795 | What do you suppose they will do with us now? |
46795 | What hunt so far away settlement?" |
46795 | What if Kate had already been carried off by some wandering red man? |
46795 | What is zis I see?" |
46795 | Who could tell what the next shuffle of the cards might bring forth? |
46795 | Who?" |
46795 | Why can not we use that?" |
46795 | Will the great Pontiac keep his word by giving her back to our charge, and letting us depart for the cabin where a mother mourns?" |
46795 | With the vast wilderness stretching all around for hundreds of miles, how would they ever know where to look for her? |
46795 | Would n''t mother''s eyes just dance to see the piles of combs full of sweetness, perhaps enough for the whole winter?" |
46795 | Yes, they would be on their guard; but what of that, Bob? |
46795 | You are too young to be wandering around the country as he does, Sandy; and think, what would mother do without you? |
46795 | You ask what sall we do wif zem? |
46795 | You have keen hearing, Sandy; did you not make out what our neighbor, Peleg Green, was calling then?" |
46795 | You promise me to do everything a man could for your sister''s and your mother''s well- being?" |
46795 | but how about Blue Jacket? |
46795 | can I belief my eyes? |
46795 | cried Sandy, gripping his brother''s arm convulsively;"did you hear that, Bob?" |
46795 | vat shall be done wiz zem?" |
46795 | what if he gets clear away?" |
46795 | what if we lose them, and have nothing left to follow? |
46795 | what is it, Bob?" |
46795 | why did not Colonel Boone, or Simon Kenton, happen along at the time they were starting?" |
26610 | And the address? |
26610 | And, Carl, you''re coming up to have your Christmas turkey with us, are n''t you? |
26610 | And-- oh-- you wo n''t let Phil Dunleavy keep you from running away, not for a while yet? |
26610 | Apologize? 26610 Are you Hawk Ericson?" |
26610 | Are you going to be a Republican or a Democrat, Carl? |
26610 | Awful scared of Carl? |
26610 | Be glad to----Oh, say, Gertie, before I forget it, what is Semina doing now? 26610 Beyond the sea like Christiania? |
26610 | But do n''t you think that art is the-- oh, the object of civilization and that sort of thing? |
26610 | But do you think the woman that writes''What the man will wear''in the theater programs would stand for it? |
26610 | But seriously, Hawk, would you want to go to all those places, if you were married? 26610 But some time, perhaps?" |
26610 | But were n''t you scared when she dropped? 26610 But why do you shut me out? |
26610 | But why don''t-- Carl, why do n''t you-- why ca n''t you care more now? |
26610 | But why must we be just friends, then? |
26610 | But why must we be just friends? |
26610 | But you are here? 26610 But you,"insisted Tony,"are n''t you badly jarred, Hawk?" |
26610 | But, boy, what makes you suppose that I have any information on the subject? 26610 But, sweetheart, what if we should have children some day? |
26610 | But----May I be honest? |
26610 | Can we possibly go over and be clever in a corner, do you think? |
26610 | Can you make a regular camp- fire? 26610 Chicken? |
26610 | Could n''t we bike down to Fisher''s Pond, or maybe take the Ford? |
26610 | Cross- your- heart, hope- t''-die if you ai n''t? |
26610 | Cross- your- heart? |
26610 | D- do you think it would be all right? |
26610 | Did he? 26610 Did the child want to impress Ruth with his mighty strength? |
26610 | Did you really miss Piping Rock much to- day?. |
26610 | Did you see? 26610 Do n''t you know that because you''ve been getting so savage about Frazer the whole team''s getting mad?" |
26610 | Do n''t you think Longfellow''s a bum poet? |
26610 | Do n''t you think the Atlantic will be crossed soon? |
26610 | Do you mean to say you liked it? |
26610 | Do you really like bunnies? |
26610 | Do you think so? 26610 Does Dunleavy think much?" |
26610 | Have I been rude? 26610 Have you really? |
26610 | Heh? 26610 Heh?" |
26610 | Hello? |
26610 | How d''you mean''good- by,''Al? |
26610 | How do you know they ai n''t? |
26610 | How would you make one? |
26610 | How''d you happen to do that? 26610 I say,"hesitated Haviland,"why is it I ca n''t get in with most of the fellows at the camp the way you can? |
26610 | I suppose you''re dreadfully bored, though, when you could be down at the billiard- parlor? |
26610 | I wo n''t tease, but----May I come to your house for tea, some time? |
26610 | Is that lots or little? |
26610 | Is there any one else? 26610 Is there, honest?" |
26610 | Jobs? 26610 Law?" |
26610 | Listen, how would this be for a site? 26610 Lonely, Bob? |
26610 | Look here, Ed, how about the chicken they give the steerage on Sunday? |
26610 | Lost, heh? 26610 May I come up to- night?" |
26610 | May n''t I be a mystery, Miss Winslow? 26610 Meantime, not to change the subject, I''d better be planning and watching for a suitable day for proposing, do n''t you think? |
26610 | Mr. Griffin''s going to be a lawyer and maybe Ray will, too, and why do n''t you think about being one? 26610 My dear child,"sniffed Aunt Emma,"with collars only twenty- five cents apiece? |
26610 | My mother says she do n''t believe the Lord ever intended us to ride without horses, or what did He give us horses for? 26610 Need you? |
26610 | No, straight, is dat straight? |
26610 | No, we----"Yet you enjoy to- day, do n''t you? |
26610 | No.... Must n''t we be going? |
26610 | Oh, are you? 26610 Oh, but Carl, you do n''t mean to say you''re going to give up your business, when you''re doing so well? |
26610 | Oh, he went down the opposite side of the track pretty fast, but why the dickens was he so slow going up my side? 26610 Oh, ought I to, do you think? |
26610 | Oh, you do, do you? 26610 Oh? |
26610 | Perhaps, my Hawk.... Do n''t you think, though, that we might be bored in your Rocky Mountain cabin, if we were there for months and months? |
26610 | Really----"And you''d rather play around with me than any of the Skull and Bones or Hasty Pudding men you know? 26610 Ruth blessed, do you know the thing I want most?... |
26610 | Ruth, you wo n''t make up your mind to marry Phil till you''re_ sure_, will you? 26610 Say, Bone, do you think a fellow ever ought to join a church?" |
26610 | Say, are you feeling better now? 26610 Say, j''know of any jobs in this----""Any_ what s_?" |
26610 | September? |
26610 | Seriously, Ruth, would n''t you like to have such a place, back in the wilderness? |
26610 | So now you''ll be all nice and in love with Gertie again, heh? 26610 That''s very true, Carl, but do you appreciate the city? |
26610 | Then? 26610 Thought you were going to be a mechanical engineer?" |
26610 | To Brazil? 26610 Vell?" |
26610 | W- w- well,shivered the Turk,"who tries it first?" |
26610 | W- where----Does Dr. Brown live here? |
26610 | W- why, how d''you mean, Genie? |
26610 | We had n''t ought to go on, had we? |
26610 | We''ll have some good long hikes together, heh?... 26610 We''re not lovers?" |
26610 | Well, I''ve done some settlement work----Did you ever do any, by any chance? |
26610 | Well, and wha''do_ you_ mean by''broad''? 26610 Well, ca n''t a fellow change his mind? |
26610 | Well, even so, do n''t you think it''s kind of unnecessary to talk publicly, right out in a college lecture- room, about socialism? |
26610 | Well, suppose he was going to be a lawyer and go in for politics? |
26610 | Well, would you really want to keep on going, and take your wife? 26610 Well, young man, are you prepared to apologize to the president and faculty?" |
26610 | Wh- what''s the matter? |
26610 | What d''you mean by''provincial''? |
26610 | What do I care if they hit me? |
26610 | What do you mean by''common''? |
26610 | What do you mean by''decently''? |
26610 | What do you mean by''our class''? |
26610 | What do you mean? |
26610 | What for? |
26610 | What is a Touricar? 26610 What is this Upper West Side? |
26610 | What is your authority for that? |
26610 | What new philosophy? |
26610 | What the deuce is the matter? |
26610 | What was that? |
26610 | What''s the purpose of it, anyway? 26610 What''s trouble, Genie? |
26610 | What''s your name, little boy? |
26610 | What? 26610 When shall I come?" |
26610 | When? 26610 Where do we go?" |
26610 | Where''s de matches, you tissy- cat? |
26610 | Where''s those steps? 26610 Why do n''t any of you fellows like me?" |
26610 | Why not? 26610 Why should n''t I read it?" |
26610 | Why sorry? |
26610 | Why, blessed, what you scared of? 26610 Why, is n''t it pretty cold, do n''t you think?" |
26610 | Y- yes? |
26610 | Yes, but then how can you belong to the Blue Bowl Sodality? |
26610 | Yes, but----"And you''d rather be loafing on a dirty wharf, looking at a tramp steamer, than taking tea at the Plaza? |
26610 | Yes.... To- night, I_ must_ have a mystery.... Do you swear, as a man of honor, that you are at this party dishonorably, uninvited? |
26610 | You are n''t angry at them? |
26610 | You do n''t? 26610 You do trust me, do n''t you?" |
26610 | You really have enjoyed it? |
26610 | You saw our hands? |
26610 | You think it might be considered then? |
26610 | You? 26610 You? |
26610 | You_ wo n''t_ let Phil lock you up for a while? |
26610 | _ Wer ist da?_ I see you! 26610 ''Sides, even if it was across the sea, could n''t we go an''be stow''ways, like the Younger Brothers and all them? 26610 ( You''ve never seen''The Two Orphans,''have you? 26610 A blooming red- lipped Venus?... 26610 A cub reporter from the City News Association piped, like a fox- terrier,What time''ll you get off, Hawk?" |
26610 | A millionaire that we build machines for you to smash them? |
26610 | About ready for a swim? |
26610 | Against the white walls.... May I consider that we are engaged then, Miss Winslow-- engaged for the next marriage?" |
26610 | Aloud, to Harry:"Say, what''s it like in Kansas? |
26610 | Am I invited to dinner with a swain?... |
26610 | And I ca n''t get this insane question out of my mind: Was his beard burned? |
26610 | And afterward we went and waited outside, right near the stage entrance, and what do you think? |
26610 | And are n''t authors better than commonplaceness? |
26610 | And how honored I am to have you tell me-- Lieutenant Haviland-- and the very bad Carl that lived in Joralemon?" |
26610 | And let me tell you that my idea of no kind of conversation is to have a guy spring''Have you read?'' |
26610 | And we would n''t even be rich, would we?" |
26610 | And we''ll put the money for a diamond ring into a big davenport.... Are we going to be dreadfully poor?" |
26610 | And what other remedy was there? |
26610 | And when I see you again there wo n''t be-- we''ll both forget all about to- night, wo n''t we? |
26610 | And why had he hurried? |
26610 | And why have n''t you been up to see us? |
26610 | And will you believe how very, very much I honor you? |
26610 | And you could smell the pine needles and sit there and look way off----Would you like it?" |
26610 | Announcements, now.... What''s he waiting for? |
26610 | Anyway, by the time I go to Plato I''ll know----""D''you mean to say you''re going to that back- creek nunnery? |
26610 | Are n''t I, Carl?" |
26610 | Are you a dramatist?" |
26610 | Are you going to play checkers all through life?" |
26610 | Are you the poet or the explorer?" |
26610 | As the council of seers rose, Carl timidly said to Ray,"Straight, now, have quite a lot of the fellows been saying I was a goat?" |
26610 | As they climbed the curving stairs Ruth tucked her arm in his, saying:"Now do you see why I wo n''t be engaged? |
26610 | At least as long as I have this new shirt, which you observed with some approval while I was drooling on about authors? |
26610 | Bagby wrote that he was coming North, to prepare for the spring''s experiments; would n''t Carl consider joining him? |
26610 | Because I stood up first? |
26610 | Bjorken?" |
26610 | But Carmeau pulled his beard, opened his mouth once or twice, then shrieked:"What the davil you t''ink you are? |
26610 | But are n''t we modern enough so we can discuss frankly the question of whether I''d better propose to you, some day?" |
26610 | But ca n''t we just sit like this? |
26610 | But ca n''t you see I''ve got to stop it before it''s too late, just for that reason? |
26610 | But do n''t you think your theory is dangerous, Mr. Ericson? |
26610 | But do you dare impose a perfectly strange man on her?" |
26610 | But first he kissed her hand with a courtly reverence, and said, with a sweetness new to him:"Dear, will you forgive me if I''ve ever hurt you? |
26610 | But for a moment a strange look of distance dwelt in Ruth''s eyes, and she said:"I wonder what I can do with the winter stars we''ve found? |
26610 | But from across the creek whimpered Gertie''s call:"Carl, oh,_ Carl_, where are you?" |
26610 | But have n''t you seen by this time about how much good it does for one lone sophomore to try and run the faculty?" |
26610 | But he had no time to repent of his doubt, now, so busily was he exulting to himself, slipping a hand under her arm:"Love her? |
26610 | But his tone was plaintive as he mourned,"How did it all start, anyway?" |
26610 | But how could he steer a world- war or a world- industry? |
26610 | But how do you know it is n''t simply living in a flat and not having any work to do_ except_ developing a temperament? |
26610 | But if by any chance you_ are_ in town, wo n''t you make your playmate''s shout to you from her back yard a part of your Xmas? |
26610 | But it is n''t conventional to go on long tramps with even the nicest new Johnnies, is it?" |
26610 | But more than that: What would she herself be like against that background? |
26610 | But she did insist that they plan practically; and it was she who wondered:"But what would happen if everybody went skipping off like us? |
26610 | But these assistant aviators in the crowd get me wild.... All right? |
26610 | But to- night----"Gertie:"Oh, must you go so soon? |
26610 | But you will let me get back by dinner- time, wo n''t you? |
26610 | But you''d like to help, would n''t you? |
26610 | But-- it''s all right, now, is n''t it?... |
26610 | But-- was Ruth so bound? |
26610 | Ca n''t you see that? |
26610 | Can I fly with the carburetor as she is? |
26610 | Can I get into it and get away?" |
26610 | Carl groaned:"He do n''t? |
26610 | Carl marveled,"Do you go to Frazer''s?" |
26610 | Carl swung him up and inquired,"What is it, old man?" |
26610 | Carl''s manager chuckled to the president of the fair association,"Well, that was some flight, eh?" |
26610 | Carl''s manager, fatly galloping up, shrilled,"How was it, old man?" |
26610 | Carl''s scalp tickled, but he tried to be very offhand in remarking:"You must have gotten that dress in New York, did n''t you? |
26610 | Carl( hastily, wondering what Eddie Klemm had done):"Oh, I see.... Have there been many changes in Joralemon?" |
26610 | Carl:"Certainly is....''Member the time we had the May party at Adelaide''s, and all I could get for my basket was rag babies and May flowers? |
26610 | Carl:"Not the old pasture by the lake? |
26610 | Carl:"Rush?" |
26610 | Carl:"Well, well, so Ben_ did_ study medicine, after----Oh,_ say_, how''s Adelaide Benner?" |
26610 | Carl:"You''ve forgiven me now, though, have n''t you?" |
26610 | Could he get off on time? |
26610 | Could he pass Tad Warren as he had passed Titherington? |
26610 | Could you be loafing around here with me? |
26610 | Could you go off on a bat with Jack Ryan?" |
26610 | Could you have stayed up longer?" |
26610 | Dear old Brown? |
26610 | Did he teach you to booze? |
26610 | Did n''t it give you some new ideas?" |
26610 | Did n''t you?" |
26610 | Did she cook some little dainty for her husband? |
26610 | Did they summon you here?" |
26610 | Did you ever run through carpets on the line?" |
26610 | Do I win? |
26610 | Do n''t I detect a chill in the atmosphere? |
26610 | Do n''t it tell about doctors''way back in the Bible? |
26610 | Do n''t that sound fairly reasonable?" |
26610 | Do n''t you get frightened? |
26610 | Do n''t you know it''s one of my principles----""But look----""----not to be engaged, Hawk? |
26610 | Do n''t you know you''ve got a chance of seeing the world? |
26610 | Do n''t you realize that every brick would have to be carted two hundred miles through this wilderness?" |
26610 | Do n''t you remember how the sand feels between your toes?" |
26610 | Do n''t you think it''d be better to be a civil engineer or something like that, instead of having to slick up your hair and carry a cane? |
26610 | Do n''t you think that''s a sweet name? |
26610 | Do n''t you? |
26610 | Do n''t you?" |
26610 | Do the people have to come here and breathe this air, I wonder? |
26610 | Do we go right up? |
26610 | Do you come to Mrs. Salisbury''s often?" |
26610 | Do you get that? |
26610 | Do you know how glad I am that you made me come?... |
26610 | Do you know what Bernard Shaw says----?" |
26610 | Do you remember how we found some fool''s gold, and we thought it was gold and hid it on the shore of the lake, and we were going to buy a ship? |
26610 | Do you remember how we ran away?" |
26610 | Do you remember? |
26610 | Do you s''pose mamma will be dreadfully angry? |
26610 | Do you think I would miss my chance of a cabin in the Rockies?... |
26610 | Do you think that?" |
26610 | Do you?" |
26610 | Does he live near here?" |
26610 | Does n''t that tremendous responsibility demand that you do something more than inherit your way of voting? |
26610 | Does one talk about shirts at a second meeting?" |
26610 | Does the doctor play?" |
26610 | Doing pretty well, I guess; settled down and got quite some real- estate holdings.... Have''nother cigar, old man?... |
26610 | Driving a taxi?" |
26610 | Eric----''"Her voice ran down; she flushed and said, defensively:"What time is it? |
26610 | Eve, look here: do n''t you know we ca n''t go on and not go farther? |
26610 | Exploring?" |
26610 | For de love of Mike, d''yuh mean to tell me Lizzie is talking back? |
26610 | For old Joralemon and Plato, eh? |
26610 | Funny, ai n''t it, that when even these dudes from Yale get to be cranks they''re short on baths and tailors?" |
26610 | Furiously:"Where''s the coward? |
26610 | Gambling- houses where it is considered humorous to play"Where Is My Wandering Boy To- night?" |
26610 | Gertie said, slowly:"I''d like to, Carl, but----Unless you''d like to play, doctor?" |
26610 | Gertie:"Why, did n''t you know? |
26610 | Girls, eh? |
26610 | Going to join us rough- necks? |
26610 | Going to lick the whole college, Ericson?" |
26610 | Good night, all.... Ray, will you please be sure and see that that window is fastened before you go to bed? |
26610 | Got your room yet? |
26610 | Had he idealized her? |
26610 | Had he not been a waiter at Plato? |
26610 | Has she done anything worth while? |
26610 | Has something been worrying you? |
26610 | Have I displeased you? |
26610 | Have I_ got_ to be rude to her? |
26610 | Have a cigar?" |
26610 | Have a cigarette?" |
26610 | Have a cigarette?... |
26610 | Have a good time in New York?" |
26610 | Have n''t reformed, have you? |
26610 | Have you ever been in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, or gone to a single symphony concert at Carnegie Hall?" |
26610 | Have you gone to sleep? |
26610 | He asked himself,"Have n''t these galoots got any sense?" |
26610 | He blurted out such monologues as,"I wonder if it is n''t pure egotism that makes a person believe that the religion he is born to is the best? |
26610 | He carried about, on the backs of envelopes, such notes as these: Join country clb take R dances there? |
26610 | He could scarce ask the hostess,"Say, where''s Ruth?" |
26610 | He cried:"Old man, I was----Say, you yahoo, are you going to make me carry both my valises to the depot?" |
26610 | He croaked:"Do you feel better, now? |
26610 | He demanded of Martin, aside:"All right, heh? |
26610 | He hated their incessant questions-- always the same:"Were you cold? |
26610 | He tramped into the telephone- booth of the corner drug- store, called up Professor Frazer:"Hello? |
26610 | He turned into a crestfallen youth as Mrs. Cowles opened the door and waited-- waited!--for him to speak, after a crisp:"Well? |
26610 | He was apologetic for his unflattering doubt, but of what sort_ was_ she? |
26610 | He was tormented by a question he had been threshing out for days: Might he permissibly have sent her a Christmas present? |
26610 | He whispered to a professor:"Is that a dormitory, there behind us? |
26610 | He would meet her at some aero race, and she would welcome him as eagerly as he welcomed her.... Had he, perhaps, already met her? |
26610 | Heh? |
26610 | Heh?" |
26610 | Heh?" |
26610 | Heh?" |
26610 | Heh?" |
26610 | Her voice was crooning,"Are you going to kiss me terribly hard?" |
26610 | Him?" |
26610 | His letters are n''t very committal.... Oh, say, Gertie, what ever became of Ben Rusk? |
26610 | Holding hands along the road, eh? |
26610 | Honest, will you give me another?" |
26610 | How could he land without crushing some one? |
26610 | How do you know you''ve got what you call a temperament? |
26610 | How does it feel to fly, anyway? |
26610 | How far had he flown? |
26610 | How had his motor stopped? |
26610 | How is the automobile business going?" |
26610 | How long could he keep up? |
26610 | How much longer would old VanZile be satisfied with millions to come in the future-- perhaps? |
26610 | How would he ever find her? |
26610 | How''s chances for getting a taxi to drive? |
26610 | How''s it going?" |
26610 | How''s that? |
26610 | How''s tricks?" |
26610 | How''s your good health? |
26610 | Huh? |
26610 | Huh? |
26610 | I can hang by my knees on a trapeze.... What did you come from Minneapolis for?" |
26610 | I do n''t want to butt in, but I''m awfully worried; I thought perhaps you ought to know.... Who? |
26610 | I got to be going, pretty quick, but I was wondering if you two felt like playing some crokinole?" |
26610 | I shall expect to find your written----""Say, honest, dean,"Carl suddenly laughed,"may I say just one thing before I get thrown out?" |
26610 | I think this is my dance?" |
26610 | I think----You do n''t happen to have done any authoring, do you?" |
26610 | I thought Eddie would be lots happier if he did n''t come, do n''t you see?" |
26610 | I wonder if we could n''t make her invite us both for dinner? |
26610 | I wonder if you did n''t look like him when you were a boy, with your light hair?" |
26610 | I''ll fly when the wind goes down----You would, would you?" |
26610 | I''ll marry you, but----""Marry me next month-- August?" |
26610 | I''m gettin''sore now, Dick.... Hey you, mechanic: hurt that wing when she tipped?... |
26610 | If I''m honest, will you try not to be too impatient till I do know just what I want?... |
26610 | In a chimney? |
26610 | In a well? |
26610 | In the laboratory Carl was growling:"Well, say, Fatty, if it was right for them to throw Eddie out, where do I come in? |
26610 | In the name of the-- what was it-- Order of the Blue Bowl?" |
26610 | Instantly a swirl of men surrounded Carl, questioning:"What j''do it for? |
26610 | Is Mrs. Needham there?... |
26610 | Is an aviator brave enough to wear his after the fifteenth?... |
26610 | Is it a state of mind?" |
26610 | Is it fun?" |
26610 | Is n''t he a dandy fellow? |
26610 | Is n''t it a fool party?" |
26610 | Is n''t it nice you''ll know them when you go to Plato?" |
26610 | Is n''t it strange how you know people, perfect strangers, from seeing them once, without even speaking to them? |
26610 | Is n''t that fine?" |
26610 | Is she married?" |
26610 | Is that Hawk Ericson?" |
26610 | Is this Gertie and me?" |
26610 | It is n''t as though we were like a lot of poor people who have to have their souls saved in a mission.... What church do you attend? |
26610 | It ought to be the craziest party-- anarchists----""A party, eh?" |
26610 | It''s better now, is n''t it, kiddy? |
26610 | It''s just that people have to go with their own class, do n''t you think?" |
26610 | It''s pretty good, after all, to have home folks that you can depend on, is n''t it? |
26610 | J''like to hear about how Napoleon smashed the theory of divine rule, or about how me and Charlie Weems explored Tiburon? |
26610 | Just what good''ll it do to go on shouting for Frazer? |
26610 | Kiss her? |
26610 | Landed in this bum town, called----, fourth in the race, and found sweet(?) |
26610 | Lieutenant Haviland came up, panting:"All right, o''man? |
26610 | Like Indians?" |
26610 | Love her? |
26610 | Make each other study?" |
26610 | May I trouble you for a match?" |
26610 | Me in a stuffy office? |
26610 | Me to Palm Beach to fly? |
26610 | Mrs. Cowles:"Do you write to your father and mother, Carl? |
26610 | Mrs. Pat is----""When?" |
26610 | My mamma owns part of the Joralemon Flour Mill.... Are you a nice boy? |
26610 | No one else? |
26610 | Not live here? |
26610 | Not much taking it easy here in New York, the way you can in Joralemon, eh? |
26610 | Of course I ca n''t speak as an actual member of the team, but still, as a senior, I hear things----""How d''you mean''disgrace''?" |
26610 | Of course I have n''t made anything yet, but I know I''m going to like it so much, and Miss Deitz says I have a natural taste for vahzes and----""Huh? |
26610 | Of course I want to see some of that part of life, but I think----Oh, do n''t you think those artists and all are dreadfully careless about morals?" |
26610 | Of course, she''ll want to know all about you; but we''ll be mysterious, and that will make it all the more fun, do n''t you think? |
26610 | Oh, Carl, will you_ ever_ forget the time you and I ran away when we were just babies?" |
26610 | Oh, Hawk dear, can you conceive of us actually sitting here and solemnly discussing being_ married_? |
26610 | Oh, I must speak to you about----Do you suppose you would ever get very, very angry at poor me? |
26610 | Oh, say, Ray, how is Howard Griffin getting along?" |
26610 | Oh, why do n''t you want me to go walking with you, now? |
26610 | Oh-- what about our tramp? |
26610 | Olive was invited to come, with a man, but he was called away and she dragged me here, promising me I should see----""Anarchists?" |
26610 | Or foreign diplomats with spade beards?" |
26610 | Or how about you? |
26610 | Or were n''t the ballad people really simple, either? |
26610 | Or would you settle down like the rest, and spend money so you could keep in shape to make money to spend to keep in shape?" |
26610 | Ought n''t we to ring? |
26610 | Pardon me for getting away from the subject proper-- yet am I, actually? |
26610 | Passionate but bewildered, trying not to injure the cause of Frazer by being nasty, he begged:"Straight, did n''t you like his spiel? |
26610 | People especially reporters are always asking me this question, do aviators have imagination? |
26610 | Philip gave him a covert"Who are you, fellow?" |
26610 | Pretty sleepy, are you? |
26610 | Professor Frazer?... |
26610 | Remember it? |
26610 | Ruth whispered:"It''s sweet to be with all these people and their fires.... Will I really learn not to be supercilious?" |
26610 | Ruth, you_ are_ going to marry me?" |
26610 | S- say, w- why do n''t you put on a kimono or something? |
26610 | Said Phil, while Ruth disappeared:"Which way you going? |
26610 | Savvy? |
26610 | Say, Gertie, could he make me a norficer? |
26610 | See how I mean?" |
26610 | See?" |
26610 | Shall I get you the picture in my scrap- book?... |
26610 | She continued:"But seriously, will it be too much of a tax on the Biddy if we do come? |
26610 | She droned, while crocheting with high- minded industry a useless piano- scarf,"Do you still go hunting, Carl?" |
26610 | She got here all right, did n''t she? |
26610 | She might some day go off and get married to some one, but engaged? |
26610 | Since, to date, her only remark had been"Y- yes?" |
26610 | So you''re going to Panama? |
26610 | Somehow----I wonder if you have told so very many?" |
26610 | Speaking of which----Tell me, who did introduce us, you and me? |
26610 | Stroking her hair, he went urgently on:"Do n''t you see? |
26610 | Studying me.... Ca n''t you understand---- Have n''t you any perception? |
26610 | Suppose your motor he stop while you fly over San Mateo? |
26610 | T.?" |
26610 | Tea at-- wasn''t it at the Vanderbilt? |
26610 | That Blackhaw University? |
26610 | That I''ve ever thought of it?" |
26610 | That is n''t wicked, is it? |
26610 | That sounds mixed but---- Oh, blessed, blessed, you really love me? |
26610 | That''s the school his father went to, was n''t it?" |
26610 | The 7.20?... |
26610 | The aviator stared again, let go the machine, walked over, exclaiming:"Say, are n''t you Hawk Ericson? |
26610 | The waiter was a Harvard graduate, I know-- perhaps Oxford-- and he said,''May I sugges''ladies velly nize China dinner?'' |
26610 | There were n''t any boys in it, but we----""No boys in it? |
26610 | Think it might be better to propose to- day? |
26610 | This real head of the Emma Winslow family was far too much absorbed in making Carl tell of his long races, and"Why does a flying- machine fly? |
26610 | Uh---- I did n''t quite catch your name? |
26610 | Us, the babes in the wood? |
26610 | VanZile had said, pleasantly,"Going out to the country for Christmas?" |
26610 | Waiting for me or the Turk?" |
26610 | Waiting for_ me!_ Can you beat it? |
26610 | Want to try me?" |
26610 | Was it true he was a mining engineer, a wealthy motorist? |
26610 | Was not his father a carpenter? |
26610 | Was this really his first ascent by himself? |
26610 | We always have been awfully good friends, have n''t we?" |
26610 | We always will be, wo n''t we?" |
26610 | We need n''t go any further, need we?" |
26610 | Well then, next you''d say,''Just how does it feel to be up in an aeroplane?'' |
26610 | Were n''t you scared then? |
26610 | Whachu taking, boy?" |
26610 | Whadya mean?" |
26610 | What I wanted to do was to request you to give me concisely but fully a sketch of''Who is Miss Ruth Winslow?'' |
26610 | What chance of being found? |
26610 | What d''you think about it, heh, Bob?... |
26610 | What d''you think you are? |
26610 | What d''you think? |
26610 | What do kids eat, bub?" |
26610 | What do you know about this Deitz person? |
26610 | What do you think she had the effrontery to tell me? |
26610 | What does she expect?" |
26610 | What ferry do you catch?... |
26610 | What for? |
26610 | What girl''ve you been falling in love with to get this Plato idea from, eh?" |
26610 | What in the name of the seven saintly sisters did I ever want to be a farmer for, heh? |
26610 | What is it, Carl?" |
26610 | What is your explanation of the phenomenon?" |
26610 | What j''expect me to do? |
26610 | What seems to be the matter? |
26610 | What shall I do?" |
26610 | What time did Tad Warren get here? |
26610 | What was she? |
26610 | What were his sensations? |
26610 | What would you think of a lieutenant that tried to boss all the generals? |
26610 | What''re you thinking of becoming a lawyer for?" |
26610 | What''s a wind pressure? |
26610 | What''s become of that girl you was kissing, last time I seen you on the cover?" |
26610 | What''s the best section to batter for a poke- out, Billy?" |
26610 | What''s your magneto?''" |
26610 | What? |
26610 | What?... |
26610 | What?... |
26610 | When Prexy said to?" |
26610 | When a purring, baby- talking acquaintance gurgled:"How did the Ruthie bride spend her morning? |
26610 | When it was time to start for Professor Frazer''s lecture the Turk blurted:"Why do n''t we stay away and forget about it? |
26610 | Where was yuh hoited?" |
26610 | Where you land? |
26610 | Where''d I do just this before? |
26610 | Where''s t''other one-- Gertie, was it?" |
26610 | Where? |
26610 | While Carl watched, Bone dropped his book and said,"Here, Bob, what d''you think of single- tax, heh?" |
26610 | Who would care if he froze to death? |
26610 | Who''d bear the children and keep the fields plowed to feed the ones that ran away?" |
26610 | Who''s the first girl wants to be kissed?" |
26610 | Who? |
26610 | Who?... |
26610 | Why are you reading that?" |
26610 | Why ca n''t I never go? |
26610 | Why did n''t you keep still?" |
26610 | Why do I bore you so?" |
26610 | Why do I get picked out as the goat, the one to apologize? |
26610 | Why do n''t he fly? |
26610 | Why do n''t he fly?" |
26610 | Why do n''t you go with your bloomin''Phil and Olive? |
26610 | Why do n''t you try to get an engagement? |
26610 | Why do n''t you try working with Ray in his office? |
26610 | Why do n''t you want to go anywhere with me any more? |
26610 | Why do we guess we had n''t to probably maybe ought n''t to had better?" |
26610 | Why do you?" |
26610 | Why does it want to catch the wind?" |
26610 | Why does the wind shove up? |
26610 | Why have n''t you ever told me about New York? |
26610 | Why is the wings curved? |
26610 | Why not go on? |
26610 | Why not? |
26610 | Why, how''s that?" |
26610 | Why, what''d God put love in the world for----""Say, will you quit explaining to me about what God did things for?" |
26610 | Why? |
26610 | Why?" |
26610 | Will Ninety- second Street be big enough for them?" |
26610 | Will you believe that? |
26610 | Will you call for me about two?... |
26610 | Will you marry me?" |
26610 | Will you respect me after it?" |
26610 | Wo n''t you come in and have some coffee and sinkers with us? |
26610 | Wo n''t you take your things off in the room at the head of the stairs?" |
26610 | Wo n''t you''splain to her? |
26610 | Wo n''t you?" |
26610 | Wonder if I dare telephone to Ruth?" |
26610 | Would n''t you like to go for some good long hikes in the country?" |
26610 | Would the maid please ask Miss Ruth to call Mr. Ericson when she woke? |
26610 | Would there be any crocuses out as yet? |
26610 | Would you be too shocked to come? |
26610 | Would you like to call me''Eltruda,''sometimes?" |
26610 | Would you like to play? |
26610 | Would you, practically? |
26610 | Yet he kept his voice gentle:"But why be narrowed to just a few families in one''s interests? |
26610 | You apologize for having a horse face, see?" |
26610 | You do n''t suppose I''d take Clements seriously, do you? |
26610 | You got a board, have n''t you? |
26610 | You have n''t forgotten all our good times, while you''ve been so famous, have you?" |
26610 | You must be good to me; you will prize my love a little, wo n''t you?" |
26610 | You ought to known it was too good a day for hunting to miss.... How''s Gert? |
26610 | You really do n''t remember me at all? |
26610 | You really love me? |
26610 | You remember how I roasted all the fellows in Omega Chi when they said you were nutty to boost him? |
26610 | You will, wo n''t you?" |
26610 | You''ll catch more cold in here, wo n''t you? |
26610 | You''ll play with me awhile, wo n''t you? |
26610 | You''ll say,''Who makes the convention?'' |
26610 | You''re a church member, are n''t you? |
26610 | You''re all over being sick?" |
26610 | You-- supercilious? |
26610 | You_ will_ come to St. Orgul''s some time, wo n''t you?" |
26610 | _ Am_ I ready for dinner? |
26610 | _ Are_ you, Gertie? |
26610 | _ Hein?_ You know naut''ing yet. |
26610 | _ October 23_: I wonder how far I''ll ever get as an aviator? |
26610 | _ Refining!_ Son, son, are you going to get Joralemonized? |
26610 | and Is John Orth dead? |
26610 | and Shall we try to climb Chimborazo? |
26610 | have we a family, too? |
26610 | have we got to go all over that again? |
26610 | have you got a mustache, too? |
26610 | he would ask himself in monologues,"law? |
26610 | his father''s best friend a tailor? |
26610 | large on his hat- band, rushed up to Carl, shook his hand busily, and inquired:"Freshman, old man? |
26610 | never in all these years have I been out like this in the wilds, in the dark, not even with Phil? |
26610 | or if you do n''t say that then you''ve simply got to say,''Just how does it feel to fly, anyway?'' |
26610 | or the Plaza?" |
26610 | that you really think, think hard, why you vote as you do?... |
26610 | what''d I have to get mixed up in all this for, when I was getting along so good? |
26610 | where''ll we sleep to- night?" |
26610 | wo n''t you men never say anything original? |
7475 | ''Dear miss,''I said,''are you not in great suffering?'' 7475 Ah, did you once see Shelley plain? |
7475 | But Rubinstein? |
7475 | Do n''t know Sly? |
7475 | Give you any of his money? 7475 Is it a cravat that Monsieur wishes? |
7475 | Mean? |
7475 | My children,he laughs,"what is the difference between six dozen dozen and half a dozen dozen?" |
7475 | Oh, is he? |
7475 | Then it is skill only,_ technique_? |
7475 | Well, what is he? |
7475 | Well, you do n''t know anything against him, do you? |
7475 | What on earth is it all about? |
7475 | Will he give me any of his money? |
7475 | You say he is very rich? |
7475 | And did he stop and speak to you? |
7475 | And just as he is thinking so another friend leans forward and says, in a decided tone of utter disappointment,"Just let me take your glass, will you? |
7475 | And ought we not to demand that Faust shall woo Gretchen in their mother- tongue? |
7475 | And the_ garde du roi_? |
7475 | And why is this precious knowledge imparted to us? |
7475 | And why not? |
7475 | Are not the taxes of these Jem Baggses, these wandering minstrels, the"only rates uninvidious in the levy, ungrudged in the assessment?" |
7475 | Are these players? |
7475 | Are they only materially better? |
7475 | Are we all essentially lackeys who love to wear a livery? |
7475 | Are we more truthful, more upright, manlier men? |
7475 | Are you never out of tune, good sir? |
7475 | But how has secession helped it? |
7475 | But if a man may falter, shall we not forgive to a trombone even a half- note? |
7475 | But if men should agree to surrender their seats that women should be first accommodated, is there any doubt that the wrong would be speedily righted? |
7475 | But in this world is the gentle Bayard as truly the type of the average man as Jeanie Deans of the average woman? |
7475 | But is Buckle right? |
7475 | But is it so invested in this play? |
7475 | But is there no other than a humiliating explanation of the fact? |
7475 | But must they also move away from those who do want them? |
7475 | But still-- still, do you get any thrill from the most perfect mosaic? |
7475 | But why try to describe beauty? |
7475 | But will they please to curb their wrath for a moment and listen to Dr. Clarke? |
7475 | But would the shame and indignation be due to the consciousness that the accommodation paid for was not provided? |
7475 | But, my dear Easy Chair, can you tell me why it is that all our young American poets write nothing but Longfellow and water? |
7475 | But-- who-- is-- Sly?" |
7475 | Could any critic, however inclined to misogyny, seriously allege ill- manners against the sex of Sidney''s sister, Pembroke''s mother? |
7475 | Could the music of the bells be spared from the story of London more than that of the cries? |
7475 | Could there be more ineffable selfishness than Adam''s plea in the garden? |
7475 | Did Whitfield pronounce the word Mesopotamia like a wind harp sighing exquisite music? |
7475 | Did you ever see a more sumptuous entertainment or a more splendid palace? |
7475 | Do the Aldermen, like Homer, sometimes nod? |
7475 | Do we find more public virtue when we get there? |
7475 | Do you see? |
7475 | Do you suppose they can escape the effect? |
7475 | Does he want a cravat? |
7475 | Does my dear Mrs. Grundy comprehend?" |
7475 | For the first time we behold Niagara, and resentfully we ask,"Is that all?" |
7475 | For who would live out of town if he could live comfortably in it? |
7475 | Grundy?" |
7475 | Has our literature produced any wiser book? |
7475 | Has tolerance gone out with astrology? |
7475 | Have they better poets, better artists, than the Greeks, than Dante, than Shakespeare, than Raphael and Michael Angelo? |
7475 | Have they brought us nearer heaven? |
7475 | Have they higher standards of conduct than those of Confucius and the Hindoos? |
7475 | Have they wiser men than Plato, Aristotle, Bacon? |
7475 | He opened it, and saw a young man, who briskly inquired,"Is Mr. Easy Chair here?" |
7475 | How are the causes of discontent removed? |
7475 | If Adam plained that Eve had lost him Paradise, does not every son of Adam own that she has regained it for him? |
7475 | If Turpin may be respectfully lamented with indulgent hope, shall a hesitating horn be doomed to"the all- sweeping besom of societarian reformation?" |
7475 | If a higher general welfare prevails, what matter if the population somewhat declines? |
7475 | If there be too much noise in the streets, might not some other form of noise have been first silenced than that of the street musicians? |
7475 | If they are players, who is in earnest? |
7475 | If we have ever had a greater preacher of that gospel who is he? |
7475 | If you whispered"Paganini?" |
7475 | If, indeed, Darby can afford to pay a hundred dollars monthly to a_ chef_, Joan need know nothing of messes; but how many such Darbys are there? |
7475 | Is it because you have no work for them at home? |
7475 | Is it blue, or this, or that, that Monsieur prefers? |
7475 | Is it only snobbishness, a mean admiration of mean things? |
7475 | Is it otherwise with his glass and porcelain? |
7475 | Is it quite so? |
7475 | Is it the instinctive effort to prolong the brilliancy of youth that induces the advancing woman to decorate herself so brightly? |
7475 | Is it the involuntary hope that she will really seem to be buoyant and gay of heart if only her dress be gay? |
7475 | Is the sincerity of religious feeling always in proportion to the magnificence of the ritual? |
7475 | It is a Daniel come to judgment, but how shall it be done? |
7475 | It is a heroic story, a romantic tradition.--And the Queen? |
7475 | Let us suppose, said the orator, that secession is successful, what has been gained? |
7475 | Must he be accounted a sturdy beggar because you happen not to be in immediate want of his wares? |
7475 | Not worth the money? |
7475 | Or do you prefer the diamonds behind the next pane? |
7475 | Or, continued the orator, more vehemently, do they think, in that case, to carry their slaves into territories now free? |
7475 | Perhaps you have played the little game of parlor magic? |
7475 | Shall he be adjudged a nuisance? |
7475 | Shall it be stopped altogether? |
7475 | Shall men keep their seats until, by sheer shame, and in deference to indignant public protest, the company does its duty? |
7475 | Sometimes, for an inadvertent hour, do the finer instincts of public spirit flag in those civic bosoms? |
7475 | Suppose that women on their side were to expect men in the family to be heroes and gentlemen as well as''good providers?''" |
7475 | The happy loiterers could see all the beautiful things, and what could they do more if they should buy them all? |
7475 | The young pale general there, the placid woman, the man in the orchestra stall, have they been playing only? |
7475 | This is the reason of the wondering question, What has become of roast meat? |
7475 | Was not the deep bay of St. Paul''s heard when Nelson, the old sea- dog, died? |
7475 | Were they not the same voices that called Whittington to turn again? |
7475 | What do you mean?" |
7475 | What do you think that he could tell you of Dresden china-- its history, its masters, its manufacture? |
7475 | What does he know about them? |
7475 | What does he know of pictures? |
7475 | What evil genius, hostile to the enjoyment of the people, persuaded them? |
7475 | What is it, do you ask? |
7475 | When, in the happy words of another, Canada has been brought down to the Potomac, do they think their fugitives will be restored? |
7475 | Why are we not also taught what else they did during the day? |
7475 | Why do we learn nothing of Mr. and Mrs. Y. and Z., at the other end of the alphabet, in Baxter Street? |
7475 | Why so eager to cast the first stone? |
7475 | Why so insistent, so scrupulously exigent? |
7475 | Will he permit?" |
7475 | Will the malcontents have seceded because of the non- rendition of fugitive slaves? |
7475 | Would they not arise rather from the consciousness of the peculiar wrong that the gentler sex should be so incommoded? |
7475 | Yes, but to what does art, especially musical art, appeal? |
7475 | Yonder trombone may have its weaknesses-- who of us, pray, is without? |
7475 | Your chords, say in the domestic concert, are they always finely harmonious, and your own reed never cracked? |
7475 | said the Senator at the Symphony Concert,"and why do people come here?" |
7475 | would it be, could it be, even with all our expectation, what we believe it to have been? |
31092 | Are we wanted in the Union? |
31092 | How deep is the water? |
31092 | How many are there of you? |
31092 | I am called to sup,he wrote,"but where to breakfast? |
31092 | If, to please the people,he said,"we offer what we ourselves disapprove, how can we afterward defend our work? |
31092 | Shall we not fire, sir? |
31092 | What shall I bring you for a present? |
31092 | What was to have been your reward in case you succeeded? |
31092 | What will your people do with me if they catch me? |
31092 | Why not? |
31092 | 10. Who lived north of the Ohio? |
31092 | 10. Who was Count de Grasse? |
31092 | 11. Who answered Jackson''s call for assistance? |
31092 | 12. Who came from outside New Orleans to help defend the city? |
31092 | 12. Who had possession of Stony Point? |
31092 | 12. Who was Hamilton the"hair buyer"? |
31092 | 12. Who was Jacataqua? |
31092 | 14. Who was Dr. Bowditch? |
31092 | 17. Who led the attack on Stony Point? |
31092 | 18. Who was Samuel Doak? |
31092 | 2. Who was Lafayette? |
31092 | 22. Who was the orator at the laying of the corner stone of Bunker Hill Monument? |
31092 | 27. Who succeeded Ferguson in command? |
31092 | 27. Who were the Creoles? |
31092 | 28. Who helped Clark make friends? |
31092 | 33. Who, next to Washington, was the most noted man at the Philadelphia convention? |
31092 | 37. Who was chosen president of the Philadelphia convention? |
31092 | 39. Who announced Clark''s arrival at Vincennes? |
31092 | 5. Who was sent to the Mediterranean Sea? |
31092 | 57. Who was the first President, and who the first Vice President, of the new nation? |
31092 | 7. Who was Moultrie? |
31092 | 7. Who was the"Iron Duke"? |
31092 | After all, the main question was, What shall be done? |
31092 | At what hour was the attack to be made? |
31092 | At what time did Clark reach the village? |
31092 | At what time of year did Clark start for Vincennes? |
31092 | But how? |
31092 | By what means did the delegates at Philadelphia succeed in agreeing on a form of federal government? |
31092 | CHAPTER II, PAGE 18 A MIDWINTER CAMPAIGN 1. Who led the patriots to victory at Saratoga, New York? |
31092 | CHAPTER XI, PAGE 156 A DARING EXPLOIT 1. Who were the Barbary pirates? |
31092 | Can you describe some of the incidents of Lafayette''s visit? |
31092 | Can you find such a man for me this very afternoon?" |
31092 | Can you name some others of the delegates to the Philadelphia convention? |
31092 | Could he do it? |
31092 | Did Clark have trouble in getting into the town of Kaskaskia? |
31092 | Did Hale receive a trial? |
31092 | Did anybody think well of Clark''s plan of campaign? |
31092 | Did not Wolfe{ 32} take equally desperate chances and win deathless renown? |
31092 | Did the patriots have plenty of powder? |
31092 | Did the pioneers have other enemies besides the Indians? |
31092 | Do n''t you suppose the recapture of the Philadelphia was talked of every day? |
31092 | Do you know a good use for palmetto logs? |
31092 | Do you think Clark was a hero? |
31092 | Do you wonder that the grateful people of the sturdy young republic were eager to receive him as their guest? |
31092 | How could he ever go home without taking Quebec? |
31092 | How did Arnold reach the city of Quebec? |
31092 | How did Arnold try to make friends of the Indians? |
31092 | How did Captain Bainbridge treat the dying Captain Lambert? |
31092 | How did Captain Hull win a hat from Captain Dacres? |
31092 | How did Captain Isaac Hull get away from the British fleet? |
31092 | How did Clark get possession of the fort? |
31092 | How did Clark introduce himself? |
31092 | How did Clark plan to defend Kentucky? |
31092 | How did Commodore Preble treat Decatur after his capture of the Tripolitan gunboats? |
31092 | How did Congress show its gratitude for Lafayette''s services during the Revolution? |
31092 | How did Decatur deceive the pirate officer? |
31092 | How did General Clinton take it all? |
31092 | How did Hale disguise himself? |
31092 | How did Lafayette live at Valley Forge? |
31092 | How did Lafayette show his affection for Washington? |
31092 | How did Lexington, Kentucky, get its name? |
31092 | How did Morgan escape from the Indian? |
31092 | How did Morgan outwit Lord Cornwallis? |
31092 | How did Pakenham begin his operations? |
31092 | How did Sir Edward fare when he marched out to get a look at the Americans? |
31092 | How did Washington and others begin to work out the problem of our national existence? |
31092 | How did Washington and others feel about the second compromise? |
31092 | How did Washington become so wealthy? |
31092 | How did Washington convince the delegates of their duty? |
31092 | How did Washington look when at the meeting at Newburgh, New York? |
31092 | How did Washington treat his slaves? |
31092 | How did Washington''s slaves treat him? |
31092 | How did Wayne divide his army to make the attack? |
31092 | How did Wayne look? |
31092 | How did our navy compare with England''s in 1812? |
31092 | How did relief finally come to Quebec? |
31092 | How did some of the delegates wish to deal with the great problem of the national government? |
31092 | How did the Americans show their good discipline? |
31092 | How did the British fleet fare at Chesapeake Bay? |
31092 | How did the British plan to attack the fort? |
31092 | How did the British soldiers act in Connecticut? |
31092 | How did the British treat Arnold and his men? |
31092 | How did the Hessians like Morgan''s riflemen? |
31092 | How did the army get along in crossing the Horseshoe Plain? |
31092 | How did the guests enjoy President Washington''s grand dinners? |
31092 | How did the patriots of the South get on in 1780? |
31092 | How did the people get news of the surrender? |
31092 | How did the pirates discover the Americans? |
31092 | How did the riflemen look as they came into town? |
31092 | How did the states begin to treat each other? |
31092 | How does the Constitution compare in size with our modern war ships? |
31092 | How early did Jackson''s men go to their posts on that last Sunday morning? |
31092 | How far away were the patriots when Ferguson camped at King''s Mountain? |
31092 | How far did Arnold have to go to get provisions? |
31092 | How goes the battle inside the fort? |
31092 | How had Arnold got information about Canada? |
31092 | How had our country changed when Lafayette came in 1824? |
31092 | How is Morgan''s valor commemorated? |
31092 | How is the Constitution said to have received the name"Old Ironsides"? |
31092 | How is the surrender of Cornwallis commemorated? |
31092 | How large an army did Washington have in Virginia? |
31092 | How long a march was it to Boston? |
31092 | How long a march was it to Kaskaskia? |
31092 | How long did it take to cross the plain of the Wabash River? |
31092 | How long did the Continental Congress continue to act? |
31092 | How long did the Philadelphia convention continue in session? |
31092 | How long did the engagement on Sunday morning continue? |
31092 | How long did the fight last? |
31092 | How long did the fight on board the Philadelphia last? |
31092 | How long did the siege of Yorktown continue? |
31092 | How long did the war last? |
31092 | How long had a soldier to serve before he could buy a bushel of wheat? |
31092 | How long had this campaign lasted? |
31092 | How long were the riflemen in getting from Cowpens to King''s Mountain? |
31092 | How many cannon did Moultrie have? |
31092 | How many cannon were the British able to fire at one time? |
31092 | How many cups of flour in half a pint? |
31092 | How many men answered Morgan''s call? |
31092 | How many men did the British have in the final action, and how many did the Americans have? |
31092 | How many men did the British lose in the final action, and how many did the Americans lose? |
31092 | How many men volunteered for the dangerous undertaking? |
31092 | How many men were chosen to go to Stony Point? |
31092 | How many of Decatur''s men were injured? |
31092 | How many of the British escaped from Stony Point? |
31092 | How many soldiers were in the garrison at Stony Point? |
31092 | How many soldiers were there in Cornwallis''s army? |
31092 | How many states were represented at Philadelphia? |
31092 | How might Sir Henry Clinton have changed the history of Yorktown? |
31092 | How much land did Washington have? |
31092 | How much of an army did Clark have for his campaign? |
31092 | How much of our country did Lafayette visit? |
31092 | How much of the original ship Constitution still exists? |
31092 | How obedient were the states to the Articles of Confederation? |
31092 | How old was General Anthony Wayne at this time? |
31092 | How old was George Rogers Clark at this time? |
31092 | How successful was the meeting at Annapolis? |
31092 | How successful were the pirates in firing at the Americans? |
31092 | How was England affected by our troubles? |
31092 | How was Ferguson killed? |
31092 | How was Hale executed? |
31092 | How was Lafayette received at the University of Virginia? |
31092 | How was Morgan remembered by Washington and other leaders? |
31092 | How was Stony Point defended? |
31092 | How was it decided to count the slaves? |
31092 | How was the Philadelphia guarded? |
31092 | How was the alarm sounded to the people of New Orleans? |
31092 | How was the army divided? |
31092 | How was the attack to be made? |
31092 | How was the expedition to reach Canada? |
31092 | How was the first President of the United States dressed when he made his formal visit to Congress? |
31092 | How was the news received by the prime minister of England, and by the king? |
31092 | How was the weather on the day of the battle? |
31092 | How was"Old Hickory"honored? |
31092 | How was"Old Ironsides"used at Newport? |
31092 | How wealthy was Washington? |
31092 | How were the British reënforced on Christmas day? |
31092 | How were the Continental and French troops received at Philadelphia? |
31092 | How were the backwoodsmen dressed? |
31092 | How were the soldiers treated at Newburyport and at Fort Western? |
31092 | How were the walls of the fort made? |
31092 | In how many battles did Morgan take part? |
31092 | In what did Washington''s greatness consist? |
31092 | Like a flash, he seized Decatur by the collar and shook him, shouting,"Aye, sir, why did you not bring me out more?" |
31092 | Meanwhile, where was Sir Henry Clinton? |
31092 | Of how much use was Pakenham''s redoubt? |
31092 | QUESTIONS FOR REVIEW CHAPTER I, PAGE 1 THE HERO OF VINCENNES 1. Who was Daniel Boone? |
31092 | Should he not make at least one desperate attempt? |
31092 | To what two political parties did the Constitution give rise? |
31092 | Was Clark brave? |
31092 | Was Hale a patriot? |
31092 | Was it strange that Washington''s heart was heavy? |
31092 | Was it wise for Hale to spend the night at"Mother Chick''s"tavern? |
31092 | Was some poor fellow chilled to the bone? |
31092 | Were the British well situated at this time? |
31092 | Were the men short of food? |
31092 | Were the slaves to be counted as persons or as goods? |
31092 | What are pioneers? |
31092 | What arms did the backwoodsmen have? |
31092 | What authority did the Continental Congress have? |
31092 | What battle began the war of the Revolution? |
31092 | What can you say of Morgan''s marriage? |
31092 | What can you say of Moultrie''s after life? |
31092 | What can you say of Washington''s charity? |
31092 | What can you say of Washington''s dignity? |
31092 | What can you say of Washington''s education? |
31092 | What can you say of Washington''s gravity? |
31092 | What can you say of imprisonment for debt? |
31092 | What can you say of the Articles of Confederation? |
31092 | What can you say of the scenes connected with the fiftieth anniversary of the battle of Bunker Hill? |
31092 | What condition of affairs was troubling Washington at this time? |
31092 | What did Arnold do to save his army? |
31092 | What did Burgoyne think of Morgan''s regiment? |
31092 | What did Commodore Preble do when the Philadelphia was captured? |
31092 | What did Cornwallis now do? |
31092 | What did England and France do to our merchantmen? |
31092 | What did General Clinton think of Washington? |
31092 | What did General Lambert do after the battle? |
31092 | What did Gladstone say of the Constitution? |
31092 | What did Hale do when he learned of the battle of Lexington? |
31092 | What did Hamilton do when he heard of Clark''s conquest? |
31092 | What did Jacataqua do? |
31092 | What did Jasper do to save the flag? |
31092 | What did King George say of the Yankees? |
31092 | What did Lafayette do on his return to France? |
31092 | What did Lafayette do when peace was declared? |
31092 | What did Lafayette do with the laurel wreath presented to him at Yorktown? |
31092 | What did McDaniel think about when he was dying? |
31092 | What did Nelson say of Decatur''s deed? |
31092 | What did Pakenham use for making a redoubt? |
31092 | What did Pompey do? |
31092 | What did Sir Edward Pakenham think of the task before him? |
31092 | What did Sir Guy Carleton do to save Quebec? |
31092 | What did Tarleton do when defeat came? |
31092 | What did Tarleton do when the spy told him that Morgan had halted? |
31092 | What did Thomas Jefferson think should be done concerning the Barbary pirates? |
31092 | What did Thomas Paine, the author of the pamphlet called"Common Sense,"say of the Revolutionary War? |
31092 | What did Washington decide to do? |
31092 | What did Washington hope to do with the assistance of the French fleet? |
31092 | What did Washington say in his letter to the colonies? |
31092 | What did Washington think of slaves? |
31092 | What did Washington think of the Constitution? |
31092 | What did Washington think should be done? |
31092 | What did Wayne write to his friend? |
31092 | What did many of the people throughout the country think of the Constitution? |
31092 | What did the Americans do with the Philadelphia? |
31092 | What did the British do in May, 1779? |
31092 | What did the British marines do with Hale? |
31092 | What did the British now decide to do? |
31092 | What did the British think of the"rebels"? |
31092 | What did the Indians do who learned of Arnold''s approach? |
31092 | What did the Secretary of the Navy in 1833 intend to do with the Constitution? |
31092 | What did the little army have for food? |
31092 | What did the people do when they heard Ferguson''s threat? |
31092 | What did the people of the several states at last begin to think? |
31092 | What did the sailors say afterwards about the burning ship? |
31092 | What did the war schooner Carolina do? |
31092 | What did the young ladies say to Tarleton? |
31092 | What did they care for the rights of a feeble nation so long as each could cut off the other''s supplies? |
31092 | What did"Lafayetted"mean? |
31092 | What do you know about Wayne? |
31092 | What do you know of Colonel Tarleton? |
31092 | What do you know of Morgan''s religious life? |
31092 | What do you know of Morgan''s strength? |
31092 | What do you know of Nathanael Greene? |
31092 | What do you know of President Washington''s public receptions? |
31092 | What do you know of Washington''s fondness for fine dress? |
31092 | What do you know of Washington''s strength? |
31092 | What do you know of the gathering at Sycamore Shoals? |
31092 | What do you remember about King''s Mountain? |
31092 | What do you think of Cunningham? |
31092 | What does John Fiske say of our condition after peace was made? |
31092 | What does John Fiske say of this battle? |
31092 | What does Washington Irving say of Stony Point? |
31092 | What effect did the army life have on Morgan? |
31092 | What effect did the crushing blows of the British have on the Southern patriots? |
31092 | What effect did this victory have on the American soldier? |
31092 | What further troubles occurred in 1786? |
31092 | What had become of the lawless men of the Franklin and Holston settlements? |
31092 | What had been Lafayette''s career in his own country? |
31092 | What happened to Jackson''s defenses? |
31092 | What happened to Montgomery, Arnold, and Morgan? |
31092 | What happened to Sir Edward Pakenham, and to Generals Gibbs and Keane? |
31092 | What happened to the Siren? |
31092 | What happened to the frigate Philadelphia and her crew? |
31092 | What happened to the men- of- war when they were changing their positions? |
31092 | What have we already learned about Morgan at Saratoga, New York? |
31092 | What have we already learned about Sir Henry Clinton? |
31092 | What have we already learned about the Holston settlements? |
31092 | What have we already learned of Gates? |
31092 | What have we already learned of Rochambeau? |
31092 | What have you already learned about General Greene? |
31092 | What hindered Clark''s march? |
31092 | What is a carrying place? |
31092 | What is a compromise? |
31092 | What is a drumhead court- martial? |
31092 | What is a dugout? |
31092 | What is a federation? |
31092 | What is a ketch? |
31092 | What is a pasha? |
31092 | What is a privateer? |
31092 | What is a receiving ship? |
31092 | What is a"forlorn hope"? |
31092 | What is blackmail? |
31092 | What is said of Captain Stewart''s seamanship in the last battle of"Old Ironsides"? |
31092 | What is the name of the state that grew out of the Franklin and Holston settlements? |
31092 | What is wampum? |
31092 | What kept Washington from financial ruin? |
31092 | What kind of boy had Hale been? |
31092 | What kind of education did Morgan have? |
31092 | What kind of example has Washington set us? |
31092 | What kind of fighters were the Tripolitan pirates said to be? |
31092 | What kind of home did Hale have? |
31092 | What kind of horseman was Washington? |
31092 | What kind of life did Hale lead when captain in the army? |
31092 | What kind of life did the pioneers lead in the wilderness? |
31092 | What kind of man was Governor Nelson? |
31092 | What kind of man was needed to carry out Washington''s plan? |
31092 | What kind of men were delegates to the Continental Congress? |
31092 | What kind of men were sent to the Philadelphia convention? |
31092 | What kind of place was Stony Point? |
31092 | What kind of place was this Stony Point? |
31092 | What kind of regiment did Morgan command? |
31092 | What kind of spirit did the pioneers show in their pursuit of Ferguson? |
31092 | What kind of time did Decatur and his men have off the shore of Tripoli? |
31092 | What kind of times were at hand? |
31092 | What kind of welcome did Boston have in store for Captain Hull? |
31092 | What kind of welcome did we give Lafayette in 1824? |
31092 | What last attempt did Lord Cornwallis make? |
31092 | What made the Indians so hostile to the pioneers? |
31092 | What made the army diminish in numbers? |
31092 | What made the patriots skillful in firing the cannon? |
31092 | What message did Sir Henry Clinton send Lord Cornwallis? |
31092 | What name did the British give to Stony Point? |
31092 | What occurred at the tavern in Virginia? |
31092 | What opinion of us did Frederick the Great, King of Prussia, have? |
31092 | What orders did Tarleton and Ferguson receive from Lord Cornwallis? |
31092 | What part of the country did Washington need to protect? |
31092 | What power did Congress have under the Articles of Confederation? |
31092 | What power did the Articles of Confederation grant to each state? |
31092 | What prediction about our nation was made in Parliament? |
31092 | What promotion did Decatur receive? |
31092 | What question about the slaves arose? |
31092 | What reason did Nathan Hale give for volunteering to act as spy? |
31092 | What regret did Hale have? |
31092 | What share in the battle did Sir Henry Clinton and his men have? |
31092 | What sort of general was Washington? |
31092 | What sort of man was Arnold at this time? |
31092 | What sort of man was Clark? |
31092 | What sort of man was Colonel Moultrie? |
31092 | What sort of man was Ferguson? |
31092 | What sort of man was Gates? |
31092 | What sort of men were in the palmetto fort? |
31092 | What sort of patriot was Colonel Enos? |
31092 | What sort of people were the South Carolinians? |
31092 | What sort of place was"The Cedars"? |
31092 | What sort of road was it to Stony Point? |
31092 | What sort of soldier was Anthony Wayne? |
31092 | What state took the lead in sending delegates to Philadelphia? |
31092 | What states are now in this region of Clark''s conquest? |
31092 | What success did the Constitution have in fighting with Tripoli? |
31092 | What threat did Ferguson send to the backwoodsmen? |
31092 | What time of year was it now? |
31092 | What time of year was it when Clark marched to Kaskaskia? |
31092 | What time of year was it when the army started? |
31092 | What trouble did they have with their boats? |
31092 | What troubles did we have with other nations during the first twenty- five years of our national life? |
31092 | What vessel is that?" |
31092 | What was Decatur''s plan for destroying the Philadelphia? |
31092 | What was England''s plan in 1814? |
31092 | What was Franklin''s opinion of the Constitution? |
31092 | What was Hale doing at the time of the battle of Lexington? |
31092 | What was Jackson''s main line of defense? |
31092 | What was Morgan besides being a great soldier? |
31092 | What was Morgan''s success due to? |
31092 | What was Washington planning to do? |
31092 | What was Washington''s appearance? |
31092 | What was Washington''s diet? |
31092 | What was Washington''s favorite amusement? |
31092 | What was Washington''s plan of attack? |
31092 | What was Washington''s reply to Lord Cornwallis? |
31092 | What was done by the Continental Congress? |
31092 | What was done with the wheel of the Java? |
31092 | What was he to do? |
31092 | What was his duty now? |
31092 | What was the Constitution''s last battle? |
31092 | What was the cause of the third compromise? |
31092 | What was the character of New Orleans? |
31092 | What was the character of the Franklin and Holston settlers? |
31092 | What was the condition of Lord Cornwallis after his victory over Greene? |
31092 | What was the condition of Morgan and his men when Tarleton appeared? |
31092 | What was the condition of Tarleton''s soldiers when they began the battle? |
31092 | What was the condition of paper money in 1780? |
31092 | What was the condition of the army when it reached Point Levi? |
31092 | What was the difference between General Charles Lee and Governor Rutledge? |
31092 | What was the duty of Morgan and his sharpshooters? |
31092 | What was the effect of Lafayette''s manner and example? |
31092 | What was the effect of Moultrie''s victory? |
31092 | What was the effect of having Colonel Murfree and his men appear in front of the fort? |
31092 | What was the effect of the victory at King''s Mountain? |
31092 | What was the exploit of the Enterprise? |
31092 | What was the first compromise in framing the Constitution? |
31092 | What was the hardest battle that"Old Ironsides"had? |
31092 | What was the last honor shown the departing guest? |
31092 | What was the nationality of Lafayette? |
31092 | What was the object in dragging sails and buckets in the water? |
31092 | What was the result of the war of 1812? |
31092 | What was the riflemen''s plan of attack? |
31092 | What was the second compromise in framing the Constitution? |
31092 | What was the third compromise? |
31092 | What was the use of fighting against such odds? |
31092 | What was the watchword? |
31092 | What was their plan? |
31092 | What weapons were to be used in attacking Stony Point? |
31092 | What were General Gates''s"Northern laurels"? |
31092 | What were Jackson''s first intrenchments made of? |
31092 | What were the people of Kaskaskia doing? |
31092 | When did Boone live? |
31092 | When did Lafayette first come to this country? |
31092 | When did Lafayette make his third trip to this country? |
31092 | When did Morgan again take part in the war? |
31092 | When did Sir Henry Clinton begin to open his eyes? |
31092 | When did the British fleet arrive at the delta of the Mississippi? |
31092 | When did the army reach Point Levi? |
31092 | When did the men learn where they were going? |
31092 | When he could{ 143} not collect this beggarly sum, is it any wonder that he deserted or rebelled? |
31092 | When he shouted,"Come, boys, who''s for the camp before Cambridge?" |
31092 | When the Revolution began, why did Washington wish to attack Canada? |
31092 | When the flour was gone, what did the army do for food? |
31092 | When was Morgan appointed captain? |
31092 | When was Morgan made a brigadier general? |
31092 | When was Morgan made a colonel? |
31092 | When was the Constitution launched? |
31092 | When was the Constitution to become law? |
31092 | When was"Old Ironsides"taken to Charlestown? |
31092 | When was"Old Ironsides"taken to Newport? |
31092 | Where did Clark plan to begin his campaign? |
31092 | Where did Lord Cornwallis finally make his headquarters? |
31092 | Where did Lord Cornwallis have his headquarters? |
31092 | Where did Morgan get the names"old wagoner,""wagoner,"and"teamster"? |
31092 | Where did the captain of the Halifax send Hale? |
31092 | Where did the patriot army now take up its quarters? |
31092 | Where is Petersburg, Virginia? |
31092 | Where is Yorktown? |
31092 | Where was Daniel Morgan''s home? |
31092 | Where was Hale buried? |
31092 | Where was Sir Henry Clinton at this time? |
31092 | Where was Washington at this time? |
31092 | Where was the British fleet all this time? |
31092 | Where was the Constitution built? |
31092 | Where was the Illinois country? |
31092 | Where was the main part of the patriot army at this time? |
31092 | Where was the money got to buy supplies for the army? |
31092 | Which was the first state to sign the Constitution? |
31092 | Who was the best man to perform this desperate exploit? |
31092 | Whom did Clark have as guides? |
31092 | Whom did Washington send to receive Cornwallis''s sword? |
31092 | Whom do you consider our greatest patriot? |
31092 | Why did Arnold leave Quebec? |
31092 | Why did Arnold''s leg deserve to be buried with the honors of war? |
31092 | Why did Clark avoid the Mississippi River? |
31092 | Why did Clark decide to push on to Vincennes? |
31092 | Why did Clark go back a second time to Virginia? |
31092 | Why did Clark go back to Virginia? |
31092 | Why did Congress accept Lafayette''s services? |
31092 | Why did Congress decide to rebuild the Constitution? |
31092 | Why did England model some of her ships after"Old Ironsides"? |
31092 | Why did England try to keep the Americans from going west? |
31092 | Why did England wish to punish North Carolina first of all? |
31092 | Why did Ferguson choose King''s Mountain for his camp? |
31092 | Why did General Clinton send out raiders? |
31092 | Why did Governor Dinwiddie object to promoting Morgan? |
31092 | Why did Jacataqua decide to go with the troops? |
31092 | Why did Jackson plan to attack the British at once? |
31092 | Why did Knowlton find it hard to get a man for Washington''s purpose? |
31092 | Why did Lafayette first come to this country? |
31092 | Why did Lord Campbell wish to capture Charleston? |
31092 | Why did Lord Cornwallis wish a truce for so long a time? |
31092 | Why did Morgan again retire from service? |
31092 | Why did Morgan choose Cowpens for his battle ground? |
31092 | Why did Morgan leave the army for a while? |
31092 | Why did Morgan return to the army? |
31092 | Why did Morgan stop driving army wagons? |
31092 | Why did Morgan wish to fight the bully? |
31092 | Why did Sir Henry Clinton delay the attack upon North Carolina? |
31092 | Why did Washington call his house"a well resorted tavern"? |
31092 | Why did Washington like Benedict Arnold? |
31092 | Why did Washington need a fleet? |
31092 | Why did Washington send troops to Long Island? |
31092 | Why did Washington withdraw from New York? |
31092 | Why did it take Lafayette so long to go from New York to Boston? |
31092 | Why did news travel so slowly in those days? |
31092 | Why did not Clark allow his men to storm the fort? |
31092 | Why did not Cornwallis take part in the surrender? |
31092 | Why did not Hamilton march from Vincennes to Kaskaskia? |
31092 | Why did not Jasper accept promotion? |
31092 | Why did not Lord Cornwallis retreat from Yorktown? |
31092 | Why did not Morgan meet Tarleton at once? |
31092 | Why did not Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Patrick Henry, and Samuel Adams attend the Philadelphia convention? |
31092 | Why did not Washington follow up Clinton''s raiders? |
31092 | Why did not Washington hold Stony Point? |
31092 | Why did the British destroy Norfolk? |
31092 | Why did the British lose so many officers in the battle? |
31092 | Why did the Continental Congress decline in power? |
31092 | Why did the armies hurry away from Yorktown? |
31092 | Why did the backwoodsmen not find Ferguson at Gilberttown? |
31092 | Why did the battle of Cowpens make Morgan so famous? |
31092 | Why did the colonies band together in 1774? |
31092 | Why did the patriots hasten the siege of Yorktown? |
31092 | Why did the patriots wait so long before attacking the city? |
31092 | Why did the people care so little about a federation, or federal government? |
31092 | Why did the people care so much about"Old Ironsides"? |
31092 | Why did the people of Charleston suppose the fort had surrendered? |
31092 | Why did we buy the good will of the Barbary pirates? |
31092 | Why did we not declare war on Great Britain before 1812? |
31092 | Why do we admire Washington? |
31092 | Why do we owe such a debt of gratitude to the builders of"the good ship Constitution"? |
31092 | Why do you think they did so? |
31092 | Why is the victory a sad one to think of? |
31092 | Why not cross the James River and retreat to a safe place in North Carolina? |
31092 | Why run the risk of almost certain defeat? |
31092 | Why should we continue to preserve"Old Ironsides"? |
31092 | Why was Clark''s campaign so important? |
31092 | Why was General Jackson so busy just before Christmas? |
31092 | Why was Morgan well thought of by the village people? |
31092 | Why was Stephen Decatur chosen to destroy the Philadelphia? |
31092 | Why was Washington instructed to add six war ships to our navy? |
31092 | Why was Wayne called"Mad Anthony"? |
31092 | Why was a fort built on Sullivan''s Island? |
31092 | Why was it easy to get soldiers for this campaign? |
31092 | Why was it important for the Americans to have possession of King''s Ferry? |
31092 | Why was it so hard to reach the Dead River? |
31092 | Why was it the Americans were so successful in burning the Philadelphia? |
31092 | Why was not a new wheel put on"Old Ironsides"? |
31092 | Why was the Fourth of July in 1788 so glorious? |
31092 | Why was the ascent of the Dead River so difficult? |
31092 | Why was the soldier put to death for loading his gun? |
31092 | Why was the young minister sent through the Clove? |
31092 | Why was this battle so fierce? |
31092 | Why were both England and France so jealous of us a century ago? |
31092 | Why were the Americans obliged to burn the Philadelphia? |
31092 | Why were the bands of pioneers put under one supreme commander? |
31092 | Why were the battles of"Old Ironsides"so important to us as a nation? |
31092 | Why were the pioneers so long in hearing of the battle of Lexington, which was fought in April? |
31092 | Would you call Hale a hero? |
31092 | exclaimed the governor,"to a camp boxer and a teamster?" |
31092 | { 127} Yes, but what about Sir Henry Clinton, the British commander in chief in New York? |
46794 | A warning to the white settlers? |
46794 | Aim, do you say, brother? 46794 And perhaps we might have to take to a tree, just as I did two years ago, waiting for dawn to drive the critters away; eh, Bob?" |
46794 | And the others also? |
46794 | And without saying good- bye to any of us? 46794 Are there any more of them?" |
46794 | Are they retreating, brother? |
46794 | Are we getting closer, Bob? 46794 Are we making any progress at all?" |
46794 | But I am a prisoner here, and these Indians may mean to put me to death? |
46794 | But about the warning? 46794 But did you think you heard some one call?" |
46794 | But how about the Indians, Pat? |
46794 | But how comes it that we found you in such a queer scrape, Pat? |
46794 | But look here, Blue Jacket, what about Bob? |
46794 | But suppose the tree caught fire, and burned,said Sandy, in bewilderment;"how could we save ourselves then?" |
46794 | But the deer,continued Sandy, persistently;"why not try for it? |
46794 | But they have other canoes, for I saw three at least? |
46794 | But we can share the honor, Sandy; for if you had not kept running round and round as you did, how else could I have shot him? |
46794 | But what do you think happened? |
46794 | But what does it say, Pat? |
46794 | But what is that you are carrying, Sandy? |
46794 | But what of Bob? |
46794 | But what shall we do? |
46794 | But which way? |
46794 | But why did you shout? 46794 But why do you keep looking up at the sky so much?" |
46794 | Daviess, Hardin, Harlan and the young man, Simon Kenton( Note 6), of whom Boone seems to be so fond, will they also remain in our company that long? |
46794 | Did we get anything? |
46794 | Did you hear it, too? |
46794 | Do we have to take the chances of crossing that swollen stream? |
46794 | Do you ever forget anything? |
46794 | Do you mean that you have been with my brother since the fire? |
46794 | Do you mean to tell us that the bear fired your gun at you? |
46794 | Do you suppose he is alone? |
46794 | Do you suppose we are anywhere on a line with the island? |
46794 | Do you think he means to jump for the boat? 46794 Have you given these foolish lads permission to keep this varmint alive when he''s better off if dispatched?" |
46794 | How can I ever thank you, boys, for what you have done? |
46794 | How long will it be before dawn comes? |
46794 | How many more bullets have you in your pouch? |
46794 | How will it hold? |
46794 | I wonder if I could manage to get away from here, in case I got my hands free? |
46794 | I wonder if they will pursue us? |
46794 | I wonder when the folks will be along? |
46794 | I wonder where he can be? |
46794 | Is he going to die? |
46794 | Is he near the border of the village, Blue Jacket? |
46794 | Is it you, Blue Jacket? |
46794 | Is that all? 46794 Is that true, O''Mara?" |
46794 | Lose him, Pat? |
46794 | Must you go now, Colonel Boone? |
46794 | Not a white man, surely? |
46794 | Now I get it,cried Sandy,"and, Bob, listen, what can that roaring sound mean? |
46794 | Ready? 46794 Ready?" |
46794 | Shall we go in and try to sleep? |
46794 | Shall we stake the canoe out here in the rushes? |
46794 | So we are to beware of the river''s rising wrath, are we? 46794 So, you are zere, too, it seems?" |
46794 | So, zat ees the vay ze vind blows? 46794 Tell us, what did they dare say to you?" |
46794 | The ridskin gone, is it, me byes? |
46794 | Then Bob came along with you? |
46794 | Then have you found a bear''s den, or perhaps a wolf''s whelps? |
46794 | Then what can we do? 46794 Then you are with me?" |
46794 | Then you do not mean to give up looking for game? |
46794 | Then you know our father? |
46794 | There, how does that look? |
46794 | They are coming here then, those brave souls from Carolina, who head toward the setting sun? |
46794 | Well, what of that? |
46794 | What ails you, Bob? |
46794 | What are you thinking about, Bob? |
46794 | What can have happened to him, Bob? |
46794 | What can you mean? 46794 What did you think you heard?" |
46794 | What do you mean to do? |
46794 | What do you think is the matter, Bob? 46794 What does all this foolishness mean?" |
46794 | What else can it mean? 46794 What is it, Bob?" |
46794 | What is it,--Indians? |
46794 | What is it? 46794 What is this, Bob, Sandy?" |
46794 | What ought we do first? |
46794 | What shall we do now? |
46794 | What would you? |
46794 | What? |
46794 | When did you promise Bob to save me? 46794 Where do you think all this water is coming from?" |
46794 | Where? |
46794 | Which way? |
46794 | Who could have been so cowardly and cruel? |
46794 | Who knows? |
46794 | Who may you be, and how did it happen that we found you among the tree- tops at the head of this island? |
46794 | Why should we? |
46794 | Why, Kate, my child, what has happened? 46794 Why, what shall I do?" |
46794 | Would it do to climb high up in a tree? |
46794 | Yes, but when time passes, and I fail to come, he may get impatient and do something that will get him into trouble? |
46794 | Yes,returned Bob, with a little laugh,"it is our old friend, Pat O''Mara, without a doubt; but what can he have stumbled into now? |
46794 | You do n''t think that ugly Anthony Brady did it? 46794 Am I to never see my people again-- dear old Bob, Kate, father, and my mother? |
46794 | And did n''t dear old Bob say the bread we cast upon the waters might return ere many days? |
46794 | And if so be this foine lad chooses to coddle yees back to loife agin, phat business is it av ours? |
46794 | And if the fire rushed down upon him before this discovery could be made, what then? |
46794 | And if the very worst comes--""Yes, what then, Bob?" |
46794 | And look at this figure standing here; what do you make of him?" |
46794 | And notice how he swings his long tail back and forth? |
46794 | And now, I wonder where Bob is?" |
46794 | And what can that be tied to it, Bob?" |
46794 | Are they disposed to be friendly; or would we have to fight whenever we ran across them?" |
46794 | Are we near the river, and is that a rapids of any sort?" |
46794 | Bid Blue Jacket mean that they should make their escape by water? |
46794 | Blue Jacket, is it you?" |
46794 | Blue Jacket, was he not a warrior now, and as such fully competent to decide for himself? |
46794 | But how about the deer, brother?" |
46794 | But we were furious, and would not give in; would we, Bob?" |
46794 | But what has he got to do with the rains?" |
46794 | But what was this? |
46794 | But what would you haf me do? |
46794 | But why had he not answered his shouts? |
46794 | But why have I not heard his signal call? |
46794 | But you think, then, Bob will bide his time patiently, and wait to hear from you?" |
46794 | But, if you expect to stay right here, why should I not lie down and sleep under this tree, as well as in there?" |
46794 | CHAPTER III CAUGHT IN THE SNOW- STORM"WHAT makes it so dark, Bob?" |
46794 | CHAPTER VIII THE PERILS OF THE WILDERNESS"DID you see that, Bob?" |
46794 | CHAPTER XIII BLUE JACKET"How will this place do?" |
46794 | CHAPTER XX THE COUNCIL FIRE"WHO calls me?" |
46794 | CHAPTER XXII THE ESCAPE"WHEN can we go, Blue Jacket?" |
46794 | Can the Indians be about, and have they frightened all the deer and buffalo away?" |
46794 | Can the enemy be coming down on us now?" |
46794 | Can you go any faster, Sandy?" |
46794 | Could anything have happened that the girl was coming home at this unusual hour; for the cabin where she had been employed was half a mile away? |
46794 | Could he dig his toes into the smooth walls with enough vigor to sustain his weight? |
46794 | Could the animal clear it, if he decided to jump? |
46794 | Could they manage to make land before the boat filled and sank under them? |
46794 | Did he not know only too well the self- sacrificing devotion of Bob? |
46794 | Did not we hear their father, Abner Hodgkins, say almost the same thing just three days ago, when we passed him at the door of the alehouse?" |
46794 | Did that mean they would let him live if he gave in, and allowed himself to be made a prisoner? |
46794 | Did the Indians have dogs? |
46794 | Did you ever hear of such ingratitude?" |
46794 | Did you ever know him to be so happy? |
46794 | Did you ever see a face like that? |
46794 | Did you ever see such a thick mass? |
46794 | Do we learn this in the Good Book? |
46794 | Do you believe you can make a happy home here?" |
46794 | Do you know, I think I heard a wolf howl a little while ago?" |
46794 | Do you think they will try to climb over here?" |
46794 | Do you think we can manage it, Bob? |
46794 | Does she not constantly say that in God''s good time all must be made clear? |
46794 | Had he seen the folly of further resistance, and thrown himself over the side, welcoming the fate that seemed so certain? |
46794 | Had his rough eloquence reached the hearts of those sons of the wilderness? |
46794 | Had not Bob told him to stay where he was until he came? |
46794 | Have they discovered us after all?" |
46794 | Have we not heard that all signs fail in dry weather? |
46794 | Have you got any of the white man''s writing to give me?" |
46794 | His gun-- could he not do something with the broad shoulder butt to urge the canoe around? |
46794 | How about that, Sandy?" |
46794 | How do we know but what we may be close to a village, since no one has ever come this way before?" |
46794 | I do not think we want to get any closer to the gentleman, do you, Sandy?" |
46794 | If Bob had escaped both the peril of the fire and that of the Indians, would he discover what had happened to his brother and carry the news home? |
46794 | Is it not so?" |
46794 | Is it not written that we bind up the hurts of our enemies, and thus cover their heads with ashes of reproach? |
46794 | Is it possible then he meant to stick that arrow in our roof rather than any other?" |
46794 | Is that not the signal agreed upon with the sentinels out in the timber? |
46794 | Is the trail any fresher than before? |
46794 | Is there any one wounded near here?" |
46794 | It ees quite varm, but perhaps not yet so varm as it may be, eh?" |
46794 | Just think how mother would smile if she saw us carrying home a nice fat buck, or even a doe? |
46794 | Meanwhile, what of Bob, who took his life in his hand, content to feel assured that at the worst Sandy would be saved? |
46794 | Must they carry on this bitter struggle only to be overwhelmed by superior numbers in the end? |
46794 | Notice how often that old bull throws up his head and sniffs the air? |
46794 | Of what use was his forest training if he could not ascertain whether Sandy had issued from the tree before, or after, the fire? |
46794 | Perhaps he may take a message to his people from us, and be the means of bringing about a lasting truce-- who knows? |
46794 | Phat if the bear was so clost till yer heels that ye had to shin up anything at all?" |
46794 | Sandy Armstrong, say you? |
46794 | Sandy made an involuntary dive for his gun, as he ejaculated:"What did you hear? |
46794 | See his sleek gray sides? |
46794 | Shall we land here, and climb up?" |
46794 | Shall you tell father, and have him spread the news?" |
46794 | Surely you could not imagine that any one would be on this island to hear you?" |
46794 | Tell me, Blue Jacket, did he send any message by you? |
46794 | That rushing sound up on the wind--_does that mean the woods are on fire_?" |
46794 | That would be terrible, would n''t it, Bob?" |
46794 | That would take hours of time; and meanwhile what of Sandy? |
46794 | The gloomy mysterious forest surrounded them on every side save the river, and who could say what terrible perils it concealed? |
46794 | Then you expect that our new friend will be able to help out?" |
46794 | To fire it would be useless, for who was there to come to his assistance? |
46794 | Was it fated that he should be smothered here, suffocated by the pungent smoke that caught his breath, and seemed to choke him? |
46794 | Was it not father who told us how an ounce of prevention is better than a pound of cure? |
46794 | Was it the whoop of an Indian? |
46794 | Was it wise for him to wander off in this manner, without a definite plan? |
46794 | Was it worth while to call out again? |
46794 | Was it worth while trying again to mount upward? |
46794 | Was there anything he could do to help? |
46794 | Were any of them injured? |
46794 | Were the Indians about to descend upon them? |
46794 | What can I do?" |
46794 | What can it be?" |
46794 | What do you suppose we can do if he fails, Bob?" |
46794 | What do you think of my choice? |
46794 | What had happened to Bob? |
46794 | What have you found, Sandy? |
46794 | What if he did, and upset us out here? |
46794 | What if he was caught in the open? |
46794 | What if it were one of our dear lads, in an Indian village-- would you wish him to be treated like a dog? |
46794 | What in the world would we do, Bob?" |
46794 | What is that?" |
46794 | What manner of man could this be, that even the mention of his name should cause a shiver to pass through an Indian council? |
46794 | What news did he bring? |
46794 | What was that? |
46794 | Where did you see him, Blue Jacket?" |
46794 | Who can tell?" |
46794 | Who knows but thot this may be the interin''wedge whereby we may make a treaty av pace wid the bloody Injuns?" |
46794 | Who knows the ways of these redskins better than he? |
46794 | Why are you here, when your duty is at the Hodgkins?" |
46794 | Why should this stranger be so moved at sight of David Armstrong''s two boys? |
46794 | Why, where was Bob? |
46794 | Will I ever forget this? |
46794 | Will I ever get this gun loaded? |
46794 | Would he dream of changing his base in the hope of bettering his condition? |
46794 | Would he not follow after the fire, seeking some sign of me?" |
46794 | Would his will prevail? |
46794 | Would morning never come? |
46794 | Would the new country offer them as comfortable a home as this? |
46794 | Would they ever forget that stirring night? |
46794 | Would they proceed to kill him then and there? |
46794 | Would you let the poor boy die, even though his skin be different from ours? |
46794 | You remember we came into the place just before you left there, monsieur? |
46794 | a ridskin it is ye are afther havin''here? |
46794 | an''is it a horsepital ye''ve stharted already, Bob?" |
46794 | could there be any greater luck? |
46794 | cried Sandy, suddenly,"what is that over yonder? |
46794 | demanded Sandy, confused; for how were they to know just where the unseen enemy might be hidden? |
46794 | do you mean that you would force us to go back to captivity; and you a white man at that? |
46794 | expostulated the other,"what could have happened? |
46794 | he asked, eagerly,"are they coming; and must we fight in the dark?" |
46794 | he surely could not have dragged him away to do him harm?" |
46794 | how did I come to forget that?" |
46794 | look yonder, brother; whatever can that be, perched up in that tree- top? |
46794 | now, who said he fired_ at_ me? |
46794 | remarked Sandy, remembering the caution of the trapper;"would n''t it just be awful if they caught fire? |
46794 | was his like ever known among the young pioneers of the West? |
46794 | what haf we here? |
46794 | what if he did not find a place to hide? |
46794 | what is this you mean to do?" |
46794 | where are you?" |
46794 | who cares?" |
46794 | ye wud, eh? |
5145 | About what? |
5145 | Ai n''t it purty? |
5145 | Ai n''t much like the leetle feller I met here three year ago-- air ye? |
5145 | Air ye afeerd? |
5145 | Air ye goin''home now? |
5145 | Air ye still shootin''at that ole tree? |
5145 | Air you pokin''fun at ME? |
5145 | Air you the constable? |
5145 | And did she always let ye? |
5145 | And did you try to break it down? |
5145 | And how''s your cousin-- Jason? |
5145 | Are you sorry, Mavis? |
5145 | Back to Mavis? |
5145 | Can I do anything for you? |
5145 | Can I git them clothes now? |
5145 | Can the one that''s left appoint his OWN board? |
5145 | Can you beat it? |
5145 | Can you read and write? |
5145 | D''you have anything to do with this? |
5145 | Did I hear you say''CAN''T''? |
5145 | Did she come purty near throwin''you? |
5145 | Did ye hear whut they was talkin''about? |
5145 | Did you ever hear o''my tellin''the Hawns anything about you Honeycutts? |
5145 | Did you keep your promise, Jason? |
5145 | Did you see Steve a- talkin''to some fellers down the road? |
5145 | Did you tell''em? |
5145 | Do n''t know? |
5145 | Do n''t ye understand, boy? |
5145 | Do n''t you think you might save a little time-- waitin''fer Babe to git tame? 5145 Do you know the perpetrators of the unlawful burning of the toll- gate on the Cave Hill Pike?" |
5145 | Do you know whar John Burnham is? |
5145 | Do you reckon I need hit agin you? |
5145 | Does all the boys have to do that? |
5145 | Explain what? |
5145 | Found out yit who killed yo''daddy? |
5145 | Got a still up here? |
5145 | Got yo''gun, Jason? |
5145 | Have ye got a license? |
5145 | Have you got yo''license? |
5145 | Have you matriculated yet? |
5145 | Have you never tried to kiss a girl? |
5145 | Have you seen Marjorie and Gray? |
5145 | Hit is? |
5145 | Home? |
5145 | How about it? |
5145 | How is the colonel? |
5145 | How much is that reward? |
5145 | How much o''this reward do you want? |
5145 | How''d that happen, mammy? |
5145 | How''d you know whar we live? |
5145 | How''s Mavis? |
5145 | How''s grandpap? |
5145 | How''s he goin''to help hisself,asked the girl,"when he ai n''t hyeh?" |
5145 | How''s the folks in the mountains? |
5145 | How''s the folks? |
5145 | How''s the folks? |
5145 | I reckon you could n''t help doin''it? |
5145 | I reckon,he said sympathetically,"you hain''t found no way yit o''gittin''yo''land back?" |
5145 | I tell ye, I''m a- goin''back to that new- fangled school when I git to grandpap''s, an''whut''ll you do? |
5145 | In that great big house in the woods? |
5145 | Is Mavis goin''to live with you all the time? |
5145 | Is Mavis here? |
5145 | Is grandpap here? |
5145 | Is he all right? |
5145 | Is he dead yit? |
5145 | Is my mammy hyeh? |
5145 | Jasie, take me back home with ye, wo n''t you? |
5145 | Jason,said the old man sternly,"whut''s the matter out hyeh?" |
5145 | Jason,she said finally,"you do n''t believe Colonel Pendleton cheated Steve-- do you?" |
5145 | Little gal,he mimicked,"air you a- talkin''to me?" |
5145 | Look here, Steve,he said earnestly,"have n''t you had enough now? |
5145 | Look hyeh, chile, is you referrin''to Perfesser Burnham? |
5145 | ME? |
5145 | Mavis,he said huskily,"do you remember what I said that day right here?" |
5145 | Mavis,he said,"I want you to marry me-- won''t you, Mavis?" |
5145 | Mother? |
5145 | Must be purty good shot now? |
5145 | Ner who shot yo''pap? |
5145 | Not now; and then shyly,"are you?" |
5145 | Now, was n''t that curious? |
5145 | One o''them fotched- on women whoop ye fer missin''yo''a- b- abs? |
5145 | Rest yo''hat thar on the bed, wo n''t you? |
5145 | Rickolect whut I tol''you about hell a- comin''about that terbaccer? |
5145 | S''pose I do n''t break nothin'',he asked shrewdly,"do I git that back?" |
5145 | Seen any chestnut hoss comin''along here? |
5145 | So that''s yo''boy an''gal? |
5145 | That''s right-- how is she? |
5145 | The what? |
5145 | The what? |
5145 | Then why did she go? |
5145 | These fellers up here tried to bust our county up into little pieces once-- an''do you know why? 5145 Uncle Lige, do you know whar my mammy is?" |
5145 | Was n''t it lots o''fun, Jasie? |
5145 | Was that her school down there at the mouth of the creek? |
5145 | Well, how do I git to the college I''m goin''to? |
5145 | Well, if I tol''you anything about them to- day, do n''t you know I''d be tellin''them something about you to- morrow? |
5145 | Well, the same thing is true about me of two or three men on your side, is n''t it? |
5145 | Well, who the hell WAS the feller? |
5145 | Well,he rumbled scathingly,"you''ve been a- playin''hell, hain''t ye? |
5145 | Were you going to shoot an unarmed boy? |
5145 | Were you looking for us? |
5145 | Whar can I git some water to wash? |
5145 | Whar is he? |
5145 | Whar you goin''? |
5145 | Whar you two been? |
5145 | Whar you two goin''? |
5145 | Whar''s Mavis? |
5145 | Whar''s Mavis? |
5145 | Whar''s Steve? |
5145 | Whar''s the college? |
5145 | Whar? |
5145 | What can we do for you? |
5145 | What do you mean, boy,shouted an angry voice,"shooting that rabbit?" |
5145 | What have you got there, mammy? |
5145 | What is it? |
5145 | What is your name? |
5145 | What''s the matter with Marjorie? |
5145 | What''s the matter, grandpap? |
5145 | What''s yo''hurry? |
5145 | What? 5145 What?" |
5145 | When they comin''? |
5145 | When you goin'', Jasie? |
5145 | Where do you live? |
5145 | Where''s Jason? |
5145 | Where''s Jason? |
5145 | Where''s Steve, mammy? |
5145 | Which side air you on NOW? |
5145 | Who was it? |
5145 | Who''ll keep me from goin''? |
5145 | Who''s been a- tellin''you lies about me? |
5145 | Who''s comin''up here? |
5145 | Who''s that ole feller? |
5145 | Whut devilmint are you in up here now? |
5145 | Whut devilmint you up to now? |
5145 | Whut fer? |
5145 | Whut kind o''trouble? |
5145 | Whut on earth would you do down thar, Mavis? |
5145 | Whut things? |
5145 | Whut was that? |
5145 | Whut you doin''out hyeh? |
5145 | Whut you doin''up here? |
5145 | Whut you goin''to do down thar? |
5145 | Whut you mean, boy? |
5145 | Whut you want to keep us from goin''up here fer? |
5145 | Whut you want? |
5145 | Whut''d you come up here fer? |
5145 | Whut''s a license? |
5145 | Whut''s dat-- whut''s dat? |
5145 | Whut''s the matter with Mavis? |
5145 | Why do n''t you take Mavis? |
5145 | Why have n''t you been over to see me, Jason? |
5145 | Why, I did n''t know you yesterday-- did I? 5145 Why, Mavis-- I thought you-- Gray-- Mavis, will you, will you?" |
5145 | Why, hain''t ye heerd the news? 5145 Why, how are you, Jason? |
5145 | Why, mebbe you air the rock- pecker? |
5145 | Why, was n''t you atter him? |
5145 | Why, what''s the matter, Jason? |
5145 | Why, who told you? |
5145 | Will that git-- get me in, when I a- get to the door? |
5145 | Will you do something for me? |
5145 | Yes, an''who you reckon the school- teacher is? |
5145 | You are going back home? 5145 You come from near the Ohio River?" |
5145 | You did n''t see Gray? |
5145 | You hain''t goin''to give the boy up, Jason? |
5145 | You hain''t told''em? |
5145 | You have n''t told anybody else? |
5145 | You know a good deal about geology already-- are you going to take my course too? |
5145 | You see that star there? 5145 Your father works in tobacco?" |
5145 | ''Member that good- lookin''little furrin feller who was down here from the settlemints? |
5145 | Ai n''t you goin''to settle down and behave yourself?" |
5145 | Air ye goin''to school up here?" |
5145 | And every building was covered with vines, and it was funny that vines grew on houses, and why in the world did n''t folks cut''em off? |
5145 | And gently, at last:"What''s the matter, Mavis?" |
5145 | And if his father should go under, if Morton Sanders took over his home and the boy must make his own way and live his life where he was-- why not? |
5145 | And then suddenly:"Gray, did you ever ask Mavis to marry you?" |
5145 | And, if that happened, what would become of him? |
5145 | But where was the dance, and had they gone to it after all? |
5145 | Could there be some thwarted hope in the lives of Gray''s father and her mother that both were now trying to realize in the lives of her and Gray? |
5145 | Could this keen- faced, keen- eyed, sinewy, tall lad be the faithful little chap who had trudged sturdily at his heels so many days in the mountains? |
5145 | He felt his arm caught tightly and he turned to find Marjorie, white, with trembling lips, but struggling to be calm:"Where is Jason?" |
5145 | He had been a long time in those hills, his father was sick and worried-- and what was he doing down there anyhow? |
5145 | How in the world did they get those names?" |
5145 | How long d''ye reckon a purty gal like Mavis was a- goin''to wait fer you? |
5145 | I started before breakfast-- can I get a bite here?" |
5145 | Invariably for a long time his mother had asked:"Whut you been a- doin'', Jason?" |
5145 | Is n''t that funny?" |
5145 | Is that boy Gray comin''back hyeh?" |
5145 | It was incredible, but could he enforce it? |
5145 | It would take a step- ladder to get into the top bed-- good Lord, did people sleep that way in this college? |
5145 | Jason will have to come back here-- how do you suppose Marjorie would feel here, bein''a woman, if you feel the way you do, bein''a man? |
5145 | Marjorie nodded with some hesitation, and Gray went on:"How-- how is he now?" |
5145 | May I inquire, son, if yo''purpose is to attend dis place o''learnin''?" |
5145 | Now, what are you going to do about it?" |
5145 | She had startled him by her insight into-- he halted-- into everything-- and how was Jason getting along? |
5145 | The boy''s eyes were shifting now from one to the other and he broke in abruptly:"Whut''s the matter?" |
5145 | The girl hesitated:"Money trouble, mother?" |
5145 | Was there something that ruled this land-- something better than the code that ruled his hills? |
5145 | Was-- was that what attracted you?" |
5145 | Well, are n''t you coming? |
5145 | Well, do you see any reason why we should be shooting each other down to oblige a few cowards?" |
5145 | What are you goin''to do about it?" |
5145 | What was going on over there? |
5145 | What was the trouble that Steve had already heard about Mavis and Gray, and what the trouble at which Steve had hinted-- for him? |
5145 | What you say?" |
5145 | What''d I tell ye, son? |
5145 | When do you two aim to git married?" |
5145 | Where do you live?" |
5145 | Whut''ve I been tryin''to l''arn ye since you was a baby? |
5145 | Why,"thundered the old man savagely,"did n''t YOU kill him face to face?" |
5145 | You got here in time, did n''t you?" |
5145 | You hain''t got a knife-- now?" |
5145 | You know I''m a good girl-- why did n''t you go after the folks who''ve been talkin''instead o''pitchin''into Gray? |
5145 | You know that, do n''t you?" |
5145 | You''ve come up to see your folks?" |
5145 | he cried, with a start of surprise;"found anything to shoot?" |
5145 | he said,"where did this come from?" |
19135 | A boy? |
19135 | About what? |
19135 | After all the brickbats that have been coming my way? |
19135 | Ah, Nancy, what do ye want me ter do that fur, anyhow, gal? 19135 Ai n''t it a picture?" |
19135 | Ai n''t that old Boney''s voice? |
19135 | All right-- what? |
19135 | An''what ye gwine ter do when dey git ye? 19135 An''ye do n''t know?" |
19135 | And Phoebe----The maid turned as she neared the door:"Yassah?" |
19135 | And are you going? |
19135 | And do you want to know why Daniel Boone was great, my son? |
19135 | And he did n''t come? |
19135 | And it''s all ours? |
19135 | And it''s no one else? |
19135 | And not quite so good- looking? |
19135 | And remember that I''m fighting my way back to your side? |
19135 | And the civil power was not supreme when you restored McClellan to his command? |
19135 | And the rabbits? |
19135 | And then what do you reckon Dan''l Boone done, sir? |
19135 | And they passed it? |
19135 | And vain? |
19135 | And we may come out a corpse? |
19135 | And what can I do for you, sir? |
19135 | And what can I do for you? |
19135 | And what did the old snake in the grass want this time? |
19135 | And what happened? |
19135 | And what was your answer? |
19135 | And where''d you get that new suit of clothes? |
19135 | And who was he? |
19135 | And why did you wear that dangerous uniform, sir? |
19135 | And why not? |
19135 | And ye did n''t get sick? |
19135 | And yet you recalled him to the command of the army? |
19135 | And yet you submit to such infamy in your own Cabinet? |
19135 | And you can give me the whole day? |
19135 | And you do n''t want an office, do you? |
19135 | And you will not order our regular troops to take Baltimore immediately at the point of the bayonet? |
19135 | And you''ll be content to resume a normal life after to- day? |
19135 | And you''ll stop quarreling? |
19135 | And you''re Senator Winter''s daughter? |
19135 | And you''re going to fight him? |
19135 | And you_ do n''t_ believe him? |
19135 | And your conditions? |
19135 | And your life is worth more than other people''s? |
19135 | Are you acquainted with Mr. Lincoln''s views? |
19135 | As a peacock----"Conceited? |
19135 | At ten o''clock? |
19135 | Because I was sure that he was on our side----"Is that all? |
19135 | Because for the first time you made me see things as you see them-- I got a glimpse of the inside----"Then I won you-- didn''t I? |
19135 | Because he ran to me for help-- how could I shoot him? |
19135 | Before you must wake? |
19135 | Besides, what right have you to ask anything of me? |
19135 | But I ca n''t shut myself up in an iron box-- now, can I? 19135 But his beautiful daughter?" |
19135 | But maybe God''ll be so busy he''ll forget my birds? |
19135 | But now? |
19135 | But tell me,he cried cheerfully,"what can I do right now to make you happy? |
19135 | But why about me? |
19135 | But why holler so loud? 19135 But why?" |
19135 | But you can not expect,Gilmore said,"with only four and one half millions to hold out forever against twenty?" |
19135 | But you may need a friend----"He does wield the power of kings-- doesn''t he? |
19135 | But, why? |
19135 | Ca n''t you take bitters for it in time to stop it? 19135 Can any cause be worth this ocean of tears, this endless deluge of blood?" |
19135 | Can you doubt it? |
19135 | Certainly, sir-- what had that to do with our rights? 19135 Damn it, what''s the matter with you?" |
19135 | Dear lady, are you a child of God? |
19135 | Did I do right, Ma? |
19135 | Did I? |
19135 | Did Mr. Lincoln in any way authorize you to come here? |
19135 | Did he, Pa? |
19135 | Did she? |
19135 | Did they scalp my grandpa? |
19135 | Did we lick''em good? |
19135 | Did we? |
19135 | Did ye know, Boy,he began slowly,"that we come out to Kaintuck with Daniel Boone?" |
19135 | Did you ever hear the army cheer as''Little Mac''rides along the line? |
19135 | Did you fight with General Washington? |
19135 | Did you hear that? |
19135 | Did you sit on my stomach and choke me? |
19135 | Did you? |
19135 | Do I_ look_ sick? |
19135 | Do n''t you live nowhere? |
19135 | Do n''t you want it? |
19135 | Do n''t you want to go to meeting and hear the new preacher? |
19135 | Do n''t you? |
19135 | Do you bring any overtures from your Government, gentlemen? |
19135 | Do you reckon his boys sleep up there and peep out of them holes? |
19135 | Do you think I''m going to die? |
19135 | Enemies? 19135 Enjoy the show?" |
19135 | First, I wish to speak to you with perfect frankness about some ugly matters which have come to my ears-- may I? |
19135 | For instance now,he said dreamily:"You endorse my Inaugural?" |
19135 | For something-- Tom-- something big----"Do n''t keer how big''tis-- what of it? 19135 Get back to their own camp?" |
19135 | Git whar? |
19135 | Gone where? |
19135 | Good Lord, Boy, we got ter have skins h''ain''t we? |
19135 | Had to? |
19135 | Has she got a pain? |
19135 | Have I done so? |
19135 | Have mercy on me-- for Jesus''sake-- kill me-- you were kind to my horse-- can''t you do as much for me? |
19135 | Have n''t you realized yet that you are going to be mine? |
19135 | Have ye? |
19135 | Have you no regard for your reputation? |
19135 | He demands a thousand dollars to- night, Lizzie? |
19135 | He entered Atlanta a spy, did n''t he? |
19135 | He is, in fact, defying the orders of the President, is n''t he? |
19135 | He sent this to me? |
19135 | He was a spunky one anyhow, was n''t he? |
19135 | He''s as handsome as everybody says? |
19135 | He''s beyond the reach of pain and disappointment now, dear----"Dead? |
19135 | Hello, Sonny, what command? |
19135 | Hold up your damned gun----"Keep it out of my eye, wo n''t you? |
19135 | How can you tell? |
19135 | How dare you take me in your arms like that without a word? |
19135 | How do you know? |
19135 | How long do you think a man could march with that thing on and the thermometer at ninety- eight in the shade? |
19135 | How long does it last? |
19135 | How long since any message arrived from General Sherman? |
19135 | How would you like me for a steady gardener? |
19135 | How''d you get there? |
19135 | How''s my little girl? |
19135 | How? |
19135 | I am sorry-- why? |
19135 | I could n''t be a real man and do less, could I? |
19135 | I could n''t have said less than that I must possess and hold the property of the Government, could I? 19135 I did n''t know that women were admitted?" |
19135 | I do n''t know whether it means peace or war, not being a statesman, but of one thing I''m sure----She paused and Ned leaned close:"Yes?" |
19135 | I dunno-- what? |
19135 | I hope nothing serious, Mother? |
19135 | I hope you wo n''t think me presumptuous, Mr. President, if I ask you to tell me why you recalled General McClellan? |
19135 | I hope you''re not going to lose your job on your brother''s paper? |
19135 | I thought you were not a student of politics? |
19135 | I wonder if I''m looking into the face of my own soul? |
19135 | I wonder if Miss Liberty will ever be lifted to her place on high? |
19135 | I wonder if it''s an illusion? |
19135 | I''ll consider it-- what duty? |
19135 | I''m afraid it''s so this time----"Why so serious-- what''s the matter? |
19135 | I''m feeling comfortable, will you do something for me? |
19135 | I''m not asking you to do a cowardly thing----"To desert my leader in a crisis? |
19135 | I''m sorry, little girl, I could n''t do more for_ your_ sake-- but you understand? |
19135 | I''ve a nobler ideal of patriotism----"Your blundering backwoodsman in the White House? |
19135 | I''ve already done it, have n''t I? |
19135 | If I understand you, then,Jaquess continued,"the dispute with your government is narrowed to this, union or disunion?" |
19135 | If McClellan can whip him, sir? |
19135 | In short,Ned laughed,"you propose to stand by your Inaugural?" |
19135 | In spite of the fact that I risked the dissolution of my Cabinet and the united opposition of my party when I restored you to command? |
19135 | Is General McClellan at Alexandria to- day? |
19135 | Is it as bad as that Governor? |
19135 | Is it possible? |
19135 | Is n''t that a tremendous tribute to the man? |
19135 | Is that all, Mars? |
19135 | It stirs your blood, does n''t it? |
19135 | It was n''t wrong, was it, to fight for a thing like that? |
19135 | It wo n''t hurt me ef I''tend to my own business, will it? |
19135 | Just for me, because I ask it, John, and you love me? |
19135 | Let''s me an''you not go ter meetin''ter- morrow? |
19135 | Let''s wait until to- morrow? |
19135 | Love does rule life, does n''t it? |
19135 | May I break the silence now, dearest, to ask you something? |
19135 | May I go? |
19135 | May I write just a word to my mother and to my sweetheart? |
19135 | Miss Betty''s in the garden, sor; she says to come right out there----"What? |
19135 | Mr. Seward expects to be called to a position of greater power than President----"You mean? |
19135 | My God, Nancy, what can I do for ye, Honey? |
19135 | My chief was bitter against my going-- I-- I hope you approve-- Miss Betty? |
19135 | My name is Vaughan-- John Vaughan----The dark head was lifted with interest:"The brother of Ned Vaughan, who escaped from prison?" |
19135 | My, my, can this be Julius Cæsar Thornton? |
19135 | No salary, save the eternal gratitude of your Chief-- will you accept? |
19135 | No, what? |
19135 | No-- but I''m sorry--she paused and suddenly asked,"Your brother agrees with you?" |
19135 | No-- what? |
19135 | Nonsense-- but if I were-- what is the death of one man if thousands live? 19135 Not a hawk?" |
19135 | Not if I ask it, because I love you? |
19135 | Not the daughter of that old grizzly bear who''s always camping on my trail? |
19135 | Now look, are they comin''? |
19135 | Now then, tell me, if you please, what possible result of good would follow the issuing of such a proclamation as you desire? 19135 O Ma, you wo n''t, will you? |
19135 | Of course----"Is that your brother? |
19135 | Of the President? |
19135 | Oh, that is the sweat box,the Secretary replied,"used for insubordinate seamen----""Oh,"the rugged giant exclaimed,"how do you work it?" |
19135 | Over politics? |
19135 | Perhaps I am already certain of that election without your assistance? |
19135 | Perhaps I had an interpreter? |
19135 | Presumptuous? |
19135 | Ran at the first fire? |
19135 | Really? |
19135 | Resigned? |
19135 | Revelation-- what do you mean? |
19135 | Say, man, is dat a hat er a bee gum? |
19135 | So you came here to- night to kill me? |
19135 | Stop it I say-- would you kill a feller just for a doggoned old cooter? |
19135 | Swore that if I moved an inch to leave his command he''d shoot me----"He said that to you? |
19135 | Tell me about him? |
19135 | Tell me everything you said about it? |
19135 | Tell me,Ned broke in,"does your father mean half he says about Lincoln and the South?" |
19135 | That nigger-- wasn''t he funny? 19135 That''s it, is he? |
19135 | That''s so, ai n''t it? |
19135 | That''s what I want----"We''re going into our first battle, are n''t we? |
19135 | The certain young man and I are not very happy----"You''ve quarrelled? |
19135 | The man who wields a knife or the tyrant who calls the fanatic into being? 19135 Then I''ll warn the President----"He held her with cruel force:"You understand that if it''s true, my arrest, court- martial and death follow?" |
19135 | Then I''m forgiven for making home folks of you? |
19135 | Then in the name of Almighty God, where did you get that man? |
19135 | Then it''s true that he is not really trying to help him? |
19135 | Then why? |
19135 | Then you were approached by the leaders of Knights of the Golden Circle? |
19135 | There''s only one thing in life that''s bigger----"And that? |
19135 | They could n''t execute him without our knowing it, could they? |
19135 | They did force you? |
19135 | They''re runnin''now? |
19135 | To see a certain young man? |
19135 | To your home town? |
19135 | To- day? |
19135 | Triumphant now, you will receive our enemies with open arms? |
19135 | Victory? |
19135 | Volunteered you, did they? |
19135 | Waal, ye seed the way them bees made fer their trees, did n''t ye, when they got a load er honey? |
19135 | Was it really as bad as it looks to- day? |
19135 | Was it? |
19135 | We lost the battle yesterday? |
19135 | We''ll hope it''s a sign for the future-- shall we? |
19135 | We''ll watch for''em next spring, wo n''t we? 19135 Well, Julius Cæsar Thornton, this is a serious charge they have lodged against you?" |
19135 | Well, it''s too late to- night fur any more lessons, now_ ai n''t_ it? |
19135 | Well, then? |
19135 | Well, what is it? |
19135 | Well, what of it? 19135 Well, what was He doin''when that Indian scalped my grandpa?" |
19135 | Well,the younger man burst out at last,"what is my fate? |
19135 | What I want to know, Ned, is this,he drawled,"who started sin in this world, anyhow? |
19135 | What ails the poor birds? |
19135 | What am I going to do with him? |
19135 | What are those horses doing over there by the trees? |
19135 | What are ye goin''ter do? |
19135 | What did he say to you? |
19135 | What do you suppose happened on one of our battlefields? |
19135 | What do you think of it? |
19135 | What else? |
19135 | What in''ell''s the matter? |
19135 | What is it, dear? |
19135 | What is it? |
19135 | What is it? |
19135 | What is that? |
19135 | What is the use, my dear boy, in setting up the gap when the fence is down all around? |
19135 | What made him come here? |
19135 | What made him so black? |
19135 | What made his nose so flat and his lips so thick? |
19135 | What makes the fools holler so? |
19135 | What of it? |
19135 | What race? |
19135 | What story? |
19135 | What the divil are you doin''that for? |
19135 | What ye laughin''about, Nancy? |
19135 | What''ell are ye runnin''over me for? |
19135 | What''ell ye reckon that means? |
19135 | What''ell''s the matter here? 19135 What''ll school be like, Ma?" |
19135 | What''s it like? |
19135 | What''s the hurry? |
19135 | What''s the idea? |
19135 | What''s the matter now? |
19135 | What''s the matter with her? |
19135 | What''s the matter, Boy? |
19135 | What''s the matter, Ma? |
19135 | What''s the matter? |
19135 | What''s the matter? |
19135 | What''s the use ter worry, Nancy gal? |
19135 | What''s the use? |
19135 | What''s the use? |
19135 | What''s to hurt me there? |
19135 | What''s your business here, sir? |
19135 | What''s your impression of the Inaugural, Senator? |
19135 | What''s your name? |
19135 | What? |
19135 | What? |
19135 | What? |
19135 | Where are you going? |
19135 | Where have you been all this time, nigger? |
19135 | Where your brother went to raise a company to fight us-- strange, is n''t it? |
19135 | Who expects beauty in a real man? |
19135 | Who is an assassin, dear? |
19135 | Who was he? |
19135 | Who, me? |
19135 | Who? |
19135 | Who? |
19135 | Why did n''t she? |
19135 | Why did n''t they shoot''em? |
19135 | Why did n''t ye shoot him? |
19135 | Why did n''t you call me? |
19135 | Why did this one fight so much harder than the ones on the bank? |
19135 | Why do n''t he run away? |
19135 | Why do n''t we build a house like that? |
19135 | Why do n''t we get at''em? |
19135 | Why do n''t you like''em, Ma? |
19135 | Why do n''t you move that line of battle now to make it conform to your own? |
19135 | Why do n''t you search me first? |
19135 | Why do you say that? |
19135 | Why does n''t he come? |
19135 | Why is it,he said thoughtfully,"British soldiers ca n''t fight?" |
19135 | Why not? |
19135 | Why should he wish to sacrifice his brave men under the leadership of a fool? |
19135 | Why the devil do n''t you all fight? |
19135 | Why, Mammy? |
19135 | Why, what on earth, child? 19135 Why, you''re better, Ma, are n''t you?" |
19135 | Why-- it may take us longer than half an hour? |
19135 | Why? |
19135 | Why? |
19135 | Why? |
19135 | Why? |
19135 | Why? |
19135 | Why? |
19135 | Will they dare? |
19135 | Will they know when it''s time? |
19135 | Will you do something for me? |
19135 | Will you let him alone? |
19135 | Will you let him alone? |
19135 | William Tecumseh Sherman? |
19135 | With every beat of your heart? |
19135 | Wo n''t ye come in, Honey, and rest a minute and me give ye somethin''to eat while Pa''s gettin''ready to go with ye a piece? |
19135 | Wo n''t you, Boy? |
19135 | Wo n''t you, for my sake, dear,--just because I''m your sweetheart and you love me? |
19135 | Would n''t that be awful? |
19135 | Would you care? |
19135 | Would you like to hear,she began softly,"something about the Revolution which my old school teacher told me in Virginia?" |
19135 | Yassah, she''s sufferin''fum a little spell er nervous prosperity, sah-- dat''s all-- sah----"Oh, that''s all? |
19135 | Yes, dear, immensely-- you know Mr. John Vaughan, Father, do n''t you? |
19135 | Yes, sir, Methodist-- why, sir? |
19135 | Yes, why? |
19135 | Yes, yes-- what do you want for it? |
19135 | Yes----"Over my father''s prostrate form? |
19135 | Yet God must use man, must n''t He? |
19135 | You admire that kind of man? |
19135 | You are all mine now? 19135 You are alone, sir?" |
19135 | You are asking me that as a reporter, young man, or as a friend of my daughter? |
19135 | You are going to march in the ranks? |
19135 | You are not going to take this insult from him? |
19135 | You are sure of defeat then? |
19135 | You are taking dinner with Miss Betty to- night? |
19135 | You can do something, Doctor? |
19135 | You do n''t mean it, Miss Betty? |
19135 | You do n''t mean it? |
19135 | You do n''t say so? |
19135 | You do n''t say? |
19135 | You doubt the truth of these statements? |
19135 | You get that impression from his rambling address with its obvious effort to straddle the Universe? |
19135 | You have heard nothing yet from General Sherman? |
19135 | You have no favors to ask for your friends, have you? |
19135 | You have no word from him, of course? |
19135 | You have seen Stanton? |
19135 | You have this chance to put your foot on this frozen snake''s head and yet you bring him into your house again to warm him into life? |
19135 | You know him? |
19135 | You know it? |
19135 | You know that he never loses an opportunity to sneer at you behind your back? |
19135 | You know that he''s hand in glove with the conspirators in Congress who are trying to pull you down? |
19135 | You know that he''s the greatest letter writer of the age? 19135 You know, Ned,"he went on slowly,"what I think is the prettiest piece of poetry?" |
19135 | You love me? |
19135 | You mean? |
19135 | You really like him? |
19135 | You saw it all? |
19135 | You saw me? |
19135 | You say that to me, standing beside the grave of your son? |
19135 | You see that gold? |
19135 | You take it seriously? |
19135 | You think he''ll stoop to coarse jokes? |
19135 | You think so? |
19135 | You tried to make him reasonable? |
19135 | You want to know the truth, Haggerty? |
19135 | You went forth like a man to fight for your country, did n''t you? |
19135 | You were going to leave without an effort to see me? |
19135 | You were in a battle? |
19135 | You were up at dawn? |
19135 | You will fight with them? |
19135 | You will, will you? |
19135 | You will, wo n''t you, Ma? |
19135 | You wo n''t change Commanders because I ask it? |
19135 | You wo n''t give up, will you, Ma? |
19135 | You''ll be good, if I let you go? |
19135 | You''re all alone, little girl? |
19135 | You''re looking for a friend-- money? |
19135 | You''re not goin''out there, Ma? |
19135 | You''re sure, Ma? |
19135 | You''ve seen the Rail- splitter, our new President? |
19135 | Your General is here? |
19135 | Your father? |
19135 | A man must be true to what he believes to be right, must n''t he?" |
19135 | A rumble of disgust swept the lines:"What t''ell are we waitin''for?" |
19135 | Again an angry flush mounted her cheeks:"You wish them to be captured?" |
19135 | Ai n''t He everywhere then? |
19135 | Ai n''t this Joe Hall''s place?" |
19135 | Amid the few flickering lanterns could be heard the greetings of friends in subdued tones as they clasped hands:"Is that you, old boy?" |
19135 | And so he merely stammered:"Will you-- er-- please-- tell Miss Betty I''m here?" |
19135 | Are they bringing back Grant''s whole army?" |
19135 | At last a voice gasped:"Is-- that-- you-- Austin?" |
19135 | Betty bent close to his desk and whispered:"You''ll give me three days to get his mother here?" |
19135 | Betty looked at him with a flush of angry excitement:"General McClellan is counting on Pope''s defeat to- day?" |
19135 | Betty looked him straight in the eye in silence and slowly asked:"You''re not really going to join the rebels?" |
19135 | Betty looked up surprised:"Is n''t that good news?" |
19135 | Betty nodded:"And prays God night and morning to give him greater strength with which to hate it harder-- yes----""But you''re not so blind?" |
19135 | Betty placed her hand on his arm in tender protest:"Father, dear, how can you be so unreasonable-- so insanely unjust? |
19135 | Betty spoke in a whisper:"You mean that their conspiracy had become so dangerous there was no other way?" |
19135 | Betty''s lips trembled with a smile:"What''s the salary?" |
19135 | Boney and me''ll go back home----""You ai n''t goin''ter carry that thing clean home, are you?" |
19135 | Boom!_""How do you know those are our guns?" |
19135 | Brutus or Cæsar, William Tell or Gessler? |
19135 | But I''ve been praying for you day and night since----""For me?" |
19135 | Ca n''t ye do somethin''else for her? |
19135 | Ca n''t ye quit hankerin''after them things, Honey?" |
19135 | Ca n''t you believe this?" |
19135 | Ca n''t you let me have my boy back? |
19135 | Ca n''t you see that?" |
19135 | Can the Queen of Great Britain do as much?" |
19135 | Can we not agree now and stop this frightful carnage?" |
19135 | Can you do this?" |
19135 | Come, my little bright eyes, out with it?" |
19135 | Could a government founded on the genuine principles of Democracy live? |
19135 | Could he speak the word to this boy that might send one or both to the gallows? |
19135 | Could it be true? |
19135 | Could she have guessed Betty''s secret? |
19135 | Could the Republic survive this war within a war? |
19135 | Dey sho''volunteered me whether er no----""And how did it happen?" |
19135 | Do n''t you min''takin''me up in de hack wid you las''night?" |
19135 | Do n''t you think it''s foolish for two brothers who have been what you and I have been to each other to part like this? |
19135 | Do you know why I''ve sent for you?" |
19135 | Do you suppose the new President realizes the meaning of such a moment?" |
19135 | Do you think you can swing an axe that''s a man''s size?" |
19135 | Gilmore smiled into the Judge''s face:"Why were you so long coming?" |
19135 | Had he gone into the Cabinet to place the General in supreme power in a moment of crisis? |
19135 | Had they forced the President into this humiliating act? |
19135 | Had whispers from the Infinite reached the souls of the ragged men in grey and told them of coming Gethsemane and Calvary? |
19135 | Has the moment arrived when I can best strike with this weapon? |
19135 | He adjusted his glasses and glanced at the note:"Your mistress is lying down?" |
19135 | He ai n''t deaf-- is He? |
19135 | He answered that a great battle was about to be fought and that it was absolutely useless to ask for pardon----""But it isn''t-- is it, dear?" |
19135 | He bent nearer in evident distress:"What can I do, Mother?" |
19135 | He bowed to her with easy grace:"And how can I serve you, Madam?" |
19135 | He broke into a cynical laugh and asked:"And what will you do?" |
19135 | He destroyed that and decided on a single line:"MY DEAR MISS BETTY:"Can I see you a few minutes before leaving to- night? |
19135 | He examined it with care and fixed the man with his gaze:"Well, sir?" |
19135 | He glanced toward the waiting crowd and whispered again:"Any news to- day from the front before I go on?" |
19135 | He hates the President and says he''s responsible for all the blood and suffering-- and so I''m alone-- but you''ll help me?" |
19135 | He held her a moment:"You must leave so early, dear?" |
19135 | He laughed, and a shadow suddenly swept his face:"I wonder, Miss Winter, if any of us will live a normal life after to- day?" |
19135 | He leaped to his feet shivering in the dark and whispered:"What is it, Ma?" |
19135 | He lifted his bristling eyebrows:"What''s it for?" |
19135 | He looked searchingly and hungrily into her brown eyes:"Is it John?" |
19135 | He moved and turned his dying face up to Ned:"Why is it you always whip us, Johnny?" |
19135 | He paused and whispered to Ned as he reached for another cartridge:"Are they comin''or goin''?" |
19135 | He paused for breath and turned to Ned:"Now look!--Comin''or goin''?" |
19135 | He rode quickly up to Ned:"Wo n''t you hold my horse''s bridle a minute, young man, while I use my glasses?" |
19135 | He sat up, pressed his hand over his aching head and stared into the grinning face:"And what are you doing here, you imp of the devil?" |
19135 | He slipped his long arm around Ned''s shoulder and walked with him to the door:"Serve that on her for me, will you, right away?" |
19135 | He smiled back into her laughing eyes and began awkwardly:"Oh, I say, Peggy----"She dropped a pretty courtesy:"Yiss- sor?" |
19135 | He started on as if to pass him, stopped suddenly and extended his hand:"Hello, Dick, what''s up?" |
19135 | He stopped suddenly and threw his long arms around Welles:"What can we do for the Secretary of the Navy for this glorious intelligence? |
19135 | He stopped suddenly in front of Morton, his deep set eyes burning a steady flame:"And what do you propose?" |
19135 | He threw her a searching look, was silent a moment and slowly said:"That''s a pointed question, is n''t it?" |
19135 | He turned then to the executioners:"May I have just a minute to pray?" |
19135 | He turned to Mrs. Lincoln, who had accompanied him:"You know what that is?" |
19135 | He walked with unsteady step to her bedside and whispered:"Are you sick, Ma?" |
19135 | He was always a big- hearted, generous boy-- you wo n''t let them shoot him?" |
19135 | He was silent a moment and a smile played about the corners of his lips:"Would you change because I asked it?" |
19135 | He''s only playing a game with you to strengthen himself-- can''t you see this?" |
19135 | His speech has been put in the form of a leaflet which is being mailed in thousands to our soldiers at the front----""You know that to be a fact?" |
19135 | His wife sprang up with flashing eyes:"And you?" |
19135 | How can I face my Secretary of War with such a pardon in my hands?" |
19135 | How can I learn books without you to help me? |
19135 | How can a poor man help it if his legs just carry him away?" |
19135 | How can he reassure them? |
19135 | How could he reverse his position on so vital and tremendous a matter over night? |
19135 | How did they ever put it together?" |
19135 | How do you know when it''s come?" |
19135 | How had their own men gotten in such a position? |
19135 | How long were you naked in the sun?" |
19135 | I axe ye dat now? |
19135 | I can read his Inaugural, but I want to see the soul of the man behind its conventional phrases----""He''ll use conventional phrases?" |
19135 | I can twist him around my little finger----"She paused, snapped her finger and smiled up into his face sweetly:"Do you doubt it, sir?" |
19135 | I got ye a breathin''all right now-- who''d ye think it wuz?" |
19135 | I know dat de General done issue dem orders agin hit, an''I quit long ergo----""This sheep looks like it----""Dat sheep?" |
19135 | I love you so utterly with every breath I breathe, every thought of mind and every impulse of soul and body, how can I see aught else in the world? |
19135 | I offered to efface myself and give up the dearest ambition of my soul to heal the wounds of my people-- and he refused----""Refused?" |
19135 | I read that to you the other night, do n''t you remember?" |
19135 | I''ll fight this thing-- and you''ve got to help me-- won''t you?" |
19135 | I''m expecting that handsome brother of yours directly and I must look my best for him, now must n''t I?" |
19135 | I''m proud of it-- I''ll hold my head a little higher with every thought of you----""And you''ll think of me sometimes when war has separated us?" |
19135 | If I let you go, will you promise me faithfully that no word shall pass your lips of what you''ve seen inside our lines?" |
19135 | If his own party leaders were boldly proclaiming such treason to the Union how could he hope to stem the tide that had set in for its ruin? |
19135 | If the slave was not the issue, why fight? |
19135 | If this could be done after three and a half years of blood and tears and two billions of dollars spent, where could the end be? |
19135 | In breathless awe he asked:"Is he folks?" |
19135 | In her heart of hearts did she desire any other sort of lover? |
19135 | In life, in death, through evil report and good report?" |
19135 | Is John here?" |
19135 | Is he going to add his voice to this chorus of rage? |
19135 | Is it not already nearly done? |
19135 | Is our Nation a myth? |
19135 | Is there a single court or magistrate, or individual that will be influenced by it there? |
19135 | Is there no North?" |
19135 | It seems you have learned nothing from the wrath with which your sacrifice of John C. Fremont to appease the slave power was received?" |
19135 | It''s a bargain, is n''t it? |
19135 | It''s a funny world, is n''t it?" |
19135 | It''s a good story and it''s my last-- it''s a pity to kill it----""Your last? |
19135 | It''s hellish-- it''s hellish----""And you would justify an assassin?" |
19135 | It''s hot and cold-- a straddle, a contradiction----"He paused and turned to Betty:"What do you think?" |
19135 | It''s uncertain at this hour whether he''ll be in the cabinet----""Why?" |
19135 | It''s very beautiful----""But you do n''t love me?" |
19135 | John Vaughan leaned toward Betty and whispered half to himself:"I wonder if those cheers were defiance after all?" |
19135 | John saluted:"This is General Sherman?" |
19135 | John swerved out of their way and an officer rushed up to him crying:"Why do n''t you take a horse?" |
19135 | Julius scratched his head and walled his eyes:"I had er little taste ob it, sah,----""Well, you tried to fight, did n''t you?" |
19135 | Less see ye?" |
19135 | Let me off fer good an''all, wo n''t ye?" |
19135 | Let me off''n these lessons, Honey? |
19135 | Love asks but one question-- do you love me?" |
19135 | May I see you at once? |
19135 | McClellan''s handsome face went white:"What do you mean?" |
19135 | Men everywhere were asking one another, what next? |
19135 | Most of the deserters, true to the oath of the order of the Knights of the Golden Circle, desert with their arms----""Is it possible?" |
19135 | Mr. Davis smiled:"Do you think there are twenty millions at the North determined to crush us? |
19135 | My dream came true, and where is its glory? |
19135 | Ned Vaughan looked up with a frown:"How did you recognize him?" |
19135 | Ned Vaughan smiled:"A queer superstition has grown up in Washington that the dome of the Capitol will never be completed----""Do you believe it?" |
19135 | Ned frowned:"Why do you ask that question?" |
19135 | Ned softly laughed:"He certainly is not a beauty?" |
19135 | Ned''the other day when I introduced you to John?" |
19135 | Ned?" |
19135 | O Tom, you promised me before we were married to let me teach you-- didn''t you promise?" |
19135 | O my God, what''ll she do now?" |
19135 | Old Edward was again rubbing his hands apologetically at the door:"A body of clergymen from Chicago, sir----""Clergymen from Chicago?" |
19135 | Or the storm clouded dawn of a new and more wonderful life? |
19135 | Our time had expired and I demanded that we be discharged then and there----""On the eve of a battle?" |
19135 | Please say you wo n''t?" |
19135 | President?" |
19135 | President?" |
19135 | President?" |
19135 | Pretty poor Commander- in- Chief of the Army and Navy if I do that, am I not? |
19135 | Reassured by his manner Betty leaned closer:"You remember the morning you gave me the pass to Alexandria?" |
19135 | Say you''ll be mine, dearest?" |
19135 | Shall I fight secession in the South and merely argue politely with it here? |
19135 | Shall I issue a document that the whole world will see must be of no more effect that the Pope''s bull against the comet? |
19135 | She murmured her thanks and he placed his big hand on her dark head and asked casually:"Of course you''re loyal?" |
19135 | She paused, looked up at John, blushed and added:"We are to be married next week, Mr. President----""Is it so?" |
19135 | She stroked his forehead with gentle touch:"I wo n''t give up for your sake----""It''s a promise now?" |
19135 | Sometimes we must do our duty and leave the rest to God, must n''t we? |
19135 | Standing with the principles of''76 behind us, who can deny them the right? |
19135 | Tell me, what else did you say?" |
19135 | That ca n''t hurt anybody, can it?" |
19135 | The Boy clung close to her side and his voice was husky as he spoke:"Ai n''t you afraid, Ma?" |
19135 | The Boy laughed:"You do n''t believe it?" |
19135 | The Boy lifted his face to his mother''s curiously:"Ma, you said God counted the beat of a sparrow''s wing?" |
19135 | The Boy silently took his mother''s hand and asked in subdued tones:"What is the pest, Ma, and what makes it?" |
19135 | The Boy''s brow was wrinkled for a moment and then he suddenly looked up to his father''s rugged face:"And what became of Dan''l Boone?" |
19135 | The Colonel slapped him across the shoulders with his sword:"What sort of a place is this for you, sir?" |
19135 | The Colonel took off his hat and gazed at the pair:"Are n''t you the boy who held my horse?" |
19135 | The Commander nodded and John went with him-- why? |
19135 | The Democratic politicians of Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois now called to power assume that the rebellion will not be crushed----""And therefore?" |
19135 | The General lifted his hand with a curious smile:"You''re in earnest?" |
19135 | The President bent over the table of Southern wires and silently watched:"You ca n''t strain a little message through for me, can you, my boy?" |
19135 | The President joined heartily:"I''ll bet he is,"he said,"and hates me just as cordially as ever?" |
19135 | The President lifted his calm, deep eyes to the flushed angry face, glanced at the gold marks of his rank, and said:"What can I do for you, Captain?" |
19135 | The President looked up with a friendly smile:"Well, Mars, what''s the trouble now?" |
19135 | The big hand fumbled the black beard a moment:"You doubtless said bitter things in Washington when you returned?" |
19135 | The boyish Commandant faced him:"Will you accept the honor of firing the first shot, sir?" |
19135 | The brown eyes twinkled:"You love him very much?" |
19135 | The dark, wistful face brightened:"And yet they say I''m a good- natured, easy- going fellow with no convictions?" |
19135 | The executioner dropped the rein and faced his subordinate:"You''re going to question my authority?" |
19135 | The hazel- grey eyes twinkled:"What''s her name, sir?" |
19135 | The house you''re going to build for me?" |
19135 | The kindly hand was lifted to John Vaughan''s shoulder:"Why did n''t you do it?" |
19135 | The leader of the meeting called from the door:"Wo n''t you join us in prayer, Colonel?" |
19135 | The little body suddenly stiffened:"Why did n''t he kill''em?" |
19135 | The man pressed on eagerly:"O Nancy, why ca n''t ye be happy here? |
19135 | The memory of his brutal stare that day stopped her and she scribbled a line and sent it to him:"John, dear, may I see you a moment? |
19135 | The mother bent low:"What are you thinking about, Boy? |
19135 | The mother smiled:"Who said they could n''t fight?" |
19135 | The mother squeezed his little hand:"When you''re a man will you build your mother one?" |
19135 | The new company grew more and more nervous:"What''s up ahead?" |
19135 | The older man''s voice dropped to persuasive tones:"Is n''t there something bigger than fighting for a section? |
19135 | The stalwart figure suddenly stiffened:"And you could respect a man who would do a thing like that?" |
19135 | The swarthy face lighted with a radiant smile:"What did she say about my Inaugural?" |
19135 | The tall figure bent curiously examining the contrivance:"And we apply this to thousands of brave American seamen every year?" |
19135 | The very worst is suspected----""You mean?" |
19135 | The young editor was silent a moment and spoke in low tones:"You can keep a secret?" |
19135 | There''s no more doubt, dear?" |
19135 | These people who had elected him-- could he ever hope to bind them into a solid fighting unit? |
19135 | They demanded an answer to a single insistent question:"What are you going to fight about?" |
19135 | This is not the way I told you I would return, is it? |
19135 | Thoughtful men and women had begun to ask themselves new questions:"Is not the price we are paying too great?" |
19135 | Through chattering teeth came the trembling response:"W- w- hy, m- my God, do you think the bullets can come through?" |
19135 | Vaughan?" |
19135 | Was it right to blame a man too harshly for being mad about the woman he loved? |
19135 | Was it the end of the Republic? |
19135 | Was she laughing at him? |
19135 | Was such a force love? |
19135 | We are going to try to make even a better record in the next campaign----""When will it open?" |
19135 | We ca n''t live these young days over again, can we? |
19135 | We have come to ask how it may be brought about?" |
19135 | Were they all too cocksure? |
19135 | What are ye tryin''to get away from''em for?" |
19135 | What can I do? |
19135 | What could it mean? |
19135 | What did it mean? |
19135 | What do you mean?" |
19135 | What has the South to gain by Secession? |
19135 | What have you been doing to- day?" |
19135 | What is it?" |
19135 | What makes a good thing good and what makes a bad thing bad, and who said so first?" |
19135 | What was its meaning? |
19135 | What ye gwine ter do when hit''s forever an''eternally too late? |
19135 | What''ell''s the matter with you? |
19135 | What''s de use er''stroyin''er good piece er property lak dat? |
19135 | What''s going to hinder them from uniting? |
19135 | When he was alone with his mother she whispered:"Did n''t you go out there last night and let it loose when the dogs were asleep?" |
19135 | When news of our defeat comes there is no sorrow----""Is that statement really true?" |
19135 | Who would have thought when we were married, that I should so soon be called upon to save my country?" |
19135 | Why ca n''t a Nation that spends two millions a day on contractors and soldiers give its President a salary he can live on?" |
19135 | Why did n''t he fight and die? |
19135 | Why do n''t they come? |
19135 | Why do n''t you pick me up?" |
19135 | Why do they holler at Him?" |
19135 | Why fight them for nothing? |
19135 | Why had his powerful, brutal personality drawn her with such terrible power? |
19135 | Why had she asked him so pointedly about John? |
19135 | Why had she come here, anyway? |
19135 | Why had she preferred him? |
19135 | Why should he worry? |
19135 | Why should you gasp over the idea that one man may die whose death would stop this slaughter?" |
19135 | Why were you so long?" |
19135 | Will it shock you to learn this?" |
19135 | Will my words free the slaves when I can not even enforce the Constitution in the rebel States? |
19135 | Will you accept the position?" |
19135 | Will you allow them to be torn from your firesides and driven as dumb cattle into the mouths of Southern cannon? |
19135 | Will you do as I ask, and assure the safety of our country?" |
19135 | Will you do it?" |
19135 | Will you give any more of your sons to be food for vultures on the hills of Virginia? |
19135 | Will you preside over such a meeting?" |
19135 | With a pang of positive terror Betty asked herself the question whether the man she loved had been touched by this deadly pestilence? |
19135 | With long, quick stride he met her and grasped her hand, a kindly twinkle in his eye:"And how''s our old grizzly bear, your father, this morning?" |
19135 | Wo n''t you accept his resignation?" |
19135 | Wo n''t you have common sense and send those men about their business? |
19135 | Wo n''t you stay and help us? |
19135 | Would Lincoln dare to force the issue between them and risk the mutiny of this Grand Army undoubtedly devoted to their brilliant young leader? |
19135 | Ye know the preacher says:''What shall hit profit a man ef he gain the whole world an''lose his life?'' |
19135 | Ye know what scares me most ter death sometimes, gal?" |
19135 | Yer would n''t put her in the ground an''throw the cold dirt right on her face, would you?" |
19135 | Yes, I''ll help-- we must make it beautiful, must n''t we?" |
19135 | Yet how else can we win? |
19135 | You accept the position in my Cabinet?" |
19135 | You are glad to see me-- aren''t you?" |
19135 | You did n''t know that Chase was there, did you?" |
19135 | You do n''t want me to get you any niggers with the house do you?" |
19135 | You know that he''s a candidate against you for the Presidency, do n''t you?" |
19135 | You thought me an ambitious tyrant-- now, did n''t you?" |
19135 | You''ll be wantin''to see General Sherman, I guess?" |
19135 | You''ll fight for her till I get back?" |
19135 | You''re going to be a man among men for your mother''s sake, are n''t you?" |
19135 | You''re not afraid of a little whip- poor- will?" |
19135 | You''ve been ill, I see-- wounded, of course?" |
19135 | You''ve called me Ned too long to drop it now, do n''t you think?" |
39407 | ''What yer want here?'' 39407 ''Where did you work while you were away?'' |
39407 | ''Why, do n''t you know me?'' 39407 ''Yes-- how long there?'' |
39407 | A present? |
39407 | And now? |
39407 | And what became of Love? |
39407 | And... and what is our Susie going to do-- give a ball, and invite the Governor of Kentucky? |
39407 | B,said Emmy Lou,"and e?" |
39407 | Ca n''t I drink to the beggar, too, whoever he is? |
39407 | Can you show them-- valentines? |
39407 | Constance Parker, what on earth is the matter with you to- day? 39407 Did I do wrong? |
39407 | Did the two little Knights of Kentucky ever meet Joyce again or find the Gate of the Giant Scissors? |
39407 | Do n''t you think it would be more natural for him to count and think in dollars-- a million dollars? |
39407 | Do you know Bear Waller owes its muserkil educashun to me? 39407 General Haverhill-- Miss--?" |
39407 | Genie Roscoe, what pranks are you playing? |
39407 | Get any valentines? |
39407 | God? |
39407 | Goin''somewheres? |
39407 | Hogwallow? |
39407 | Hot agin-- ain''t it? |
39407 | How did they come to find-- it? |
39407 | How long has that man been here? |
39407 | Howd''y do, St. John? 39407 I hesitated a moment; he looked at me more closely and said in that same tone:"''Where?'' |
39407 | I suppose Lieutenant Rigby here has told you that we must use your house? |
39407 | I suppose you, too, are loyal-- to Virginia, Miss Eugenia? |
39407 | Is he followin''us? |
39407 | Is it your fader? |
39407 | Lally, this is the only thing I have ever owned in the way of jewelry, and it''s not much, but will you take it and wear it for my sake? |
39407 | Marstah, hez you seed anythin''ob a spotted heifer wid one horn broke off, anywhars on de road? 39407 My dear child, has your husband been preaching? |
39407 | No? |
39407 | Oh, D.,she cried, in a sudden rapture,"we are glad, ai n''t we?" |
39407 | Right yonder, over Little Niggerwool-- see''em there? |
39407 | Shall we go home? |
39407 | So,said Gracie Gayle,"you''re out of the running?" |
39407 | Still, what think you became of all that men did? |
39407 | Tell me, what are you going to do? |
39407 | Tell me? |
39407 | Then I must just go back to treating her like a child again? |
39407 | There''s a new poet, did you know? 39407 They had such a habit of asking:''Where did you work last?'' |
39407 | Think you that all of them are not gathered elsewhere-- strangely changed, yet the same? 39407 To Laura-- On the Vanity of Passion?" |
39407 | To Laura-- Unrelenting? |
39407 | To Laura-- Whose Departing Darkens the Sky? |
39407 | Wanted-- fur-- whut? |
39407 | Well, sir? |
39407 | Well, where is it-- the body? |
39407 | What am I to do without my little candle? |
39407 | What are you doing? |
39407 | What became of the man who was true? |
39407 | What became of the woman who asked for nothing in life but love and youth? |
39407 | What do we know; what did he know on earth? 39407 What do you mean? |
39407 | What does it read? |
39407 | What does it read? |
39407 | What does it read? |
39407 | What happened after the Little Colonel''s house party? |
39407 | What is going on? |
39407 | What was your idea, Constance, in coming to this tiny place? |
39407 | What''s up? |
39407 | What''s your business? |
39407 | Which-- him? |
39407 | Whither did Science go? 39407 Who''s the superintendent of the Oriel mine? |
39407 | Whose little girl_ are_ you? |
39407 | Whut buzzards-- where? |
39407 | Why should I hesitate to tell what you do n''t hesitate to do? |
39407 | Why, who is this? 39407 Will she go to him?" |
39407 | Wo n''t you? |
39407 | Would n''t you like to be Dandie''s and papa''s little girl all at once? |
39407 | Would not all have helped each? |
39407 | Would not each have helped all? |
39407 | Would they have so mingled their wars with their prayers? |
39407 | Would they not have thrown away their weapons and thrown their arms around one another? 39407 Yes, is n''t it? |
39407 | You are going in, then? |
39407 | You are-- loyal? |
39407 | You awake, miss? 39407 You do n''t know about the place? |
39407 | You love me in spite of dat I am your nigga? |
39407 | You love me in spite of dis? |
39407 | You make a practice of this? |
39407 | You surmise the contents of the will? |
39407 | You vill gome mit me to mein gountry? |
39407 | ("Is it only a mother you want for Lola-- and yourself? |
39407 | ("Oh, you do?") |
39407 | (_ Goes off into another peal of laughter, turns to the men._) Howard, Dad, all of you, did you hear that? |
39407 | (_ Laughs._)"To Laura-- Who Deigns Not a Single Tear?" |
39407 | (_ Shouts heard._)_ Alathea._ What''s that? |
39407 | (_ To Lynch._) Are you satisfied, Mr. Lynch? |
39407 | (_ To the rest-- rising._) Shall we depart, that he may still indite them? |
39407 | A buzzard-- hey? |
39407 | A cowbell-- that was it; but why did it seem to come from overhead, from up in the sky, like? |
39407 | A little face to look at, A little face to kiss; Is there anything, I wonder, That''s half so sweet as this? |
39407 | A tear? |
39407 | Ai n''t I? |
39407 | Ai n''t they got nothin''but soldiers to send out here? |
39407 | And give me a chance to be of use? |
39407 | And how was it that the clapper seemed to strike so fast? |
39407 | And if not, how was she to survive the contumely and shame? |
39407 | And she''ll answer them, mamma, wo n''t she?" |
39407 | And that young man-- does he never get tired of his own works?" |
39407 | And when a man got a little along in life he was apt to be a light sleeper-- wasn''t that so? |
39407 | And who can turn backward our feet from the destined place? |
39407 | And who will remember the time, or the wish, or the boon? |
39407 | And why did it shift so abruptly from one quarter to another-- from left to right and back again to left? |
39407 | And"Why, for cat''s sake, ca n''t you tell a fellow what''s up your sleeve?" |
39407 | And"is this a merry jape?" |
39407 | Are the modern ways Darker for all the light That the years have shed? |
39407 | Are you a real colonel or jest a newspaper colonel, or are you a colonel on the governor''s staff? |
39407 | As I drew near he called out threateningly:"''Who are you?'' |
39407 | At last a postscript from Mrs. Loring herself:"Would n''t you like to come to see her? |
39407 | BELL HORSES[ From_ Under a Fool''s Cap_( London, 1884)] Bell horses, Bell horses, What time of day? |
39407 | Beneath me? |
39407 | Blakemore._ What''s the joke? |
39407 | But Larkin saw the gourd and at a glance understood it, and asked,--"Whar''d ye git that ar gourd? |
39407 | But can it be a shadowy road Whereon both Youth and Genius strode? |
39407 | But the rector''s question,"May, would you put in your furniture before you built your walls?" |
39407 | But then I am so used to the heartache that I might be lonesome without it; who knows? |
39407 | But this particular buzzard now-- wasn''t he making for Little Niggerwool? |
39407 | But what did the letters make? |
39407 | But what have my Lady''s girls to do? |
39407 | But you will have it, will you? |
39407 | But, say, The next day? |
39407 | Ca n''t I?" |
39407 | Certainly; but do not such objectors know in their hearts that their reply is no answer, but is utterly irrelevant? |
39407 | Contentment, wallowing despair? |
39407 | Could it be following him? |
39407 | Could some arrangement be made...? |
39407 | Dat suits you well? |
39407 | Day by day these two felt that these frayed ends would meet sometime; and hold? |
39407 | Dear heart, may I at last on thy warm breast Sink to forgetfulness and silent rest When evening cometh on? |
39407 | Did I make him suspect? |
39407 | Did n''t we have a royal time that summer and were n''t we young and foolish? |
39407 | Did you hear that-- faint and far away? |
39407 | Did''you see a lane forkin''off''bout a mile back by de crick, close to de big''simmon- tree? |
39407 | Do n''t you hear it? |
39407 | Do you know when and where it was that satire virtually ceased to exist in English literature? |
39407 | Do you think I could stand for that cat-- Puss, I mean-- in this house and me off to Reno? |
39407 | Does it grow Feeble with years, and move slow On the path that leads To the world''s needs? |
39407 | Does it make you feel bad to see me cry, Pa Gladden? |
39407 | Does man reach up or down To take the victor''s crown Of progress in science, art and commerce? |
39407 | Does not every one see that any such test would be wholly impracticable and nugatory? |
39407 | Does some one reply that some Negroes are better than some Whites, physically, mentally, morally? |
39407 | Does the heart harden By what the hand has wrought? |
39407 | Does the soul narrow With the broadening of thought? |
39407 | Flows yet that crystal stream whereof I drank? |
39407 | For what have the ages to say of the myriad dead? |
39407 | For why should day be more magnificent than life? |
39407 | Frivolity, woe burlesquely masked by unselfishness or pride? |
39407 | Had she acted her part well, she wondered, or had she overdone it? |
39407 | Have you any daughter?" |
39407 | Have you never looked at yourself in the glass, child? |
39407 | Have you never thought of studying your own lines? |
39407 | He began as usual:"''Where did you work last?'' |
39407 | He took her hands in his and asked, with searching earnestness,"If you love me, vy vill you not gome mit me?" |
39407 | Hinton?" |
39407 | How could it come to naught?" |
39407 | How does my Lady''s garden grow? |
39407 | How in hell should I know you?'' |
39407 | How long would he stay? |
39407 | How long?" |
39407 | How long?'' |
39407 | How pay you back? |
39407 | Howd''y do, Miss Ogden? |
39407 | Howd''y do, Nevin?" |
39407 | I came to call you-- All right? |
39407 | I like the new ones best, do n''t you? |
39407 | I orgernized the Zobo band, I lent''em my ballads, but whar''s my thanks? |
39407 | I remember that there was a time, Miss Barton, when I loved it better than school; do you?" |
39407 | I was right?" |
39407 | I wonder if there ever was a fight that can match mine? |
39407 | I wondered if it were stolidity or stoicism? |
39407 | I''ve met no stray cows; but can you tell me how far it is to Major Hiram Gilcrest''s? |
39407 | IN OLD TUCSON[59][ From_ Quivira_( Boston, 1907)] In old Tucson, in old Tucson, What cared I how the days ran on? |
39407 | If they were thus to sleep at last, why were they ever awakened? |
39407 | If you''ll bring_ me_ something-- Wo n''t you please, dear? |
39407 | In all the works that plan And purpose to accomplish The betterment of man? |
39407 | In big places like this there is so much to see, so much to digest, so much to read out of guide books, that-- what''s the use? |
39407 | Is n''t this a real letter?" |
39407 | Is not indifference often a net to catch or to conceal? |
39407 | Is not philosophy, at times, resignation in delirium? |
39407 | Is some other quenchless star their safe habitation?" |
39407 | Is the right Dead-- Under the wheels of progress By the side of the road to success, Bleeding and bruised and broken, Left in forgetfulness? |
39407 | Is truth Stronger in youth Than in age? |
39407 | It was a hot- enough night-- wasn''t it? |
39407 | It would be difficult for a critic to say more in praise of an author, would it not? |
39407 | It''s her favor_rite_, and why? |
39407 | Kin you speak Spanish?" |
39407 | Langor, shrewd energy? |
39407 | Liebchen, is it for me?" |
39407 | MY LADY''S GARDEN[ From the same] How does my Lady''s garden grow? |
39407 | Marion speaks gaily._) Mr. Lynch, of the City News, may I present Mrs. Elizabeth Blakemore? |
39407 | May I offer supper to him and his staff?" |
39407 | Messer Petrarca, should not be made High Jurisconsult to our lord, the Devil, Whose breath of life is oaths?... |
39407 | Mine is a lineage of Kentucky poor white trash, who knows, but a speck of''nigger''? |
39407 | Modesty, diplomatic egotism? |
39407 | Must I go to the meeting of the heirs?" |
39407 | No? |
39407 | Now he struck away the trembling hands which clutched at his white jacket, ignoring the shivering inquiries as to"What was the matter?" |
39407 | Now was n''t that sweet of him? |
39407 | Now who plays Hubert false? |
39407 | O lost Elysium, art thou hiding there? |
39407 | OF DEATH( To Michael Monahan)[ From the same] Why should I fear that ultimate thing-- The Great Release of clown and king? |
39407 | Of course God sent the little babies, but how did he get them down to Mrs. Katzman? |
39407 | Or bothered about anything? |
39407 | Or was she wench... Or some shuddering maid...? |
39407 | Or-- less? |
39407 | Over her waves the flag of her hopes; where are the monuments that are her memories? |
39407 | Said I to Love:"What must I do, All in the summer gloaming?" |
39407 | Said I to Love:"What must I do, All in the summer nooning?" |
39407 | Said I to Love:"What must I do, All on a summer''s morning?" |
39407 | Said I to Love:"What must I do? |
39407 | Said I to Love:"What must I do? |
39407 | Said I to Love:"What must I do? |
39407 | Sainte Nitouche, you do n''t refuse it? |
39407 | Shall I despair now Hope On the horizon spreads her dawn- white wings? |
39407 | Shall I not wait? |
39407 | Shall we depart? |
39407 | She began by contributing poems to the periodicals, but her one- act comediette, entitled_ Where was Elsie? |
39407 | So I have come to give Mr. Stanton a----_ General Livingston._(_ Interrupting._) Would the papers print that? |
39407 | Sold her bed to lie upon straw; Was she not a dirty slut To sell her bed, and live in dirt? |
39407 | Surely? |
39407 | Sweet, there''s a door to every shrine; Wilt thou, as morning, open thine? |
39407 | Sweetheart? |
39407 | THE LITTLE CHRIST[79][ From_ The Atlantic Monthly_, December, 1905] Mother, I am thy little Son-- Why weepest thou? |
39407 | THE UNDERGROUND PALACE OF THE FAIRIES[ From_ Where was Elsie?_( New York, 1888)] Act I, Scene IV. |
39407 | THESE DAYS[21][ From_ Pearson''s Magazine_( April, 1907)] Pray, What is it to- day That it should be worse than the early days? |
39407 | That dared the knife And that took the blade?... |
39407 | The one that demands the protection of profits the continued policy of hot- house growth for our industries? |
39407 | The woman asked me in a sharp voice, as if she were defending herself from being overcharged:"''How much?'' |
39407 | Then whose Puss is she? |
39407 | There are some; where are the others? |
39407 | These ceremonies-- whom will they incite to kindred action elsewhere? |
39407 | UNREMEMBERING JUNE[85][ From_ Some Successful Marriages_( New York, 1906)]"And you will let me have word of you? |
39407 | UNREQUITED[48][ From_ Poems_( New York, 1911)] Passion? |
39407 | WHAT RIGHT HAST THOU? |
39407 | Was he sick? |
39407 | Was it suspicion that she had seen in the general''s eyes as she left him? |
39407 | Was not this what in human times they called Christmas Eve?" |
39407 | Was there such a combination to be found, he asked, in a youngster of twenty- three or twenty- four, such as would be graduating at the"Tech?" |
39407 | Well, then? |
39407 | Were there four of them? |
39407 | What are you all grinning about, anyway?" |
39407 | What became of the children? |
39407 | What can artists do, other than quicken the pulse of sluggard humanity? |
39407 | What cared he for the lament of the leaves? |
39407 | What difference do they make as long as you have a steady income of your own?" |
39407 | What do I know of it but that''tis fair? |
39407 | What dost know of me to love? |
39407 | What for?" |
39407 | What gav''st thou these? |
39407 | What is his godship''s name?" |
39407 | What kind of father, and man, do you think me?" |
39407 | What maiden toil or spinning to do? |
39407 | What other monuments will they build? |
39407 | What right hast thou thus vilely to inflame Thy fellow men with hate, O fiend of greed? |
39407 | What right hast thou to take the hallowed name Of God upon thy lips, or Christ''s, who came To save the race from sorrows thou dost cause? |
39407 | What shall I do? |
39407 | What shall I do? |
39407 | What shall I do? |
39407 | What spell dost bear from listening plant to plant, Like some white witch, some ghostly ministrant, Some specter of some perished flower of phlox? |
39407 | What use to dwell on this premature Hell? |
39407 | What was the end of the march of the earth''s children?" |
39407 | What would they do to him? |
39407 | What? |
39407 | When did you get here?" |
39407 | Where are Kentucky''s monuments for her battlefields? |
39407 | Where are her monuments for her heroes that she insists were hers alone? |
39407 | Where beauty mocks and springtime comes in vain, And love grows mute, and wisdom is forgot? |
39407 | Where did the myriads of them march to? |
39407 | Where do you live?" |
39407 | Which course is the wiser for our government to take? |
39407 | Who dared to tie her up like that?" |
39407 | Who dares to state That God grows less as man grows great? |
39407 | Who ever heard of a place called''Hogwallow''?" |
39407 | Who is she? |
39407 | Who shall say That decay Marks the good of to- day? |
39407 | Who''s ahead? |
39407 | Who''s goin''to run the army? |
39407 | Whose gourd is that?" |
39407 | Whose little girl-- or boy-- are you?" |
39407 | Why do we drink to him? |
39407 | Why is it that when a distinguished person enters a church it allus perduces a flutter? |
39407 | Why should I dread to take my way Through the same shadowed path as they? |
39407 | Will you come in?" |
39407 | Will you come, my Glaia? |
39407 | Wit, brilliant misery? |
39407 | Wo n''t ye come inter the house, my darter? |
39407 | Wo n''t you forgive me and take me back? |
39407 | Wo n''t you step into the coach and speak to her?" |
39407 | Wo n''t you?" |
39407 | Would I be permitted to refuse this dish? |
39407 | Would he search-- and find? |
39407 | You want it parted on the side, do n''t you, tied with a bow, and all the rest hanging down? |
39407 | Your father will find you fancy- free, will he not?" |
39407 | _ Alathea._ Who''s ahead? |
39407 | _ Alathea._ Why does n''t Queen Bess come to the front? |
39407 | _ An accident_--you''ll remember, old man? |
39407 | _ Bob and Morris._(_ Turn, face each other, absolute amazement showing on their faces, speak together._) Well, what do you think of that? |
39407 | _ But oh, for the clover in bloom and the breeze blowing there!_ Fame? |
39407 | _ Col._ Madam, what are you all doing here? |
39407 | _ Dear Pierrepont_: Who is this Helen Heath, and what are your intentions there? |
39407 | _ Enter Jack and Elsie with fairy flask and taper.__ Elsie._ Is this the room, Mr. Jack o''Lantern? |
39407 | _ General Livingston._ What do you mean? |
39407 | _ Gla._ And you will stay with me? |
39407 | _ Gla._ Do brothers talk like that? |
39407 | _ Gla._ How cam''st thou here? |
39407 | _ Gla._ Into that world? |
39407 | _ Gla._ Why talk Of crowns and kings? |
39407 | _ Hen._ And what didst think of me? |
39407 | _ Hen._ I think not, sweet_ Gla._ But you will be my brother? |
39407 | _ Hen._ O, I''m loved? |
39407 | _ Hen._ See yon light cloud half- kirtled with faint rose? |
39407 | _ Lynch._ Would they print it? |
39407 | _ Marion._ Not your Puss, Howard? |
39407 | _ Marion._ Puss? |
39407 | _ Marion._ Take you back? |
39407 | _ Marion._(_ Enters._) Has she gone? |
39407 | _ Sancia._ And that is-- what? |
39407 | _ Sancia._ And, to the rack, if faithless? |
39407 | _ Sancia._ And-- long ago? |
39407 | _ Sancia._ You hear him? |
39407 | _ Stanton._ Who? |
39407 | and if it has, why does it not speak of it? |
39407 | and it might Not sound so sweet in sonnets ever after? |
39407 | and then? |
39407 | are you a sonnet- monger? |
39407 | are you all gone dotty?" |
39407 | are you in? |
39407 | asked Emmy Lou,"m and y?" |
39407 | asked Mr. Opp,"not endeavoring to improve her intellect, or help her grow up in any way?" |
39407 | bows._)_ Alathea._ Colonel, what are you all doing here? |
39407 | but perhaps you can direct me to Mister Mason Rogers''house? |
39407 | faster, faster fly, For know ye not the sun Is climbing high across the sky, And yet my work''s not done?" |
39407 | for I see a crown of thorns, A bleeding brow._ Mother, I am thy little Son-- Why dost thou sigh? |
39407 | he said, as if he had discovered something--''and before that?'' |
39407 | like it was something to take pride in, instead of sorrow for? |
39407 | long ago? |
39407 | or snap? |
39407 | some dull and silly show Out of your sallow books? |
39407 | they demand, and they send letters to the Valley by the score, asking"Did Betty go blind?" |
39407 | this air will soil it? |
39407 | what Prince? |
39407 | what can I do?" |
39407 | what can I do?" |
39407 | what can I do?" |
39407 | what''s that shiny thing? |
42267 | ''And pray, what do you mean, sir, by this insolence?'' 42267 ''And what did you say to_ that_?'' |
42267 | ''Do n''t you know, stupid, that these orders can not be intended to apply to_ us_?'' 42267 ''Do you know who we are, sir?'' |
42267 | ''Then you have the effrontery, do you, to refuse admittance to the lady of your commanding officer?'' 42267 ''What did I_ say_ to it?'' |
42267 | ''Where did you get your liquor from?'' 42267 A guinea that we knew of; but I''ve had plenty in my time, and how do you know this is not one we had overlooked?" |
42267 | A long step back-- and to what? 42267 About me, sir?" |
42267 | Am I not so? |
42267 | And have the children looked after themselves at all, sir? |
42267 | And how did you like the ride? 42267 And how, then, has what seems to me so obvious never occurred to you?" |
42267 | And in that case, must the government resign, sir? |
42267 | And it sounds-- somehow it sounds,said Mr. Skimpole,"like a small sum?" |
42267 | And suppose I am willing to go to prison,said Antonio,"rather than testify against Ellen''s brother; can I do so?" |
42267 | And where,said Randal, with an iron smile,"are the £20,000 you ascribe to me to come from?" |
42267 | And why can not the officers do the same? |
42267 | Are you all ready, and have you got every thing that you want? |
42267 | Are you arrested for much, sir? |
42267 | At what time did you arrive there? |
42267 | Ay? |
42267 | But how can I serve Riccabocca? 42267 But if the question at issue comes before the House you will vote against it?" |
42267 | But what did you think upon the road? |
42267 | But whom can the exile possibly have seen of birth and fortunes to render him a fitting spouse for his daughter? 42267 Can he?" |
42267 | Can he? |
42267 | Can you read it? |
42267 | Did I not tell you? |
42267 | Did you imply that he has children of his own, sir? |
42267 | Did you know this morning, now, that you were coming out on this errand? |
42267 | Do you know? |
42267 | Do you see that short branch just above you? |
42267 | Do you see,inquired Sieyes, pointing to a sort of cabinet in the room,"that pretty piece of furniture?" |
42267 | Do you suppose,Napoleon replied,"that I have never thought of that? |
42267 | For me? |
42267 | Gentlemen of the jury,said the judge again,"what say you? |
42267 | Gentlemen of the jury,said the judge,"are you agreed upon the verdict?" |
42267 | Has Hazeldean consented to the post- obit? |
42267 | Has my wife,said he to Bourrienne,"been speaking to you of the Bourbons?" |
42267 | Have n''t you just come from Franconia? |
42267 | Have we ever met before? |
42267 | Have you any thing to sell? |
42267 | He is quite happy? |
42267 | He is well? |
42267 | Honest, is she? |
42267 | How can you tell how it came into the gruel? 42267 How can your woman eyes be so dull, and your woman heart so obtuse?" |
42267 | How do you know that? |
42267 | How far is it from here to Franconia? |
42267 | I can not conceive,said he, abruptly,"why you should tempt me thus-- what interest is it to you?" |
42267 | I hope I have not driven her away? |
42267 | I worthy of such a creature? 42267 If Audley''s affairs are as you state, what can he do?" |
42267 | Indeed, sir? |
42267 | Is it about Rodolphus? |
42267 | Is n''t the gruel good? |
42267 | Is not this house,he asked,"as nigh heaven as my own?" |
42267 | Is that Mr. Jarndyce''s wagon? |
42267 | Is this Governor Dummer? |
42267 | It did n''t affect your appetite? 42267 May I ask, sir, what is--""Coavinses?" |
42267 | May I say what I have heard expressed with regard to you and your position-- in the streets-- in the clubs? |
42267 | My child,said he, with a trembling voice,"what is this?" |
42267 | No? |
42267 | Of what? |
42267 | Oh, dear me, what''s this, what''s this? |
42267 | On what ground do you wish to be excused? |
42267 | Randal Leslie? 42267 Rheumatism, sir?" |
42267 | Shall I''old your''Orse, Sir?] |
42267 | She does not expect a judgment? 42267 That''s your daughter, is it?" |
42267 | Then,said the other,"would you do me the favor to deliver this letter to a friend of mine, there resident? |
42267 | They could n''t know that the money belonged to me,thought he; adding aloud:"Have you no friends here in London?" |
42267 | This? |
42267 | Took? |
42267 | We can not talk very well here,said Antonio,"will it do if I come and see you about it to- night?" |
42267 | Well, citizen,said Napoleon, in one of the shops,"what do they say of Bonaparte?" |
42267 | Well, father, dear, how are you this morning? |
42267 | Well, general,said Bourrienne,"why do you not endeavor to remedy those evils which you foresee?" |
42267 | Were you at the corn- barn when it took fire? |
42267 | What are the numbers? 42267 What company is this, Rosa?" |
42267 | What could possess that fellow; with his unmeaning face, fat paunch, and bandy legs, to have his picture taken? |
42267 | What did Esther do? |
42267 | What do you think will be best, Miss Summerson? |
42267 | What does that spell? |
42267 | What is it that is buried there? |
42267 | What is it, father? 42267 What is it, father?" |
42267 | What is it? |
42267 | What is the alternative, sir? 42267 What is the reason?" |
42267 | What is your name? |
42267 | What may I call your name? |
42267 | What wheels on such a day as this, for gracious sake? |
42267 | What would be done,asked Antonio,"if I should refuse to do so?" |
42267 | What''s the use of a cloak if it''s not rolled up? |
42267 | What''s this you have put into the gruel, Mary? |
42267 | What''s this, they tell me? 42267 When can you go?" |
42267 | Where did you say the wind was, Rick? |
42267 | Where do you live? |
42267 | Where would you wish to go? |
42267 | Where''s your cloak, rascal? |
42267 | Who doubts that? 42267 Who lives in the attics?" |
42267 | Who''s that? |
42267 | Who''s this, Miss Summerson? |
42267 | Whose money is it, I should like to know? 42267 Why did I not,"he afterward often said, as he looked at his brawny, hairy, Samson- like arms,"strangle that man when I had him in my power?" |
42267 | Why does he show that fat hand so conspicuously? |
42267 | Why must I? |
42267 | Why so? |
42267 | Why that sigh, my dear mother? |
42267 | Wot do you mean? |
42267 | You are a friend to the present ministers? 42267 You are sure, then, that the government will be outvoted?" |
42267 | You ask,the opposition exclaimed,"who was the aggressor? |
42267 | You can not be serious? 42267 You have?" |
42267 | You think we are right, Harley? |
42267 | ''Alas,''said the poor Frenchman, profoundly dejected;''and if so, where shall I spend my evenings?''" |
42267 | ''What did I_ say_? |
42267 | ( Inquiringly) Pray, Sir, wot''s it like? |
42267 | A blank, however, it has turned out, and the question becomes grave-- What are you to do?" |
42267 | Accosting Del Uomo, this spy inquired whether he were not about to visit such a town? |
42267 | After the oath was administered as usual, the county attorney began to question Antonio as follows:"Were you in Hiburgh on the night of this robbery?" |
42267 | Am I so very-- very childlike?" |
42267 | And I ca n''t abear to part with any thing I once lay hold of( or so my neighbors think, but what do_ they_ know?) |
42267 | And how did you like Mrs. Jellyby, my dear?" |
42267 | And if I did-- if I lost ten thousand pounds-- what then? |
42267 | And nine? |
42267 | And what was the answer he got?" |
42267 | And who is your friend? |
42267 | And why do you think they call me the Lord Chancellor, and my shop Chancery?" |
42267 | Apropos, have you spoken to my father, as you undertook to do?" |
42267 | Are not these families substantial prayers? |
42267 | Are there no means of coming to an understanding? |
42267 | Are you as kind as if she were the great heiress you believe Violante to be?" |
42267 | Are you not in a situation to impose any conditions you may think fit?" |
42267 | Attar of roses did Golden Sleeve suggest? |
42267 | Being compelled to record categorically a reply to the inquiry,"What are the manners and customs of the inhabitants?" |
42267 | Besides, how live in the mean while?" |
42267 | Better do it yourself; reason enough for it, that he has confided to you his hope, and asked you to help him; why should not you? |
42267 | But at all events, Ada-- I may call you Ada?" |
42267 | But how is this? |
42267 | But how? |
42267 | But if it be"wicked"to malign the black hat, who shall be justified? |
42267 | But were you frightened at the snakes? |
42267 | But what are all such difficulties to our modern Galileo, or to his scientific audience? |
42267 | But what avails it? |
42267 | But what do you know of him?" |
42267 | But what guarantee have I that this money will be paid-- these estates made mine upon the condition stipulated?" |
42267 | But why_ will_ you call me child? |
42267 | But would such absurdities in reasoning have ever gained currency in those thinking though little scientific periods? |
42267 | But, to leave the very day after your friend''s daughter comes as a guest!--what will_ she_ think of it?" |
42267 | Can any thing be more horrible than your pressing of seamen? |
42267 | Can he be devil enough to propose it? |
42267 | Can the married world explain to us, how it is that matrimony seems to dull the edge of triumph, and to round a grave over maiden glory? |
42267 | Can you believe that I could tear myself from a gift which alone recalls to me the day when my husband loved me? |
42267 | Can you hear the sound upon the terrace, through the music, and the beat, and every thing?" |
42267 | Could it have been so in our own land, when Edwards preached his deep theology to plain men in plain New England villages? |
42267 | Did n''t make you at all uneasy?" |
42267 | Did terror constitute any part of the exercises of your own mind? |
42267 | Did you break your doll?" |
42267 | Did you recognize no family likeness?--none in those eyes-- mother?" |
42267 | Do n''t mean to say yer''ve come down to a Pony?" |
42267 | Do you forget that I am engaged-- and of my own free will and choice? |
42267 | Do you hear a sound like a footstep passing along the terrace, Watt?" |
42267 | Do you imagine that all those people who came to pay their court to me were sincere? |
42267 | Do you want your breakfast? |
42267 | Does the operator_ will_ it thus to be? |
42267 | Eastward lay Bagdad and Persia, thrones of Caliphs who once sat in his seat-- why should not he sit in theirs? |
42267 | From the beginning was not the Oriental merchant a magician? |
42267 | HARLEY.--"And what undeceived you? |
42267 | Has not this ever occurred to you?" |
42267 | Has the picture been engraved, miss?" |
42267 | Have I not seen you one; have I not held you in my arms?" |
42267 | Have I the pleasure of addressing another of the youthful parties in Jarndyce?" |
42267 | Have you ever seen a man rise under kings by merit alone?" |
42267 | Have you taken arms to revive the reign of the ancient kings? |
42267 | He began:"''So, Reuben Darke, you have considered my proposition, and agree, of course?'' |
42267 | He rose, and approaching his scrutinizing intruder, said:"Do you_ know_ me, sir?" |
42267 | How comes one of the most essential ingredients to be left behind in the psychological transfer? |
42267 | How could Mohammad Alee reflect that sallying forth to grasp it, that peer had bitten the dust? |
42267 | How could he? |
42267 | How could you do it? |
42267 | How do I put down three- and- twopence? |
42267 | How have I become so? |
42267 | How is it that they do not feel peace to be the first of necessities as the first of glories? |
42267 | How much are you out of pocket? |
42267 | How much, you? |
42267 | How much,_ you_? |
42267 | How otherwise can I aid him? |
42267 | I do n''t know what the business name of it may be, but I suppose there is some instrument within their power that would settle this?" |
42267 | I guess-- the young author?" |
42267 | I ventured to take this opportunity of hinting that Mr. Skimpole, being in all such matters quite a child--"Eh, my dear?" |
42267 | In case of a restoration, what is to become of the men who were conspicuous in the revolution? |
42267 | In reference to this assertion Napoleon says,"How was such a thing possible? |
42267 | Is it any thing about a picture?" |
42267 | Is it any thing like beer, for example?"] |
42267 | Is it honorable for so decided a minority to attempt, by force of arms, to dictate laws to the majority?" |
42267 | Is that the natural conduct of a lover?" |
42267 | Is there any tide of atmosphere which makes flux and reflux of cold-- kindred to the sweep of the ocean? |
42267 | Is this connecting medium mind, or matter, or a compound of both, or a tertium quid? |
42267 | Leonard, I think you would rejoice at an occasion to serve your old friends, Dr. Riccabocca and his daughter?" |
42267 | May I know?" |
42267 | Miss Summerson, if I do n''t deceive myself?" |
42267 | Miss Violante, is the doll to have blue or black eyes?" |
42267 | Must the war, which for the four last years has devastated the world, be eternal? |
42267 | Napoleon quietly listened to his story, and then, raising his head from his pillow, inquired,"Have they corrupted our guard?" |
42267 | No man ever yet saw that Baron in a dressing- gown and slippers? |
42267 | Now is n''t he?" |
42267 | Now what do you make of thirty- eight pence? |
42267 | Only--""Only, you would say, I am going out of power, and you do n''t see the chance of my return?" |
42267 | Or is it a bridge without an abutment on either shore? |
42267 | PUPIL TEACHER( drawing nine strokes).--How can that be? |
42267 | PUPIL TEACHER.--Twelve-- and eight? |
42267 | Randal thought of that dry witticism in Gibbon,"Abu Rafe says he will be witness for this fact, but who will be witness for Abu Rafe?" |
42267 | Rick, my boy, Esther, my dear, what have you been doing? |
42267 | SMITH.--"Is Mrs. Brown in?" |
42267 | Saving yourself, what of the scene is changed since then? |
42267 | Seven and five, how many? |
42267 | Shall interminable war continue merely to settle a question of history? |
42267 | Shall not you and I, my reader, swim to our Heros, though a thousand Leanders never came to shore? |
42267 | She hurriedly took up her little bag of documents, which she had laid upon the table on coming in, and asked if we were also going into court? |
42267 | She then asked,''Have you a servant, sir, in whom you can rely, who can go with me into the street for a few moments?'' |
42267 | Sieyes, much annoyed, rather petulantly exclaimed,"Gentlemen, who shall take the chair?" |
42267 | So that''s Lady Dedlock, is it?" |
42267 | So, he has brought you up to follow in his ways, and has sent you into foreign countries and the like? |
42267 | Such a sum-- for what?--for a mere piece of information? |
42267 | Surely you will not deny me?" |
42267 | Tell me now, why do you desire the return of the Bourbons? |
42267 | The security, too, bad-- what security?" |
42267 | The sum is large, no doubt; it answers to me to give it to you; does it answer to you to receive it?" |
42267 | Thirty- eight pence, how much? |
42267 | To the petitioners, pleading in his behalf, Napoleon replied:"Why should I pardon this man? |
42267 | Ve- ry mortifying, is it not?" |
42267 | Was it indeed true that he was in the elegant saloon of the_ Marquise_ M----? |
42267 | Was it not the magic to draw from your purse the Philosopher''s Stone? |
42267 | We have had deep snows in April, and May_ may_ bring him his season yet: for what says the Almanac of past years? |
42267 | What are we to do when you are gone? |
42267 | What can it mean? |
42267 | What could a man do, in the little leisure left by so much unremitting work? |
42267 | What in men''s mouths? |
42267 | What is there in that glen of mimosas? |
42267 | What is to become of France? |
42267 | What is to become of all the changes which have been effected in the last twelve years?" |
42267 | What is to become of the confiscated estates and the national domain, which have been sold and sold again? |
42267 | What matters that? |
42267 | What right have I to such kindness, save my name of Leslie?" |
42267 | What say you-- shall it be so?" |
42267 | What say you?" |
42267 | What urged him to it? |
42267 | When all was ready, the justice commenced by saying to Antonio,"What is your name?" |
42267 | When you stopt out till mornink, who sat up for you? |
42267 | When you was ill, who forgot the nat''ral dignities of his station, and answered the two- pair bell? |
42267 | Where do I carry the three? |
42267 | Where was it likely Violante should go but to the Lansmeres''? |
42267 | Where, then, the danger? |
42267 | Who can help sympathizing with the poor woman, who thus saw all her fairy treasures resolved into their intrinsic worthlessness? |
42267 | Who has not inhabited this palace? |
42267 | Who has not seen just such statistics as these dwelt upon with unction by your thorough"statist?" |
42267 | Who was there to make him afraid? |
42267 | Who would care for a fox''s brush, if it had not been rendered a prize by the excitement of the chase?" |
42267 | Whom, my lord, except yourself?" |
42267 | Why did you do it? |
42267 | Why did you? |
42267 | Why is Madame Goldschmidt so much less than Jenny Lind? |
42267 | Why should I regret my incapacity for details and worldly affairs, when it leads to such pleasant consequences? |
42267 | Will you give them back to me again?" |
42267 | Will you tell Peschiera where the young lady is, or shall I? |
42267 | With such a rival what chance had he? |
42267 | With that laconic logic which he had ever at command, he said,"Are you fighting in self- defense? |
42267 | With the loss of that place, Randal lost all means of support, save what Audley could give him; and if Audley were in truth ruined? |
42267 | Would it be well, do you think, to come out of the controversies for a little while, and be simply Apostolic thus low down? |
42267 | Yes, my dear?" |
42267 | You called her Rosa?" |
42267 | You could not wish them to be mean enough to stay in?" |
42267 | You find the long vacation exceedingly long, do n''t you?" |
42267 | You thought nothing to that effect?" |
42267 | You understand how those things are managed?" |
42267 | [ Illustration: FLUNKEY.--"Apollo? |
42267 | _ Que voulez vous?_ It is my profession, my hobby. |
42267 | and eight and three''s eleven, and eight''s nineteen, and seven''s what? |
42267 | do n''t talk of duty as a child, Miss Summerson; where''s Ma''s duty as a parent? |
42267 | has nothing been said as to the division?" |
42267 | in his letter to you guarantees the contrary of all which you apprehend? |
42267 | is the prisoner guilty or not guilty?" |
42267 | says Mr. Guppy, greedily curious;"what''s the story, miss? |
42267 | what''s the matter?" |
7143 | A rather big man, with a shock of white hair, and staring eyes; a man dressed in a faded suit of brown, and wearing an old blue flannel shirt? |
7143 | About what? |
7143 | After he went in you fastened the door, did you? |
7143 | Ai n''t they looking for a desperate escaped jail bird? |
7143 | Ai n''t we goin''to stand guard to- night, fellers? |
7143 | All ready, boys? |
7143 | And I sure hope you do n''t hold any grudge against me, young feller, because I bumped your head when I took you in? |
7143 | And did you feel that same yank? |
7143 | And it was n''t your shadow this time? |
7143 | And so Herb Benson dared you, Max, you say? |
7143 | And this is that queer old cabin he said we''d run across? |
7143 | And when would you do all this fine slipping- up business? |
7143 | And, say, what''s this he''s gone and brought back with him, fellers? |
7143 | Any use, Max? |
7143 | Anybody around, that you can see, Max? |
7143 | Are you sure you saw something, Bandy- legs? |
7143 | As how? |
7143 | B- b- but, f- f- fellows, did yon ever s- s- see_ such_ a c- c- cabin? |
7143 | Back to camp? |
7143 | Because ghosts-- whoever heard of them wanting a fire, either to cook with, or else keep warm? 7143 Before you go, Steve, tell us whether they looked like men or boys?" |
7143 | But are you looking for a lunatic? |
7143 | But can they get him, d''ye think? |
7143 | But show me the ham, will you? |
7143 | But tell me first, when_ can_ we be ready to go, Max-- some time to- morrow? |
7143 | But then you''ve had experience, and ought to know what sort of racket a bobcat makes when he''s on the rampage? |
7143 | But what would a measly old raccoon want in my canoe? |
7143 | But where''s the bally old glasses, fellows? 7143 But, Max, footprints ca n''t talk, can they?" |
7143 | But, Max, who is he? |
7143 | But, Steve,complained Bandy- legs,"you ai n''t told us yet who you believe it was made all that noise? |
7143 | Can we stand it, fellows? |
7143 | Can you take us to where we can find him? |
7143 | Could n''t we just stick it out around the fire? |
7143 | Could that be so, Max? |
7143 | Did n''t I tell you I felt a pull that woke me up? 7143 Do n''t you think we ought to go a little slow about landing?" |
7143 | Do they have real panthers around here, Max? |
7143 | Does anybody know the history of this island, and who ever lived here? |
7143 | Found the very hickory you wanted, have you? |
7143 | Fresh done, too, ai n''t they? |
7143 | From the penitentiary, of course; I can see the uniform? |
7143 | Go on and tell us about it, please? |
7143 | Got him safe, Jenkins? |
7143 | Got your tree all picked out, have you, Bandy- legs? |
7143 | Guard over what? |
7143 | Have you been up to that cabin again? |
7143 | Hey, what you goin''to do, have a snack? |
7143 | How d''ye know but what he come across from the mainland? |
7143 | How d''ye suppose he fixed it, so as to keep the water out till just now? |
7143 | How does it go? |
7143 | How many fellers d''ye reckon started grubbin''up here, after we quit? |
7143 | I reckon all the boys are on their way by now, eh, Max? |
7143 | I reckon, now, this is the cabin that boy spoke about, when they called out after us as we were leaving town? |
7143 | I said they wore gray homespun clothes, did n''t I, just like the farmers, plenty of''em, have around these diggings? 7143 If he just had to come snoopin''around, why could n''t the critter pick out a boat belongin''to somebody else? |
7143 | If so be those Shatters and Toots and Beggs are around, have n''t we left things nice for them, though? |
7143 | Is he here now on the island? |
7143 | Man or boy, do you think, Max? |
7143 | Max, do n''t you think it''d work, if I tried it? |
7143 | Max, whatever do you think? |
7143 | Nothing doing, Steve? |
7143 | Now open up, and explain what all this fuss and feathers means? |
7143 | Now what makes you say that, Bandy- legs? |
7143 | Now whoever could have lived here, do you think? |
7143 | Now, I hope my assistant did n''t hurt you much when he jumped you, following my orders, when he heard you coming? |
7143 | Now, how about that? |
7143 | Now, how d''ye know that fact? 7143 Now, what happened?" |
7143 | Now? |
7143 | Of course they knew all about what we expected to do? |
7143 | Oh, is that it? |
7143 | Oh, say, ca n''t you let a feller get up even a little thing like that without throwing cold water on him? |
7143 | Oh, yes, I''m on to you now, Max,cried the other, triumphantly;"you mean that you can tell it was a man by the size of the prints; ai n''t that it?" |
7143 | Perhaps they saw you, and wanted to keep out of sight? |
7143 | Say, ca n''t you hike down to the boathouse and meet us there? |
7143 | Say, do we crawl back in our nice blankets, and try to get some more sleep? |
7143 | Say, do you mean Wesley Coombs? |
7143 | Say, now, Max, you do n''t suppose that it could have been any of them fellows, do you? |
7143 | Say, where''d you hang that half of a ham, Owen? |
7143 | See anything of the convict? |
7143 | So they challenge us to make a camp, and stick it out, do they? 7143 Sure you can fix it so there wo n''t be any chance of my going down?" |
7143 | Sure, and I''m in fine trim for the job; how about you, Toby? |
7143 | Sure, who would n''t? |
7143 | Tell us what you do remember, Steve? |
7143 | That makes three of us in our tent, do n''t it? |
7143 | That you did n''t get three fingers scorched; is that it? |
7143 | That you, Max? |
7143 | Then again, what would they be doing away up here so late in the day? |
7143 | Then you remembered something about it, did you? |
7143 | Then you''ve seen him? |
7143 | Think you saw something, did you, Max? |
7143 | To be sure we will, and it''s a very little favor to ask after doing us such a good turn; but what''s the idea, my boy? |
7143 | To camp on Catamount Island? |
7143 | Tracks of what, the catamount? |
7143 | W- w- what happened to W- w- wesley C- c- combs? |
7143 | Want to take these rattles along, Bandy- legs? |
7143 | Was there only one feller here, or a crowd? |
7143 | We ca n''t make a decent breakfast off string that''s only got a ham flavor, can we? |
7143 | Well, did n''t we kinder half''spect we''d have a visit from one or t''other of them crowds, p''r''aps both? |
7143 | Well, how do you know it, Bandy- legs? |
7143 | Well, that sounds clever of you, I must say,remarked the other, admiration in his voice,"and the trap worked, did it?" |
7143 | Well, what are we going to do about it? |
7143 | What about our canoes? |
7143 | What about''em? |
7143 | What ails you, Steve? |
7143 | What ails you? |
7143 | What ails you? |
7143 | What can we do, Max, to fix her up? |
7143 | What d''ye mean by saying that, Jenkins? |
7143 | What do you think of it, boys? |
7143 | What is it, Bandy- legs? |
7143 | What is it? |
7143 | What luck? |
7143 | What makes you say that? |
7143 | What strikes you as so funny, Max? |
7143 | What was that name you spoke, sir? |
7143 | What was that something, Owen? |
7143 | What''s the matter, Bandy- legs? 7143 What?" |
7143 | When do you suppose he could have found a chance to do such a dirty trick, Max? |
7143 | Which way did they seem to go when they left? |
7143 | Which way now? |
7143 | Who are you, and what are you looking for over here on Catamount Island? |
7143 | Why, how c''n you tell that, Max, without ever once gettin''sight of the feller? |
7143 | Why, stands to reason, do n''t it, that a big man''d wear shoes ever so much longer than a little man, or a kid? 7143 Why?" |
7143 | Wonder when he could have been here last? |
7143 | Works all right, do n''t it, Bandy- legs? |
7143 | Would you think that bunch of fellows''d take the trouble to come all the way up here just to bother us? |
7143 | You might shin out for home, Bandy- legs? |
7143 | ''Pearances are often deceitful, remember, we used to write in our copybooks at school? |
7143 | Ai n''t it always that way, Max? |
7143 | And do you think he did it just to give us a scare?" |
7143 | And feel a little pity, wo n''t you, please, for the other poor fellers who go ridin''down the raging flood, hangin''on to the bottom of their boats? |
7143 | And was midnight far past? |
7143 | And when Steve made a move that must have attracted their attention, why had they bolted so hastily? |
7143 | But it''s decided, is it, fellows, that we go to- morrow noon?" |
7143 | Could Ted Shafter and his cronies have dared venture back after receiving that severe fright earlier in the evening? |
7143 | Could there be any further danger to be met? |
7143 | D''ye hear that, Jenkins? |
7143 | Did anything give a yelp?" |
7143 | Did this cigarette cough mean that Ted and his two cronies were coming to play a practical joke on the campers of Catamount Island? |
7143 | Do n''t think any Shafter, Toots or Beggs made that, do you?" |
7143 | Do n''t you feel like making the try?" |
7143 | Do you mean to say you can put us on the track of one?" |
7143 | Had he, Max, miscalculated, so that the unknown party would not be apt to try to enter the camp until away toward morning? |
7143 | Have you heard of him, my boy?" |
7143 | How about coming down, Toby?" |
7143 | How about it, boys?" |
7143 | How big do you think he was, Steve?" |
7143 | How much longer could he stand it? |
7143 | I hope now none of you want to throw up the sponge, and go back home, to let Herb and his crowd crow over us?" |
7143 | If they could stay here two nights a''ready, what''s a- goin''to hurt us inside of only one hour, tell me that, hey?" |
7143 | Last of all, why go on_ up_ the river? |
7143 | Listen to him, would you? |
7143 | Look at the stuff scattered around, would you?" |
7143 | Or could it be that the boys were sitting up unusually late? |
7143 | Say, did n''t I tell you that if there was anybody goin''to be eat up by cats, it''d be me?" |
7143 | See?" |
7143 | Somebody tell me what that big thief wanted with me last night, when he grabbed my leg, and started to haul me out of the tent? |
7143 | Still, that awful howl we heard last night-- I keep wonderin''what it meant, fellers?" |
7143 | They do n''t ketch you asleep, do they? |
7143 | What could be delaying the man? |
7143 | What did you tell Herb? |
7143 | What does it look like, Max?" |
7143 | What if this were one of the deadly species that was being attracted toward his crouching form? |
7143 | What sort of a trap, would you mind telling us, young man?" |
7143 | What was that?" |
7143 | What''ll I do-- jump over and swim for the shore right here?" |
7143 | What''ll we do about it?" |
7143 | Whatever ails him, d''ye think, Max?" |
7143 | When shall we begin operations, Steve?" |
7143 | Who were they, and why did they seem to be so greatly interested in Catamount Island? |
7143 | Wonder what became of the beggars? |
7143 | Would n''t I get left behind, and that''d mean make a meal for the big woods cat? |
7143 | are you?" |
7143 | asked Owen, who also detected some unusual signs of disgust about the returned fisherman;"did the biggest get away, like it always does? |
7143 | declared the indignant Bandy- legs;"guess I''d''a''felt it, would n''t I, Max?" |
7143 | demanded Bandy legs? |
7143 | did n''t we see Max Hastings and his crowd there on the foot of the plagued island? |
7143 | what do you suppose that was?" |
7143 | what you think you''ll find there, diamonds this time?" |
7143 | what''s on the carpet now, tell me, Max?" |
7143 | what''s the matter with you?" |
7143 | who''s that?" |
7143 | your canoe?" |
12423 | A plurality? |
12423 | Against it? |
12423 | And what should be done with the freedmen? |
12423 | Are the states"sovereign states"? |
12423 | Are they still self- evident? |
12423 | At Boston? |
12423 | At the close of January, 1777, what places were held by the British? |
12423 | But the real question was, should slaves who had no vote be counted as a part of the population? |
12423 | But what should be done with California and with New Mexico? |
12423 | But which of them should be President? |
12423 | By Hamilton? |
12423 | By whom? |
12423 | CHAPTER 26 §§ 276, 277.--_a._ What is meant by the Era of Good Feeling? |
12423 | CHAPTER 33 THE COMPROMISE OF 1850[ Sidenote: Should Oregon and Mexican cessions be free soil?] |
12423 | Can the taxing power and the legislative power be separated? |
12423 | Chase? |
12423 | Compromise as to Apportionment.--Should the members of the House of Representatives be distributed among the states according to population? |
12423 | Could it not be set aside on the ground that there was no longer a French monarchy? |
12423 | Could the Southerners have done otherwise than fire on the flag? |
12423 | Could the Spanish war have been avoided? |
12423 | Could these states have been neutral? |
12423 | Could they have been avoided? |
12423 | Did Lee and other officers who resigned necessarily believe in the right of secession? |
12423 | Did Mexico begin the war? |
12423 | Did a white man in the North and in the South have proportionally the same representation in the House? |
12423 | Did the British government act wisely? |
12423 | Did the"spoils system"originate with Jackson? |
12423 | Do the same objections hold against the present Stamp tax? |
12423 | Do the same reasons exist to- day? |
12423 | Do we still keep to the Monroe Doctrine in all respects? |
12423 | Do you consider such a method wise or not? |
12423 | Do you consider such a system better or worse than the Spoils System? |
12423 | Do you think his action justifiable? |
12423 | Do you think that a President should"reign"? |
12423 | Do you think that laws made by a legislature so elected were binding? |
12423 | Do you think that railroads should be carried on by the state or by individuals? |
12423 | Do you think that roads should be built at national expense? |
12423 | Exactly what was the condition as to Cuba? |
12423 | Explain carefully the plan of the campaign to Corinth Why was Corinth important? |
12423 | For what did Garrison contend, and how did he make his views known? |
12423 | For whom would you have voted had you had the right to vote in 1824? |
12423 | From what parts of the country did the volunteers come? |
12423 | Had sea power been in Southern hands, could the Union have been saved? |
12423 | Had slavery disappeared in the North because people thought that it was wrong? |
12423 | Had you lived in 1840, for whom would you have voted? |
12423 | How and why had the center of population changed since 1791? |
12423 | How are Williams''s ideas as to religious freedom regarded now? |
12423 | How are manufactures protected? |
12423 | How could the Articles of Confederation be amended? |
12423 | How did Hamilton set to work to defeat Adams? |
12423 | How did Hobson try to prevent the escape of the Spanish fleet? |
12423 | How did Jackson oppose the South Carolinians? |
12423 | How did Jackson try to ruin the United States Bank? |
12423 | How did Jackson try to stop speculation? |
12423 | How did Jefferson''s inauguration illustrate his political ideas? |
12423 | How did Lee secure the removal of McClellan''s army from the James? |
12423 | How did Lee try to compel the withdrawal of Grant? |
12423 | How did Parliament punish the colonists of Massachusetts and Boston? |
12423 | How did Sherman''s occupation of Raleigh affect Lee? |
12423 | How did South Carolina oppose the Act of 1832? |
12423 | How did Spain get the Floridas? |
12423 | How did Townshend try to raise money? |
12423 | How did Whitney''s cotton gin change these conditions? |
12423 | How did all these affairs affect the relations between the United States and Great Britain? |
12423 | How did he carry it out? |
12423 | How did it fit him for this work? |
12423 | How did its formation make the election of Polk possible? |
12423 | How did some states treat other states? |
12423 | How did the British army get to Yorktown? |
12423 | How did the Carolina proprietors treat their colonists? |
12423 | How did the Compromise postpone the conflict over slavery? |
12423 | How did the Cuban rebellion come to an end? |
12423 | How did the McCormick reaper solve the difficulty in wheat growing? |
12423 | How did the Pequod War affect the colonists on the Connecticut? |
12423 | How did the United States acquire Louisiana? |
12423 | How did the accession of Charles II affect the colonies? |
12423 | How did the battle of Bennington affect the campaign? |
12423 | How did the choice of Washington as first President influence popular feeling toward the new government? |
12423 | How did the favoring the"pet banks"increase speculation? |
12423 | How did the holding these lands benefit the United States? |
12423 | How did the king interfere with these claims? |
12423 | How did the new government encourage manufacturing? |
12423 | How did the new government of England regard Massachusetts? |
12423 | How did the repeal of the Sherman Law affect confidence in the future of business? |
12423 | How did their action influence the election? |
12423 | How did these inventions make large cities possible? |
12423 | How did they show their opposition? |
12423 | How did they treat American ships? |
12423 | How did they treat the Indians? |
12423 | How did they try to injure one another? |
12423 | How did this act of Napoleon''s set the Monroe Doctrine at defiance? |
12423 | How did this expedition affect the later growth of the United States? |
12423 | How did this plan differ from the Stamp tax? |
12423 | How did this turn the scale of war? |
12423 | How do they influence the opinions of the people? |
12423 | How does his speech show the increase of the love of the Union? |
12423 | How far did he succeed? |
12423 | How far has later history proved the truth of his words? |
12423 | How had Grant shown his fitness for high command? |
12423 | How had Sherman''s victories affected the blockade? |
12423 | How had Washington and Adams filled offices? |
12423 | How had it fared with Grant? |
12423 | How had railroads increased, and what improvements had been made? |
12423 | How had the demands of the Southerners concerning slavery increased? |
12423 | How had the population of the states changed since 1790? |
12423 | How had the question of slavery already divided the country? |
12423 | How had the use of steamboats increased? |
12423 | How had the war altered Lincoln''s power as President? |
12423 | How has machinery influenced the history of the United States? |
12423 | How is this right secured to citizens of the United States? |
12423 | How must bribery in political life affect a government? |
12423 | How was Congress able to pass a bill over the President''s veto? |
12423 | How was Jackson fitted to meet difficulties? |
12423 | How was Mason and Dixon''s line famous later? |
12423 | How was it affected by his death? |
12423 | How was it connected with the"spoils system"? |
12423 | How was it finally captured? |
12423 | How was it known that Jefferson''s election was the wish of the voters? |
12423 | How was it proposed to overcome this difficulty? |
12423 | How was it regarded by Englishmen? |
12423 | How was it settled? |
12423 | How was it settled? |
12423 | How was its capture accomplished? |
12423 | How was slavery as an institution abolished throughout the United States? |
12423 | How was the Constitution ratified? |
12423 | How was the Emancipation Proclamation justified? |
12423 | How was the Republican party formed? |
12423 | How was the South dependent upon the North? |
12423 | How was the action of the Republicans regarded by Washington? |
12423 | How was the dispute finally settled? |
12423 | How was the idea of the Association carried out? |
12423 | How was the injury to our shipping during the Civil War connected with Great Britain? |
12423 | How was the institution of slavery abolished? |
12423 | How was the matter finally settled? |
12423 | How was the matter settled? |
12423 | How was the matter settled? |
12423 | How was the news of this affair received in America? |
12423 | How was the rebellion suppressed? |
12423 | How was this ground hallowed? |
12423 | How was this matter settled? |
12423 | How was this proposal regarded by Americans? |
12423 | How were Roman Catholics treated in England? |
12423 | How were the British connected with this Indian trouble? |
12423 | How were the slaves contraband? |
12423 | How were their hopes disappointed? |
12423 | How were these candidates nominated? |
12423 | How would this act affect the growth of the colonies? |
12423 | How would you have acted had you been a United States officer called to carry out the Fugitive Slave Law? |
12423 | How would you have voted on this question? |
12423 | If a bill is vetoed by the President, how can it still be made a law? |
12423 | If such proposals were carried out, what would be the effect on the Union? |
12423 | If you had been a Representative in 1824, for whom would you have voted? |
12423 | In the United States? |
12423 | In what European war were the Swedes and the Dutch engaged? |
12423 | In what other question similar to this had South Carolina led? |
12423 | In what respects was Jackson fitted for President? |
12423 | In what respects was Jackson unlike the early Presidents? |
12423 | In what respects were the colonial governments alike? |
12423 | In what respects were they unlike? |
12423 | In which colony would you have liked to live, and why? |
12423 | In whose hands do appointments to federal offices lie? |
12423 | Is a stamp tax a good kind of tax? |
12423 | Is it better to settle disputes by arbitration or by war? |
12423 | Is it still the basis of government? |
12423 | Is it the same to- day? |
12423 | Is this period more important or less important than the period of war which preceded it? |
12423 | Is this wise? |
12423 | Of Congress? |
12423 | Of Scott''s campaign? |
12423 | Of the Supreme Court? |
12423 | Of what advantage has the telegraph been to the United States? |
12423 | Of what advantage to the South were the negroes? |
12423 | Of what use are newspapers? |
12423 | Of what value was this region to the United States? |
12423 | On America? |
12423 | On France? |
12423 | On the other colonies? |
12423 | On what land did the Swedes settle? |
12423 | On what matters did Roger Williams disagree with the rulers of Massachusetts? |
12423 | Passage of the Ordinance of 1787.--What should be done with the lands which in this way had come into the possession of the people of all the states? |
12423 | Pierce? |
12423 | Precisely what is meant by"reconstruction"? |
12423 | Should a man be given an office simply because he has helped his party? |
12423 | Should city governments be conducted as business enterprises? |
12423 | Should it be free soil or should it be slave soil? |
12423 | Should the United States be a"world power"? |
12423 | Sumner? |
12423 | The Independent Treasury System.--What should be done with the government''s money? |
12423 | The South? |
12423 | The Wilmot Proviso, 1846.--What should be done with Oregon and with the immense territory received from Mexico? |
12423 | The mistakes? |
12423 | The"stay laws"? |
12423 | They were reddish in color and interested Columbus-- for were they not inhabitants of the Far East? |
12423 | To how much honor are the Northmen entitled as the discoverers of America? |
12423 | To what party did Tyler belong? |
12423 | To what was the prosperity of Virginia due? |
12423 | To what was the refusal to receive Pinckney equivalent? |
12423 | To what was this great success due? |
12423 | To whom did Charles give this territory? |
12423 | Under the spoils system what would naturally follow? |
12423 | Under what conditions were the remaining seceded states readmitted? |
12423 | Upon people''s minds? |
12423 | Upon the British? |
12423 | Upon the growth of cities? |
12423 | Upon what would its enforcement depend? |
12423 | Was Bacon a rebel? |
12423 | Was Douglas a patriot? |
12423 | Was Douglas''s declaration in harmony with the decision of the Supreme Court? |
12423 | Was Henry''s criticism true? |
12423 | Was a slave a person or a thing? |
12423 | Was he a traitor? |
12423 | Was his inaugural conciliatory to the South? |
12423 | Was it true or false? |
12423 | Was it wise to have one man in command of all the armies? |
12423 | Was it wise to let the Southerners work out their questions for themselves or not? |
12423 | Was the South justified in thinking that the North would yield? |
12423 | Was the United States Bank like the national banks of the present day? |
12423 | Was the burning of the public buildings justifiable? |
12423 | Was the doctrine of popular sovereignty necessarily favorable to slavery? |
12423 | Was the offer of the British government enough? |
12423 | Was the plan a wise one from the British point of view? |
12423 | Was the reduction of the navy wise? |
12423 | Was the territory Ralegh named Virginia just what is now the state of Virginia? |
12423 | Was their action wise? |
12423 | Was there any reason for the fear on the part of business men? |
12423 | Was there the least injustice in the treatment of Andrà ©? |
12423 | Was this a good way to settle important questions? |
12423 | Was this bank like one of the national banks of to- day? |
12423 | Was this important? |
12423 | Were all the Southern whites slave owners? |
12423 | Were its principles like or unlike those of the Republican party of Jefferson''s time? |
12423 | Were the Massachusetts colonists rebels? |
12423 | Were the New England colonies difficult to govern? |
12423 | Were the Southern states in any particular danger? |
12423 | Were the colonies independent when the Declaration of Independence was adopted? |
12423 | Were the harbors well defended? |
12423 | Were the people of the South generally in favor of secession? |
12423 | Were the years 1857- 61 more or less"critical"than the years 1783- 87? |
12423 | Were there any good points in the slave system? |
12423 | Were these ideas new? |
12423 | What action did Great Britain take? |
12423 | What action did President Taylor take? |
12423 | What action did the American settlers in California take? |
12423 | What action did the British merchants take? |
12423 | What action did the government take? |
12423 | What advantage has Alaska been to the United States? |
12423 | What advantage would the occupation of New York give the British? |
12423 | What advantages did it possess for the Spaniards? |
12423 | What advantages did the founders of Massachusetts have over those of New Plymouth? |
12423 | What advantages had Grant not possessed by McClellan? |
12423 | What aid had Great Britain given to the Confederates? |
12423 | What are customs duties? |
12423 | What are some of the problems now before the American people? |
12423 | What are the advantages and disadvantages of a tariff? |
12423 | What are the important duties of citizens? |
12423 | What are the important points in his Farewell Address? |
12423 | What are the three great compromises of the Constitution? |
12423 | What arrangements were made for the comfort and health of the people? |
12423 | What attitude did California take on the slavery question? |
12423 | What attitude had Mexico taken on slavery? |
12423 | What attracted the Dutch to the region discovered by Hudson? |
12423 | What candidates were named? |
12423 | What caused the trouble with the Indians? |
12423 | What change in the control of the Senate had taken place? |
12423 | What changes did Andros make in New England? |
12423 | What changes did William and Mary make in the colonial governments? |
12423 | What changes would their admission make in Congress? |
12423 | What charges were made against Adams? |
12423 | What classes of people were there in Virginia? |
12423 | What common interest did all the states have? |
12423 | What complaints did the people of Virginia make? |
12423 | What compromise did Buchanan suggest? |
12423 | What conditions make a large navy necessary? |
12423 | What custom was established by these early Presidents? |
12423 | What danger is there in such power? |
12423 | What declaration was made by the Republican party as to slavery? |
12423 | What departments were decided upon? |
12423 | What did France lose? |
12423 | What did Franklin say about the feeling in the colonies? |
12423 | What did Lincoln say about the Union? |
12423 | What did Maryland contend? |
12423 | What did Seward mean by saying that there was a"higher law"than the Constitution? |
12423 | What did Sherman''s army accomplish on its way to the sea? |
12423 | What did Spain gain? |
12423 | What did Squanto do for the Pilgrims? |
12423 | What did he say about slavery? |
12423 | What did he think of the Kansas- Nebraska Act? |
12423 | What did the British government hope to accomplish in the tea business? |
12423 | What did the Stamp Act Congress do? |
12423 | What did the allies propose as to America? |
12423 | What did the election of Grant show? |
12423 | What difference did_ one year_ make in the population of California? |
12423 | What difficulties in the United States showed the necessity of a stronger government? |
12423 | What dispute had long existed with Great Britain? |
12423 | What dispute with Mexico arose? |
12423 | What divisions took place in the Democratic party? |
12423 | What do Perry''s and McDonough''s victories show? |
12423 | What do the existing pueblos teach us about the Indians of Coronado''s time? |
12423 | What do you consider the most decisive battle of the war? |
12423 | What do you think of Lincoln''s action? |
12423 | What do you think of Napoleon''s treatment of the United States? |
12423 | What do you think of Sir Thomas Dale? |
12423 | What do you think of Weyler''s policy? |
12423 | What do you think of the action of the English mill operatives? |
12423 | What do you think of the justice of removing Schuyler? |
12423 | What do you think of the provision as to debts? |
12423 | What do you think of the provision relating to the use of the army? |
12423 | What do you think of the wisdom and justice of such a plan? |
12423 | What do you think of the wisdom of his actions? |
12423 | What do you think of the wisdom of the compromise as to apportionment? |
12423 | What do you think of the wisdom of the plan? |
12423 | What do you think of the wisdom of this policy? |
12423 | What do you think of these suggestions? |
12423 | What doctrine did Douglas apply to Kansas and Nebraska? |
12423 | What does it show as to Thomas''s ability? |
12423 | What does the Senate represent? |
12423 | What does the name show? |
12423 | What does this show about the feeling of both parties toward the government? |
12423 | What effect did it have upon business? |
12423 | What effect did the Kansas- Nebraska Act have on the settlement of Kansas? |
12423 | What effect did the control of the Mississippi have upon the Confederacy? |
12423 | What effect did the_ Monitor- Merrimac_ fight have on McClellan''s campaign? |
12423 | What effect did these laws have on Massachusetts? |
12423 | What events at first seemed to disprove Franklin''s prophecy? |
12423 | What events in any colony have shown that its people desired more liberty? |
12423 | What events showed Greene''s foresight? |
12423 | What extreme parties were there in the North and the South? |
12423 | What fact hindered the growth of cotton on a large scale in colonial times? |
12423 | What government did England have after the execution of Charles I? |
12423 | What government did the colonies really have? |
12423 | What government was formed by them? |
12423 | What great change was made by Congress in the Declaration? |
12423 | What had Blair done for the Union? |
12423 | What had Lincoln said in his inaugural? |
12423 | What had been the feeling of most of the colonists toward England? |
12423 | What had caused the growth of the Northern cities? |
12423 | What had caused the growth of the Northwest? |
12423 | What had the Republican party declared about slavery in the states? |
12423 | What help did the Southerners hope to obtain from Great Britain and France? |
12423 | What important discoveries did Lewis and Clark make? |
12423 | What important matters have been definitely settled during the past one hundred years? |
12423 | What influence did the telegraph have? |
12423 | What influence has the railroad had upon the Union? |
12423 | What is a blockade? |
12423 | What is a blockade? |
12423 | What is a bribe? |
12423 | What is a caucus? |
12423 | What is a compromise? |
12423 | What is a constitution? |
12423 | What is a majority? |
12423 | What is a privateer? |
12423 | What is a rebel? |
12423 | What is a veto? |
12423 | What is a"despotism"? |
12423 | What is a"joint resolution"? |
12423 | What is a"party machine"? |
12423 | What is an"unfriendly act"? |
12423 | What is contraband of war? |
12423 | What is declared to be the basis of government? |
12423 | What is meant by his"kitchen cabinet"? |
12423 | What is meant by saying that Parliament was"the supreme power in the British Empire"? |
12423 | What is meant by the phrase"assumption of the state debts"? |
12423 | What is meant by the phrase"change of base"? |
12423 | What is meant by the phrase"public credit"? |
12423 | What is meant by the phrase"unconditional surrender"? |
12423 | What is meant by the word"demonetization"? |
12423 | What is meant by the"Merit System"? |
12423 | What is meant by the"rising spirit of nationality"? |
12423 | What is meant by toleration? |
12423 | What is meant by"arbitration"? |
12423 | What is meant by"squatter sovereignty"? |
12423 | What is sedition? |
12423 | What is the Civil Service? |
12423 | What is the advantage of such an exhibition? |
12423 | What is the case to- day in your own state? |
12423 | What is the difference between a national and a federal government? |
12423 | What is the difference between a tax laid by a tariff on imported goods and an internal revenue tax? |
12423 | What is the difference between internal revenue taxes and customs duties? |
12423 | What is the force of the writ of_ habeas corpus_? |
12423 | What is the meaning of the phrase"too conspicuous"? |
12423 | What is the meaning of the word"Puritan"( see § 43)? |
12423 | What is the"supreme law of the land"? |
12423 | What is treason? |
12423 | What is"reciprocity"? |
12423 | What is"tariff reform"? |
12423 | What kind of a governor was Stuyvesant? |
12423 | What land did Columbus think that he had reached? |
12423 | What law had been made as to fugitive slaves? |
12423 | What laws were made about the commerce of the colonies? |
12423 | What more should have been promised? |
12423 | What oath did Lincoln take? |
12423 | What oath had the officers of the United States army and navy taken? |
12423 | What of its justice? |
12423 | What other Italians sailed across the Atlantic before 1500? |
12423 | What other colony was united with Connecticut? |
12423 | What other states followed South Carolina? |
12423 | What party came into power in 1841? |
12423 | What places were captured? |
12423 | What policy did Horace Greeley uphold? |
12423 | What policy did each uphold? |
12423 | What position did the Union army keep as regards the Confederates? |
12423 | What position does Washington hold in our history? |
12423 | What power did the Alien Act give the President? |
12423 | What power does the Constitution give Congress over a territory? |
12423 | What power had Congress over the mails? |
12423 | What power has Congress over the Judiciary? |
12423 | What principles did they stand for? |
12423 | What privileges did the patroons have? |
12423 | What privileges were the settlers to have? |
12423 | What promises had the Spaniards made to the Cubans and how had they kept them? |
12423 | What quality in Grant was conspicuous at Shiloh? |
12423 | What question arose concerning the site of the national capital? |
12423 | What reasons did Otis give for his opposition to the writs of assistance? |
12423 | What reasons were given for keeping an army in America? |
12423 | What resulted from this division? |
12423 | What results followed? |
12423 | What right had the King of Great Britain to veto a Virginia law? |
12423 | What rights did the Supreme Court declare a slave could not possess? |
12423 | What scandal arose in connection with the Union Pacific Railway? |
12423 | What slave states were not affected by this proclamation? |
12423 | What statement did Davis make as to Lincoln? |
12423 | What steps had already been taken by Congress toward freeing the slaves? |
12423 | What suggestions were made by some in the North for the ending of slavery? |
12423 | What territory did England gain in 1763? |
12423 | What the House? |
12423 | What third party was formed? |
12423 | What trouble arose with Maryland about the boundary line? |
12423 | What trouble broke out in Cuba? |
12423 | What troubles arose in the South? |
12423 | What truths are declared to be self- evident? |
12423 | What two methods does the Constitution provide for its amendment? |
12423 | What two new states were admitted in 1791- 92? |
12423 | What two parties were fighting in England? |
12423 | What two points were especially emphasized in their constitution? |
12423 | What valuable work was done at Valley Forge? |
12423 | What view did Webster take? |
12423 | What view did she take of slavery? |
12423 | What was Bragg''s object in invading Kentucky? |
12423 | What was Grant''s wish? |
12423 | What was Jefferson''s policy toward expenses? |
12423 | What was Johnson''s attitude toward reconstruction? |
12423 | What was Lee''s object in invading Pennsylvania? |
12423 | What was done with the surplus? |
12423 | What was the Force Act? |
12423 | What was the Liberty party? |
12423 | What was the Massachusetts Circular Letter? |
12423 | What was the Sherman Silver Law? |
12423 | What was the advantage of having Washington act as President of the Convention? |
12423 | What was the cause of Garfield''s murder? |
12423 | What was the cause of King Philip''s War? |
12423 | What was the chief wish of the Spanish explorers? |
12423 | What was the effect of Burgoyne''s surrender on Great Britain? |
12423 | What was the effect of St. Leger''s retreat to Canada? |
12423 | What was the effect of the blockade on the South? |
12423 | What was the effect of this measure? |
12423 | What was the effect on Northern opinion of the attack on Fort Sumter? |
12423 | What was the extent of Oregon in 1845? |
12423 | What was the extent of Oregon in 1847? |
12423 | What was the force of the Emancipation Proclamation? |
12423 | What was the force of the Tenure of Office Act, and why was it passed? |
12423 | What was the great difference mentioned in § 196? |
12423 | What was the great objection to it? |
12423 | What was the great question settled by this war? |
12423 | What was the great task before the people? |
12423 | What was the important work of Madison? |
12423 | What was the new point in Monroe''s message? |
12423 | What was the object of Burgoyne''s campaign? |
12423 | What was the object of the Continental Congress? |
12423 | What was the object of the Dutch West India Company? |
12423 | What was the object of the Mayflower Compact? |
12423 | What was the plan of Taylor''s campaign? |
12423 | What was the real object of Sherman''s march to the sea? |
12423 | What was the real significance of Cleveland''s first election? |
12423 | What was the reason for the American successes? |
12423 | What was the result of Buchanan''s attempt to send supplies to Fort Sumter? |
12423 | What was the result of Gage''s attempt to seize the arms at Concord? |
12423 | What was the result of Hamilton''s intrigues? |
12423 | What was the result of Hood''s attacks? |
12423 | What was the result of each of these battles? |
12423 | What was the result of the battle of the Cowpens? |
12423 | What was the result of the declaration as to slaves? |
12423 | What was the result of the election? |
12423 | What was the result of the election? |
12423 | What was the result of the election? |
12423 | What was the result of the expedition? |
12423 | What was the result of the seizure of the_ Liberty_? |
12423 | What was the result of their actions? |
12423 | What was the result of these economies? |
12423 | What was the result of these wars? |
12423 | What was the result of this battle? |
12423 | What was the result of this expedition? |
12423 | What was the result of this rebellion? |
12423 | What was the work of a Committee of Correspondence? |
12423 | What was the"Whiskey Ring"? |
12423 | What was the"draft,"and why was it necessary? |
12423 | What was their attitude on slavery? |
12423 | What was their hope in threatening secession? |
12423 | What was there peculiar in Lincoln''s election? |
12423 | What were Jefferson''s objections to a third term? |
12423 | What were Lincoln''s leading characteristics? |
12423 | What were Lincoln''s personal views as to slavery? |
12423 | What were its advantages? |
12423 | What were some of the duties of the President? |
12423 | What were the Non- importation agreements? |
12423 | What were the Virginia Resolves of 1769? |
12423 | What were the advantages of Webster''s"Dictionary"? |
12423 | What were the arguments in favor of the extension of slavery? |
12423 | What were the chief difficulties in the way of reconstruction? |
12423 | What were the chief weaknesses of the Confederation? |
12423 | What were the early steamboats like? |
12423 | What were the effects of the battle upon the Americans? |
12423 | What were the effects of the seizure of Ticonderoga on the siege of Boston? |
12423 | What were the effects of this union? |
12423 | What were the four most important things in Jefferson''s administrations? |
12423 | What were the good points in Jackson''s administration? |
12423 | What were the great objections to the New Jersey plan? |
12423 | What were the issues in the campaign of 1868? |
12423 | What were the provisions of the Fifteenth Amendment? |
12423 | What were the results of his treatment of the Indians? |
12423 | What were the results of the French alliance? |
12423 | What were the results of the battle of Guilford? |
12423 | What were the results of the war? |
12423 | What were the results of this action? |
12423 | What were the results of this invention? |
12423 | What were the theories on which the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions were based? |
12423 | What were the"best roads"in 1800? |
12423 | What were the"border states"? |
12423 | What were the"tender laws"? |
12423 | What work did the Jesuits do for the Indians? |
12423 | What would Jackson probably have done had he been President? |
12423 | What would be the arguments in Congress for and against this"proviso"? |
12423 | What would be the result of a grand march through Georgia to the seacoast, and then northward through the Carolinas to Virginia? |
12423 | When and how had Louisiana changed hands since its settlement? |
12423 | When did it end? |
12423 | When did the Revolution begin? |
12423 | When signed? |
12423 | When was the Declaration adopted? |
12423 | Where did the United States government keep its money? |
12423 | Where have we found Madison prominent before? |
12423 | Where have you already found the ideas expressed in Calhoun''s_ Exposition_? |
12423 | Where is it now? |
12423 | Where is the nation''s money kept to- day? |
12423 | Where was Fort Duquesne? |
12423 | Where was there the greatest density of population? |
12423 | Where were the negotiations for peace carried on? |
12423 | Which country, England, France, or Spain, had the best claim to the Mississippi valley? |
12423 | Which ideas prevail to- day? |
12423 | Which method has always been followed? |
12423 | Which method is followed to- day? |
12423 | Which of these acts was most severe? |
12423 | Which of these favored the North? |
12423 | Which party would you have joined had you lived then? |
12423 | Which side had the greater advantages? |
12423 | Which side really won in the Parson''s Cause? |
12423 | Who had directed the war before? |
12423 | Who should be the Republican standard bearer? |
12423 | Who was Charles Lee? |
12423 | Who was Mrs. Stowe? |
12423 | Who was chosen? |
12423 | Who was elected? |
12423 | Who was finally chosen? |
12423 | Who were nominated? |
12423 | Who were some of the important writers? |
12423 | Who were the Hessians? |
12423 | Who were the candidates for President in 1824? |
12423 | Who were the candidates in 1852? |
12423 | Who were the leading Republican candidates? |
12423 | Who were the leading candidates for the presidency in 1896? |
12423 | Who were the"Mugwumps"? |
12423 | Who won the battle of Bunker Hill? |
12423 | Who would be excluded by the Maryland Toleration Act? |
12423 | Whose business is it to decide on the constitutionality of a law? |
12423 | Why are Lawrence''s words so inspiring? |
12423 | Why are such writs prohibited by the Constitution of the United States? |
12423 | Why are the Hawaiian Islands important to the United States? |
12423 | Why are these steps important? |
12423 | Why could he not carry them out? |
12423 | Why could not Admiral Dewey remain at Hong Kong? |
12423 | Why did Charles and James dislike the growing liberty of the colonies? |
12423 | Why did Chase call this bill"a violation of faith"? |
12423 | Why did Congress determine to attack Canada? |
12423 | Why did Congress give Washington sole direction of the war? |
12423 | Why did Connecticut need a charter when she already had a constitution? |
12423 | Why did Davis advocate war on Northern soil? |
12423 | Why did England wish to conquer New Netherland? |
12423 | Why did General Miles land on the southern coast? |
12423 | Why did Grant impose trust in him? |
12423 | Why did Hamilton want a Bank of the United States? |
12423 | Why did Jackson dislike and distrust the United States Bank? |
12423 | Why did Lincoln inform the governor of South Carolina of his determination to succor Fort Sumter? |
12423 | Why did New Jersey and Delaware oppose the Virginia plan? |
12423 | Why did Texas wish to join the United States? |
12423 | Why did Verrazano explore the northeastern coasts? |
12423 | Why did Washington decline a third term? |
12423 | Why did colonists come to Pennsylvania? |
12423 | Why did he not succeed? |
12423 | Why did money become scarce in the summer of 1893? |
12423 | Why did not Congress have any real power? |
12423 | Why did not the people of New Amsterdam wish to fight the English? |
12423 | Why did people wish to buy Western lands? |
12423 | Why did she not give more assistance? |
12423 | Why did slaveholders feel the need of more slave territory in the Union? |
12423 | Why did so many people live near tide water? |
12423 | Why did the British attack at this point? |
12423 | Why did the British object to the boundary line laid down in the Treaty of 1783? |
12423 | Why did the Connecticut people feel the need of one? |
12423 | Why did the Democrats nominate Greeley? |
12423 | Why did the Dutch East India Company wish a northern route to India? |
12423 | Why did the New Haven settlers found a separate colony? |
12423 | Why did the Pilgrims come to America? |
12423 | Why did the Republicans sympathize with the French Revolution? |
12423 | Why did the Southerners object to the admission of Maine? |
12423 | Why did the capture of the_ Chesapeake_ cause so much delight in England? |
12423 | Why did the colonists refuse to buy the tea? |
12423 | Why did the impeachment fail? |
12423 | Why did the plan fail? |
12423 | Why did the struggle between England and France begin in the Ohio valley? |
12423 | Why did the value of paper money keep changing? |
12423 | Why did"prices go down with a rush"? |
12423 | Why do you select these? |
12423 | Why do you select these? |
12423 | Why do you select these? |
12423 | Why had Washington and Adams paid them? |
12423 | Why had it not been enforced? |
12423 | Why had manufacturing received so little attention before the Revolution? |
12423 | Why had the control of the House passed to the free states? |
12423 | Why had this feeling changed? |
12423 | Why had this led to the separation of the West and the East? |
12423 | Why had this progress been confined mainly to the North? |
12423 | Why is Civil Service Reform so difficult? |
12423 | Why is Sir Edwin Sandys regarded as the founder of free government in the English colonies? |
12423 | Why is he the greatest of all Americans? |
12423 | Why is it called a massacre? |
12423 | Why is it deserved? |
12423 | Why is it memorable? |
12423 | Why is it so important? |
12423 | Why is the Connecticut constitution famous? |
12423 | Why is the education of our people so important? |
12423 | Why is the period covered by this division so important? |
12423 | Why is the right of petition so important? |
12423 | Why is this Ordinance so important? |
12423 | Why is this book so important? |
12423 | Why is this chapter called the"Reign of Andrew Jackson"? |
12423 | Why should disputes as to elections for President go to the House? |
12423 | Why should not steam be used to haul wagons over a railroad? |
12423 | Why should slavery be allowed west of the Mississippi River? |
12423 | Why should the Southerners have felt so strongly about this election? |
12423 | Why should the people have shown loyalty to the states rather than to the United States? |
12423 | Why should the speculator get one dollar for that which had cost him only thirty or forty cents? |
12423 | Why should these petitions be considered as insulting to slaveholders? |
12423 | Why should they not pay a part of the cost of maintaining it? |
12423 | Why these? |
12423 | Why was Blaine so strongly opposed? |
12423 | Why was Cabot''s voyage important? |
12423 | Why was Charleston so difficult to capture? |
12423 | Why was Chattanooga important? |
12423 | Why was France wise to make peace with the United States? |
12423 | Why was Harrison chosen President? |
12423 | Why was Harrison defeated in 1892? |
12423 | Why was Jefferson asked to write the Declaration? |
12423 | Why was Johnson impeached? |
12423 | Why was Lincoln nominated? |
12423 | Why was Lincoln''s death a terrible loss to the South? |
12423 | Why was McClellan placed in command of the Army of the Potomac? |
12423 | Why was Mrs. Hutchinson expelled from Massachusetts? |
12423 | Why was Petersburg important? |
12423 | Why was Washington appointed to chief command? |
12423 | Why was Washington"stiff and aristocratic"? |
12423 | Why was a Navy Department necessary? |
12423 | Why was an attempt for a higher tariff made in 1828? |
12423 | Why was he unpopular? |
12423 | Why was it a failure? |
12423 | Why was it difficult for the government to carry on its business without a bank or a treasury? |
12423 | Why was it fought so bitterly? |
12423 | Why was it important south of this line? |
12423 | Why was it important? |
12423 | Why was it important? |
12423 | Why was it necessary for Lincoln to follow Northern sentiment? |
12423 | Why was it passed? |
12423 | Why was it unsuccessful? |
12423 | Why was its position important? |
12423 | Why was not the North united upon this war? |
12423 | Why was opposition to the nomination of Grant so strong? |
12423 | Why was silver demonetized? |
12423 | Why was slavery no longer of importance north of this line? |
12423 | Why was the Association so important? |
12423 | Why was the Holy Alliance formed? |
12423 | Why was the New World called America and not Columbia? |
12423 | Why was the North growing rich faster than the South? |
12423 | Why was the Shenandoah Valley so important? |
12423 | Why was the appointment of Clay a mistake? |
12423 | Why was the battle so important? |
12423 | Why was the change made in 1850 so important? |
12423 | Why was the colony prosperous? |
12423 | Why was the conquest of Vicksburg so difficult? |
12423 | Why was the destruction of the tea at Boston necessary? |
12423 | Why was the difference so great? |
12423 | Why was the effect of these victories so great? |
12423 | Why was the founding of William and Mary College important? |
12423 | Why was the navy better prepared for war than the army? |
12423 | Why was the question about the territories so important? |
12423 | Why was the scene of action transferred to the South? |
12423 | Why was the slavery contest"irrepressible"? |
12423 | Why was the voyage of the_ Oregon_ important? |
12423 | Why was there a conflict over the clause as to commerce? |
12423 | Why was there a dispute about the election of 1876? |
12423 | Why was there little question whether Oregon would be slave or free? |
12423 | Why was there so much bribery and corruption at this time? |
12423 | Why was there so much confusion in the army? |
12423 | Why was there so much opposition to Grant''s reëlection? |
12423 | Why was there such hesitation in the North? |
12423 | Why was this change so important? |
12423 | Why was this discovery of importance? |
12423 | Why was this doctrine so dangerous? |
12423 | Why were not more soldiers sent to McClellan? |
12423 | Why were the American people on the Atlantic seacoast alarmed? |
12423 | Why were the British attacks directed against these three portions of the country? |
12423 | Why were the Southerners so afraid of any discussion of slavery? |
12423 | Why were the Southerners so alarmed by Nat Turner''s Rebellion? |
12423 | Why were the Spaniards poor neighbors? |
12423 | Why were the Virginians so divided? |
12423 | Why were the elections of 1866 important? |
12423 | Why were the people of South Carolina so opposed to any limitation of slavery? |
12423 | Why were the protective tariffs of no benefit to the Southerners? |
12423 | Why were the seizures of Cairo and Paducah and the battle of Mill Springs important? |
12423 | Why were the soldiers needed after Dewey''s victory? |
12423 | Why were the soldiers stationed at New York? |
12423 | Why were there no executions for treason at the close of the Civil War? |
12423 | Why were there so few large cities in the slave states? |
12423 | Why were there so many loyalists? |
12423 | Why were these views opposed in the North? |
12423 | Why were they passed? |
12423 | Why were they so successful? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | Why? |
12423 | With what result? |
12423 | With what result? |
12423 | Would Washington have accepted the title of king? |
12423 | Would a state be likely to nullify an act of Congress now? |
12423 | Would it not then be fair for the people of the United States as a whole to pay them? |
12423 | Would not this unopposed march show the people of the North, of the South, and of Europe that further resistance was useless? |
12423 | _ b._ What matters occupied the attention of the people? |
12423 | _ b._ What people in the United States would welcome the purchase of Florida? |
12423 | _ b._ What propositions were made by the Hartford Convention? |
12423 | _ b._ What work did the privateers do? |
12423 | _ b._ Why did not this success of the Americans have more effect on the peace negotiations? |
12423 | _ b._ Why is it called the Second War of Independence? |
12423 | _ b._ Why was the news of the treaty so long in reaching Washington? |
12423 | _ c._ What does this section show you as to Jackson''s character? |
12423 | _ c._ What shows the sudden increase in Western migration? |
12423 | _ c._ What was settled by the war? |
12423 | _ c._ Why did Washington issue the Proclamation of Neutrality? |
12423 | _ c._ Why were the free states gaining faster than the slave states? |
12423 | c. What is meant by the statement that"he took possession"of the new land? |
12423 | c. What is sea- power? |
12423 | c. What other band of Spaniards nearly approached Coronado''s men? |
12423 | c. What portions of the world were known to Europeans in 1490? |
12423 | d. What effect did the defeat of Spain have upon_ our_ history? |
12423 | d. What other places were explored by the Spaniards? |
12423 | d. What reason had the Spaniards for attacking the French? |
12423 | voted? |
12423 | voted? |
12423 | § 106.--What colonies claimed land west of the Alleghany Mountains? |
12423 | § 273.--_a._ Why was so little advance made at first toward a treaty of peace? |
12423 | § 274.--_a._ Were the Federalists or the Republicans more truly the national party? |
12423 | § 280.--_a._ Why was Florida a danger to the United States? |
12423 | § 333.--How did the Mexicans regard the admission of Texas? |
12423 | §§ 271, 272.--_a._ Why were most of the naval conflicts during the first year of the war? |
12423 | §§ 376, 377.--_a_ Could one state dissolve the Union? |
12423 | §§ 394, 395.--_a_ Why did Lee invade Maryland? |
5407 | ''How long are we to be here?'' |
5407 | ''If the separation were final,''says Mr. Buckle, in a most eloquent and pathetic passage,''how could we stand up and live?'' |
5407 | ''What on earth shall we do,''we remember thinking,''if a fire breaks out?'' |
5407 | ''Will my father be there?'' |
5407 | After a long fit of musing, the Bishop turned to the chaplain, and asked the question whether nations might not go mad, as well as individuals? |
5407 | And does not Revelation( which our author holds in so deep reverence) teach that man was the last and noblest of the handiworks of the Creator? |
5407 | And if all this be most sober truth, what is there to except this joyful hope from that law to which, in all other deep joys, our minds are subject? |
5407 | And if nature seems inert, is not the rational conclusion that it is so? |
5407 | And now( to speak of less grave matters) when all I had to say about Growing Old seems very poor, do I see it rightly? |
5407 | And who is there that has not seen the parallel in actual life? |
5407 | And who shall reckon up the brains which this social calamity has driven into disease, or the early paralytic shocks which it has brought on? |
5407 | And why may not the highest of all hopes and joys possess the same all- pervading influence? |
5407 | Any more: any more? |
5407 | Are not we, as individuals, at rest, steadfast in space; evidently so to our own consciousness, demonstrably so in relation to the objects around us? |
5407 | Are you thinking rightly too? |
5407 | As Nicholas Nickleby very justly remarked, If Dotheboy''s Hall is not a hall, why call it one? |
5407 | As for biting, who does not know it? |
5407 | As to the use of the trumpet, how many advertising tailors and pill- makers could testify to the soundness of Ellesmere''s principle? |
5407 | At last he suddenly asked me,"Do sons often write the lives of fathers?" |
5407 | But by this time we can imagine our readers asking with some impatience, what is the Water Cure? |
5407 | But does not-- what every being likes depend on what it is? |
5407 | But is man at rest in space? |
5407 | But still, who can help loving the man, occasionally to be met, whose heart is right and whose talk is twaddle? |
5407 | But who can do that? |
5407 | Can it be doubtful which it is? |
5407 | Could Bacon have extemporized at the pace of talking, one of his Essays? |
5407 | Did Mr. Buckle ever read the letter of condolence which Sulpicius wrote to Cicero after the death of Cicero''s daughter? |
5407 | Did not God make, both man and nature? |
5407 | Did not he frequently allude to it in conversation with his companions? |
5407 | Did not he plague the servants for information as to the natural history and moral idiosyncrasy of donkeys? |
5407 | Did not the long- eared visage appear sometimes through his dreams? |
5407 | Did that ensure its being fine? |
5407 | Did you ever think to yourself,--Will the day come when I have been years away from that river''s side, and yet not care? |
5407 | Did you not feel for the poor fellow, the lecturer or exhibitor, when ne came in ten minutes past the hour, and found little but empty benches? |
5407 | Did you not feel somewhat afraid? |
5407 | Did you not see what a chill fell upon him: how stupified he seemed: in short, how much disappointed he was? |
5407 | Do I see it as my reader would always have seen it? |
5407 | Do n''t you all sometimes feel something like that? |
5407 | Do n''t you remember, my friend, how short a time that lonely meal lasted, and how very far from jovial the feast was? |
5407 | Do n''t you see the analogy I mean to trace? |
5407 | Do things usually turn out just as we particularly wish that they should turn out? |
5407 | Do you expect that the honest, stupid person will judge thus? |
5407 | Do you not feel the like when you look at many little matters, and then look into the Future Years? |
5407 | Do you not feel, my friend of even five- and- thirty, that there is music yet in the mention of summer days? |
5407 | Do you think, O blue- eyed banditti, Because you have scaled the wall, Such an old moustache as I am Is not a match for you all? |
5407 | Does it ever come across you, my friend, with something of a start, that things can not always go on in your lot as they are going now? |
5407 | Does natural death appear in utter helplessness and powerlessness? |
5407 | Does not a sudden thought sometimes flash upon you, a hasty, vivid glimpse, of what you will be long hereafter, if you are spared in this world? |
5407 | Does ordinary death render a man insensible to the presence of material things? |
5407 | Eh Robin, is this you? |
5407 | First: Why must every phenomenon be felt as inert? |
5407 | Friends, who have held like stations in life, have you not felt, now and then, a little waking up of old ideas and aspirations? |
5407 | Has natural death its essence in the entire separation it makes between dead and living? |
5407 | Has not many a young girl felt, like Cato, a''secret dread and inward horror''lest the pic- nic day should be rainy? |
5407 | Have we, if our religion is real, no anticipation of happiness in the glorious future? |
5407 | Have you ever read the Life of Mansie Wauch, Tailor in Dalkeith, by that pleasing poet and most amiable man, the late David Macbeth Moir? |
5407 | Have you never felt it? |
5407 | Have you never seen it? |
5407 | Have you not wondered at the tenacity of material life, and at the desperate grasp with which even the most wretched cling to it? |
5407 | Have you not, my philosophic friend, had your donkey? |
5407 | He will just be a common dog; and who that has reached your years cares for that? |
5407 | Here are the two things, Man and Nature; with which thing does the inertness lie? |
5407 | Here is the first-- Do n''t you know, my reader, that it is natural to think very bitterly of the misconduct which affects yourself? |
5407 | His race, his form, his name almost, unknown? |
5407 | How could that poor negro weigh the arguments on either side, and be sure that the blessed Faith, which was then his only support, was true? |
5407 | How does it affect his appetite? |
5407 | How does the notion of inertness come at all, then? |
5407 | How shall dissolution take place with due respect to the dead, and with least harm to the health and the feelings of the living? |
5407 | How should disappointment be met? |
5407 | I ask, is it certain that in all cases the second thought is the best;--is the right thought, as well as the calmest thought? |
5407 | If the professional man spends all he earns, what remains when the supply is cut off; when the toiling head and hand can toil no more? |
5407 | If this be the life of man, what is his death? |
5407 | If you had to appoint a postman, would you choose a man because he had no legs? |
5407 | Is corruption less corruption, in man''s view, because worms like it? |
5407 | Is damnation less damnation, in God''s view, because men like it? |
5407 | Is it reasonable to think that he did so in a fashion so blundering or so deceitful that we can only discern it wrong? |
5407 | Is not that just what millions of things actually do? |
5407 | Is not the mind unsoundly sensitive that finds an offence in a request like that? |
5407 | Is not this disappointment ft It everywhere? |
5407 | Is not, man( to say the least) one of the works of God? |
5407 | Is sin to be taken from men, as Eve was from Adam, by casting them into a deep slumber? |
5407 | Is the alternative worth fighting about? |
5407 | Is there no''rest that remaineth for the people of God,''no home and loving heart awaiting us when the toils of our hurried day of life are ended? |
5407 | It must be true, or how could he live?'' |
5407 | Marvel ye at such last words? |
5407 | May we not think upon all this( not dogmatically) in some such fashion as this? |
5407 | Might we not, if we had truly accepted the words of Scripture, have anticipated that it should be so? |
5407 | Mr. Squeers, in his reply, no doubt stated the law of the case: If a man chooses to call his house an island, what is to hinder him? |
5407 | No doubt we are dead: when shall we be quickened to a better life? |
5407 | No doubt, it is wise advice; but how to do all that? |
5407 | Not read it? |
5407 | Now, my friend, have you read Mr. Dickens''story of Martin Chuzzlewit? |
5407 | Now, shall I hate him? |
5407 | Now, was there ever so honest a biographer? |
5407 | Of course the figure is a woman; and the paragraph winds up with the following passage:-- Shall we go to her? |
5407 | Or has it faded into falsehood, as well as into distance and dimness? |
5407 | Or shall it tend to make him underrate himself, and allow inferior men of superior impudence to take the wall of him? |
5407 | Perhaps they have gone to Scotland? |
5407 | Pray go on, gentlemen; and have you, ladies, nothing to say against the wise man of the world that I have depicted? |
5407 | Secondly: Wherefore should we conclude that the phenomenon differs essentially from the fact? |
5407 | Shall Egypt lend out her ancients unto chirurgeons and apothecaries, and Cheops and Psammeticus be weighed unto us for drugs? |
5407 | Shall it lead him to fancy himself a man of very great importance? |
5407 | Shall we eat of Chamnes and Amasis in electuaries and pills, and be cured by cannibal mixtures? |
5407 | Should not I make him howl? |
5407 | Should not he taste the knout? |
5407 | Six times a day would they be expected to say promiscuously to any intelligent friend or stranger,''Have you read the Recreations of a Country Parson? |
5407 | So there we are placed on an equal footing; and what progress has been made in the argument of the question in debate? |
5407 | Taking it, then, as admitted, that the body must return to the dust from whence it was taken, the next question is, How? |
5407 | That harness-- how will you replace it? |
5407 | The friend looked somewhat disconcerted, and said,''Is it absolutely necessary that I should give the Lord''s Prayer?'' |
5407 | The question arises, whether the sorrows of the old or the young are the most acute? |
5407 | The question to be considered is, what is the best way to dispose of the mortal part of man when the soul has left it? |
5407 | The question you have to consider is, What ought your conduct to be towards a wrong- doer? |
5407 | There is that old dog: you Lave had him for many years; he is growing stiff and frail; what arc you to do when he dies? |
5407 | These old friends will die, you think; who will take their place? |
5407 | Thirdly: Why can not''inertness, as being absolute inaction, belong to that which truly is?'' |
5407 | To what is it all tending? |
5407 | Very likely he wants the money; so did the burglar: but is that any reason why you should give it to him? |
5407 | Was it not a curious mode of life? |
5407 | Was not I extremely anxious to catch the express train yesterday, and did not I miss it? |
5407 | We have heard it said that Macready never produced a greater effect than by the very simple words''Who said that?'' |
5407 | We naturally inquire of the first policeman we meet, What is the matter with Glasgow,--has anything dreadful happened? |
5407 | Well, was not the feeling a strange one? |
5407 | What can be cosier than the warm environment of sheet and blanket which encircles you in your snug bed? |
5407 | What do you care for it? |
5407 | What does it mean? |
5407 | What enjoyment of the summer days has the harassed suitor, waiting in nervous anxiety for the judgment or the verdict which may be his ruin? |
5407 | What is the precise nature of all those oddly- named appliances by which it produces its results? |
5407 | What might that time not do? |
5407 | What more do we want to make us truly man? |
5407 | What more fitting subject for a July Sunday than the teachings of the beautiful season which was passing over? |
5407 | What more magnanimous, you think, than to do the opposite of the wrong thing? |
5407 | What right had he to call one of the most admirable men in Britain''this unjust and unrighteous judge?'' |
5407 | What right had he to say that their motives were''the pride of their power and the wickedness of their hearts?'' |
5407 | What right had he to speak of Mr. Justice Coleridge as a''stony- hearted man?'' |
5407 | What said Samuel Johnson when Garrick showed him his grand house? |
5407 | What shall be said as to the effect which a solitary life will produce upon a man''s estimate of himself? |
5407 | What shall we call this lacking thing-- this one thing lacking whose absence is felt in every fibre of our being? |
5407 | What should he do? |
5407 | What sort of men are the Glasgow merchants? |
5407 | What talk concerning summer skies is like the sapphire radiance, so distant and pure, looking in through the church windows? |
5407 | What visions of earthly bliss can ever, if our Christian faith be not a form, compare with''the glory soon to be revealed?'' |
5407 | What was the use of talking to him? |
5407 | What worldly work so absorbing as to leave no room in a believer''s spirit for the hallowing thought of that glorious Presence ever near? |
5407 | What would the jury think if told that he will never get a penny of it? |
5407 | When I look back, and see Ailsa as a cloud, is it because it is a cloud and nothing more? |
5407 | When I look back, and see my thoughts as trash, is it because they are trash and no better? |
5407 | When I told you, a long time ago, that this book taught that man is dead and nature living, was this what the words conveyed to you? |
5407 | When will people see its silliness? |
5407 | When will this end? |
5407 | Where did we get the ideas of life and activity, if not from phenomena? |
5407 | Where have they gone? |
5407 | Where shall we discover such a one? |
5407 | Which is the natural way of speaking: to say that the man sees the tree, or that the tree shows itself to the man? |
5407 | Which of these has made best progress towards the end of being a good and efficient preacher? |
5407 | Who does not know this? |
5407 | Who shall say that any one of the successive wants the man has felt is more fanciful, less real, than any other? |
5407 | Who shall say that either disappointed man felt less bitterness and weariness of heart than the other? |
5407 | Who shall say that in one case out of every two, relative success is in proportion to relative merit? |
5407 | Who will believe that Mr. Justice Coleridge is distinguished for his''cold heart and shallow understanding?'' |
5407 | Why are we natural everywhere but in the pulpit? |
5407 | Why are we to depreciate the dweller that we may magnify the dwelling- place? |
5407 | Why believe that we are gratuitously and needlessly deluded? |
5407 | Why call in the aid of paralysis to piety? |
5407 | Why can not a thing exist without doing anything? |
5407 | Why does he put it for the time out of sight? |
5407 | Why does that incomparable monthly act blisteringly upon the writer''s mind? |
5407 | Why is it that Eclipse is first and the rest nowhere, while the legs and wind of Eclipse are no whit better than the legs and wind of all the rest? |
5407 | Why is it that failure in attaining ambitious ends is so painful? |
5407 | Why must a''phenomenon be inert because it is a phenomenon?'' |
5407 | Why on earth not do so? |
5407 | Why on earth should we take to burning the dead? |
5407 | Why this holoplexia on sacred occasions only? |
5407 | Why, I ask again, are we to cry down man for the sake of crying up nature? |
5407 | Why, therefore, should not the secret of nature''s invariableness be, not passiveness, but rightness?'' |
5407 | Wonder ye that one, whose spirit is just entering the separate state, should have this care for the body which he is about to leave to the worms? |
5407 | Would it not have appeared to us a natural result of the study of nature to prove man dead? |
5407 | You see them shabby, and early anxious: can that be the little boy''s rosy face, now so pale and thin? |
5407 | and did not I even then feel a strange pain in the fear that very likely it might? |
5407 | and do n''t you remember how for days you felt haunted by a sort of nightmare that there was what you would be, if you lived so long? |
5407 | but will all this give him his fortune back again? |
5407 | no monument, inscription, stone? |
4097 | A thousand thanks, Ma''m''selle,he presently said,"will ye please tell Mo''sieu''Roussillon that I would wish to see''i m?" |
4097 | A very queer present to give a girl,said Rene;"what can you do with them?" |
4097 | Absent? |
4097 | Air ye expectin''to marry Alice Roussillon? |
4097 | Alice? 4097 Always? |
4097 | And did you attend any parties and balls? |
4097 | And do n''t you remember anything at all about when, where, how the Indians got you? |
4097 | And what do I know? 4097 And what does Monsieur Roussillon know?" |
4097 | And what''s that? |
4097 | And where are ye goin''? |
4097 | And who is he? |
4097 | Any room for a feller o''my size in this here crowded place? |
4097 | Are they going to scalp us? |
4097 | Are you afraid, Monsieur Beverley? |
4097 | Are you hurt, Oncle Jazon? |
4097 | Are you hurt? |
4097 | Are you not going to the meeting, Father? |
4097 | Are you ready? |
4097 | Are you the British commander? |
4097 | Beverley, what can I do? |
4097 | But how came he to be taking you and caring for you? 4097 But what in the world are you talking about?" |
4097 | But what shape is yours, Father? |
4097 | But why, Alice? |
4097 | Comment allez- vous auj ourd''hui? |
4097 | Did you feel the button? |
4097 | Do I deserve this brutality? |
4097 | Do you imagine that? |
4097 | Do you know him, Monsieur Jazon? |
4097 | Do you mean it?--you ugly English brute-- would you murder him? |
4097 | Do you really mean that you want to fence with me? |
4097 | Domine, percutimus in gladio? |
4097 | Father Beret, can you help me? |
4097 | Feels pooty good, hay? |
4097 | Going a hunting? |
4097 | Gone? 4097 Have I appeared forward and unwomanly? |
4097 | Have I no sense? |
4097 | Have n''t you ever read it? |
4097 | Have you all been well? |
4097 | Have you ever happened to notice the obvious fact, Governor Hamilton, that Alice Roussillon and Father Beret are not all the French in Vincennes? |
4097 | Have you plenty of ammunition? |
4097 | Have you seen him? |
4097 | He hit me with his fist Where-- where is he? |
4097 | He may have said something about it in a playful way, eh? |
4097 | Helm, what do you mean? |
4097 | Hev they hit ye? 4097 How could I know, my child?" |
4097 | How did you get here? 4097 How so?" |
4097 | Humph, that''s it, is it? 4097 I am going out; I''ll be back soon; do n''t you dare leave the house while I''m gone; do you hear?" |
4097 | I believe you are the young lady that stole the flag? |
4097 | I mean, can you hide Mademoiselle Roussillon in some safe place, if I take her out of the prison yonder? 4097 I say, Lieutenant Beverley,"he repeated,"beg the young lady''s permission to use her flag upon this glorious occasion; or shall I do it for you?" |
4097 | I see, I see,Kenton assented,"but what was the row about? |
4097 | I''ve got the girl a prisoner, and I swear to you that I''ll have her shot this time if--"Why not shoot her yourself? 4097 Is Mademoiselle Alice here?" |
4097 | Is he going to fight? |
4097 | Is he going to take the flag? 4097 Is it gone? |
4097 | Is it late? |
4097 | Is it yours, Father? 4097 Is n''t that compliment enough?" |
4097 | Is she your enemy? 4097 Is the white man friendly now?" |
4097 | It''s a small favor; may I ask it? |
4097 | It''s you, is it? |
4097 | J''m''porte tres bien, merci, Mo''sieu Rene,was the quick response;"et vous?" |
4097 | Let it lie hidden forever; what do I care? 4097 Like whom, for example?" |
4097 | Long- Hair is friendly now; will white man be friendly? |
4097 | Lord, shall we smite with the sword? |
4097 | May I be so bold as to name him at a venture? |
4097 | Maybe ye know Simon Kenton,said the old man, after he and Beverley had conversed for a while,"seeing that you are from Kentucky-- eh?" |
4097 | Mean what? 4097 Miss, what have you been doing? |
4097 | Mon Dieu, Father Beret,she exclaimed with impatience,"have n''t you a grain of sense left? |
4097 | Monsieur, is this true? |
4097 | Mutiny? |
4097 | My daughter, are you trying to help Jean up the tree feet foremost? |
4097 | Not tell white man you see me? |
4097 | Not to the river house, my son? |
4097 | Oh, Father, where is the flag? |
4097 | Oh, but do you know it? 4097 Oh, did I?" |
4097 | Oh, you deem it very polite and gentle to jab me with your sword, do you? 4097 Pray, sir,"said he,"who is it that you call Indian partisans?" |
4097 | Qu''avez- vous? 4097 Quarreling again about the romances?" |
4097 | Read what? |
4097 | She gives thanks copiously for a kindness, do n''t you think? |
4097 | She''s been at it again?--she''s found''em again? |
4097 | So you''ve been raising hell again, have you, Miss? |
4097 | Speaking of that girl,he remarked after a moment''s silence,"what am I do to do with her? |
4097 | Spiritually speaking, my son? |
4097 | Suppose that I do n''t pass on? |
4097 | Suppose that I should wish to have a little chat with you, Mademoiselle? |
4097 | The nex''thing''ll be to shoot the everlastin''gizzards outen''em, wo n''t it? |
4097 | Then he is here-- he is-- you have him a prisoner again? |
4097 | There now, what did I tell you? |
4097 | They''ll kill the Captain and Lieutenant and get the fine flag that you set so high on the fort, wo n''t they, Alice? |
4097 | They''ll tear down the fort, wo n''t they? |
4097 | This Father Beret, he is too old for such a thing, is n''t he? |
4097 | Thought we was Injuns, eh? |
4097 | Ugh, not understand? |
4097 | Under the church floor? |
4097 | Ventrebleu!--et apres? 4097 Well, Barlow,"said Hamilton,"the kitten scratched you, did she?" |
4097 | Well, Miss, to what do I owe the honor of this visit? |
4097 | Well, he went out again, did n''t he? |
4097 | Well, just take a glance at this, will you? |
4097 | Well, sir, what will you have? |
4097 | Well, sir, who are you? |
4097 | Well, then, shall we go on to the fort? |
4097 | Well, then, what can be done? |
4097 | Well, what do you want me to do? |
4097 | Well, what in hell are we to do, then? |
4097 | Well,he said, taking one of the foils,"what do you really mean? |
4097 | What about? |
4097 | What are you doing, my child? |
4097 | What are you going to do? |
4097 | What are you here for, sir? |
4097 | What are you saying, Miss Roussillon? 4097 What are you saying, sir?" |
4097 | What can two or three men do against an army? |
4097 | What did I tell you? |
4097 | What do you know about Montaigne? |
4097 | What do you mean, sir? |
4097 | What do you mean? |
4097 | What do you say, Captain Farnsworth? 4097 What do you suggest?" |
4097 | What do you think of that as a nice and accurate piece of skill? |
4097 | What do you want of my husband? |
4097 | What do you want? |
4097 | What for? |
4097 | What in hell are they off hunting buffaloes for? |
4097 | What is it, Bobby? |
4097 | What is it? 4097 What is the matter now, little one?" |
4097 | What is the matter? 4097 What is this in this soup, Father Beret, that makes it so searching and refreshing?" |
4097 | What new flag mean? |
4097 | What now, Jazon? |
4097 | What shall you do? |
4097 | What''s the diff''ence? |
4097 | What''s the matter? 4097 What''s the use of waiting till morning?" |
4097 | What''s this I hear about trouble with the French women? 4097 What''s this you tell me?" |
4097 | What''s up now, if I may ask? |
4097 | What-- what do you mean? |
4097 | What? |
4097 | When will he return from the woods? |
4097 | Where are all the men? |
4097 | Where did Papa Roussillon go to? |
4097 | Where did it come from? |
4097 | Where did you and he come together? |
4097 | Where did you get this? |
4097 | Where did you put it, Alice? |
4097 | Where is Alice?--Miss Roussillon-- where did Miss Roussillon go? |
4097 | Where is Captain Helm? 4097 Where is Lieutenant Beverley?" |
4097 | Where is his house? |
4097 | Where is it? |
4097 | Where is she? |
4097 | Where is the flag? |
4097 | Where''d I come frum? 4097 Where''s the rest o''the fighters?" |
4097 | Where''s yer garrison? 4097 White man going to have little girl for his squaw-- eh?" |
4097 | White man love little girl? |
4097 | Who but he could work Adrienne up into a perfect green mist of jealousy? |
4097 | Who is it? |
4097 | Who is to suffer now? |
4097 | Who told ye I was a bach''lor? 4097 Who was the girl?" |
4097 | Who yonder? |
4097 | Who''s he? 4097 Who?" |
4097 | Why are you armed this morning, Father? |
4097 | Why are you standing on your head with your feet so high in air, Jean? |
4097 | Why could n''t he be quiet and do as your man, Lieutenant Beverley, did? |
4097 | Why do n''t you go get the pretty flag down and hide it before they come? |
4097 | Why do n''t you read your letter, Father? |
4097 | Why do you say that, my son? |
4097 | Why do you want to injure my poor, good papa? |
4097 | Why so, Father? |
4097 | Why so, daughter? |
4097 | Why, is n''t it there? |
4097 | Why, what did you bring this for? 4097 Why?" |
4097 | Would it be agreeable to Captain Roussillon for me to see him a moment? |
4097 | Would you be more savage than your Indian prisoner? |
4097 | Ye see thet hair a hangin''there on the wall? |
4097 | Yes, I know; but how can a man restrain himself under such abominable conditions? |
4097 | Yes, but--"Stepped on somebody''s toe first, eh? |
4097 | Yes, yes, my son-- yes I am going, but the time has not yet come for it, has it? |
4097 | You certainly are not in earnest? |
4097 | You have a mother, father, brothers and sisters? |
4097 | You have something to say to me? 4097 You must not; do you hear?" |
4097 | You promise me? |
4097 | You promise that? 4097 You say you''ve shot Captain Farnsworth?" |
4097 | Your word as a British officer? |
4097 | Alice, is there something to eat and a drop of wine handy? |
4097 | And Alice? |
4097 | And a young girl''s soul-- who shall uncover its sacred depths of sensitiveness, or analyze its capacity for suffering under such a stroke? |
4097 | And do we appreciate those women? |
4097 | And what were life should he fail to rescue her? |
4097 | And what would Hamilton think of this? |
4097 | And where was Beverley? |
4097 | And you do n''t know how you came by this locket? |
4097 | Are n''t you coming in? |
4097 | Are you a pig, that you poke your nose in the dirt?" |
4097 | Are you afraid of eavesdroppers?" |
4097 | Are you in earnest?" |
4097 | Are you really hurt, Miss Roussillon? |
4097 | Bah there, Alice, will you pull Jean''s leg off?" |
4097 | But I say, Lieutenant, has Roussillon really escaped, or is he hidden somewhere in town? |
4097 | But how could the thing be done? |
4097 | But what are ye up to? |
4097 | But where does all your tremendous strength lie? |
4097 | But where was Madame Roussillon? |
4097 | But why was he thinking so critically about her? |
4097 | But, after all, my son, why not here as well as in sunny France? |
4097 | CHAPTER XI A SWORD AND A HORSE PISTOL We hear much about the"days that tried men''s souls"; but what about the souls of women in those same days? |
4097 | Ca n''t you take a joke, I wonder?" |
4097 | Can he find it? |
4097 | Can you do it?" |
4097 | Clark held out his hand and added cordially:"How are you, Jazon, my old friend, and where upon earth have you come from?" |
4097 | Come in; what news do you bring? |
4097 | Could cold and hunger, swollen streams, ravenous wild beasts and scalp- hunting savages baffle him? |
4097 | Could she be dead, and this the shadowy message of her fate? |
4097 | Did you ever see anything so fine?" |
4097 | Did you know of his departure?" |
4097 | Do n''t you think I am right?" |
4097 | Do n''t you think me a wonder of cleverness and industry? |
4097 | Do n''t you wish he would, Adrienne? |
4097 | Do you belong to that family?" |
4097 | Do you happen to recollect the Captain''s name, Lieutenant?" |
4097 | Do you promise?" |
4097 | Do you think Governor Hamilton would let me visit her?" |
4097 | Do you think they will kill him, Alice?" |
4097 | Do you understand?" |
4097 | Does your father practice the art?" |
4097 | Doubtless he looked just as if he had dropped them from under his arms, and why should n''t he have the benefit of a great implication? |
4097 | Everybody cried cheerily:"Bon jour, Monsieur, comment allez- vous?" |
4097 | Fitz, my lad, do n''t ye know Si Kenton? |
4097 | For some time Father Beret seemed quite the shiftier and surer fighter, but( was it his age telling on him?) |
4097 | Had his selfishness received an incurable shock from the button of her foil? |
4097 | Had some poor soldier lost his blanket? |
4097 | Has some one taken it away?" |
4097 | Have they all gone to breakfas''?" |
4097 | Have they begun a revolution?" |
4097 | Have ye got a plenty of bullets?" |
4097 | Have you been careful?" |
4097 | Have you been to Detroit, Quebec, Montreal?" |
4097 | Have you thought upon it from all directions, my son? |
4097 | He had met Hamilton''s glowering look with a peculiarly innocent smile, as if to say:"What in the world is the matter now? |
4097 | He knew what would please Adrienne, so why not give her at least a delicious foretaste? |
4097 | He must know how he got you, where he got you, of whom he got you? |
4097 | He spoke to me about somebody-- eh, ma petite, que voulez- vous dire?" |
4097 | Helm burst out laughing, but quickly growing serious said:"Has Beverley been such a driveling fool as that? |
4097 | How about it?" |
4097 | How do the fine ladies dress, and do they wear their hair high with great big combs? |
4097 | How do you express yourself about him?" |
4097 | How is Madame Roussillon to- day?" |
4097 | I say, Beverley, are ye ready for fast shootin''? |
4097 | I''m sure I do n''t trouble myself about Lieutenant Beverley-- what put such absurd nonsense into your head, Adrienne?" |
4097 | If an officer finds it necessary to set upon a girl with his sword, may not the girl guard her life if she can?" |
4097 | In a few minutes Hamilton returned under the white flag and shouted:"Upon what terms will you surrender?" |
4097 | Is Monsieur Roussillon your master?" |
4097 | Is it a challenge without room for honorable retreat?" |
4097 | Is n''t it the part of prudence and common sense to make the best of a desperate situation? |
4097 | It was a painful process, for his arms were still fast bound at the wrists with the raw- hide strings; but what was pain to him? |
4097 | It was as if they had said:"What can we do? |
4097 | It would interfere with your appetite; eh, my son?" |
4097 | Jean? |
4097 | Let go his leg, daughter, I will vouch for him; eh, Jean?" |
4097 | Let that wear off, as in a short time it would, and then what? |
4097 | Let''s have some hot water with something else in it, what do you say? |
4097 | Lieutenant, air ye hurt much?" |
4097 | Long- Hair, how''s yer arm?" |
4097 | Love itself is without degrees-- it is perfect-- but when shall it see the perfect object? |
4097 | Marryin''is a mighty good thing, but--""What do ye know about matrimony, ye old raw- headed bachelor?" |
4097 | May I, please, Monsieur?" |
4097 | Must we bear it?" |
4097 | Nothing, nothing can prevent us, can it?" |
4097 | Now you believe me, do n''t you, Miss Roussillon?" |
4097 | Once more seated on his stool he added interrogatively:"Did you think you heard something moving outside?" |
4097 | Oncle Jazon and I will go it blind, wo n''t we, Jazon?" |
4097 | Oncle Jazon turned to Beverley and said in rapid French:"Surely the man''s not going to fight those fellows yonder?" |
4097 | Or was it supreme mastery, the last and subtlest reach of the fencer''s craft? |
4097 | Or whom he served if she could always have him coming to see her and calling her his little pet? |
4097 | S''pose yer satisfied now, ai n''t ye, Si Kenton? |
4097 | She had already suffered these things, and now that she could no longer have any protection, what was to become of her? |
4097 | Should he ever see her again? |
4097 | So, in order to draw out what he wished to hear, he said very gently:"How is the little prisoner getting along?" |
4097 | Such shocks are often vigorously alterative and tonic-- eh, my son?" |
4097 | That''s so, ai n''t it? |
4097 | The poor youthful frontiersman ought to have been stronger; but he was not, and what have we to say? |
4097 | Them kicks was good solid jolts, was n''t they, Lieutenant? |
4097 | Then what? |
4097 | Vous-- comprenez, n''est ce pas?" |
4097 | Was it luck? |
4097 | Was it weakness for him to lift his clasped hands heavenward and send up a voiceless prayer? |
4097 | Was she growing cowardly? |
4097 | Was there a lack of food? |
4097 | Was there a stream to wade or swim? |
4097 | Was this, indeed, Father Beret, that gentle old man, now before him, or was it an avenging demon from the shades? |
4097 | We are going to capture Vincennes, Kenton, are we not? |
4097 | We shall, sha''n''t we, Jazon? |
4097 | What account can you give me of the American forces, their numbers and condition?" |
4097 | What are you here for? |
4097 | What are you talking about, my son?" |
4097 | What are your terms?" |
4097 | What could her book education do but set up stumbling blocks in the path of happiness? |
4097 | What could the brave missionaries do but make the very best of a perilous situation? |
4097 | What could they do? |
4097 | What did all this victory mean to him? |
4097 | What did he do to excite ye-- to make ye feel justified in breakin''over yer parole in that high- handed way? |
4097 | What did you do with the flag, Alice?" |
4097 | What do I care about something that a queer lot of saints did hundreds of years ago in times of plague and famine? |
4097 | What do I care for all that uninteresting religious stuff?" |
4097 | What do you mean?" |
4097 | What do you think of it, Monsieur le Gouverneur?" |
4097 | What does he want with it? |
4097 | What harm can he do you by going back to Clark and telling him the whole truth? |
4097 | What hurt you?" |
4097 | What if Farnsworth had deserted him? |
4097 | What if he could knock Long- Hair down and run away? |
4097 | What if one of your prowling guards had overheard you? |
4097 | What is it?" |
4097 | What is your opinion of a man who tumbles a poor, defenseless girl into prison and then refuses to let her be decently cared for? |
4097 | What meant suffering to him, if he could but rescue Alice? |
4097 | What right had Colonel Clark to send her lover away to be killed just at the time when he was all the whole world to her? |
4097 | What sinister ecclesiastical motive prompted you to describe how Long- Hair scalped him? |
4097 | What the devil next? |
4097 | What was patriotism to the crushed heart of a lover? |
4097 | What was the use of going to fight and simply meeting and escorting down the river a lot of non- combatants? |
4097 | What would be the end of all this terrible suspense? |
4097 | What would he not have given to rub his eyes and find it all a dream? |
4097 | What would his officers and men think? |
4097 | What would you have us do? |
4097 | What''s happened?" |
4097 | What''s the matter?" |
4097 | What''s up between you and la petite Adrienne, eh?" |
4097 | When did I ever-- when did I jab you with my sword? |
4097 | When the talk ended and Father Beret humbly took his leave, Hamilton turned to Farnsworth and said:"What do you think of this affair? |
4097 | Where are all the men?" |
4097 | Where are ye goin''?" |
4097 | Where did you come from?" |
4097 | Where did you learn to fence so admirably? |
4097 | Where is it? |
4097 | Where is it?" |
4097 | Where is your mama?" |
4097 | Where was Alice? |
4097 | Where was she? |
4097 | Where was she? |
4097 | Where was the commandant? |
4097 | Where was the garrison? |
4097 | Who was it, sir?" |
4097 | Who''s got some tobacker?" |
4097 | Who''s the young man that''s caused the coolness? |
4097 | Why are you so watchful? |
4097 | Why not ask for a few days of truce? |
4097 | Why not dream and bask? |
4097 | Why not drink exhilarating toddies? |
4097 | Why should he? |
4097 | Why?" |
4097 | Will you fetch it, please?" |
4097 | Will you stand good for my veracity and sincerity, Captain Farnsworth?" |
4097 | Would he consider it treason? |
4097 | Would n''t it be romantic?" |
4097 | Would she care for him? |
4097 | Would the thumbs go down or up? |
4097 | Ye do n''t know me, do ye? |
4097 | Yes, I danced till my legs ached with women old and girls young; but how could I remember how they were dressed and what their style of coiffure was? |
4097 | You do n''t know who was your father, your mother?" |
4097 | but what have they been doing to us? |
4097 | cried Adrienne''s captor in a breezy, jocund tone,"you would n''t run over a fellow, would you?" |
4097 | he muttered, with petulant accent;"why do n''t you kick me out, Father?" |
4097 | is it true? |
4097 | is that you, Jazon? |
4097 | que diable voulez- vous?" |
4097 | she went on,"less grateful than he for a life saved? |
4097 | what do I care? |
4097 | what do you mean, Captain Helm?" |
4097 | what do you think now of your fine young lady?" |
4097 | what is it?" |
4097 | when will he come? |
4097 | where air ye?" |
4097 | where is he? |
4097 | who told you? |
4097 | why did you pretend to me that Lieutenant Beverley was dead? |
4097 | why do you persecute her? |
4097 | you will split my ears, child; ca n''t you fill my pipe and bring it to me with a coal on it? |
7845 | And after that? |
7845 | But they never did, Perhaps they threw your cabinet tools away? |
7845 | How can it be,I hear them over and over,"There never shall be eyes for me again?" |
7845 | Is it not true? 7845 Sir Galahad? |
7845 | What mission fair and true, While I am sleeping, brings you? 7845 Where do I flow and to what end? |
7845 | Where is the holy sepulchre? |
7845 | Why do you keep, O spirit beautiful and swift, this guard About my slumber? 7845 ***** And yet is not the time gone by? 7845 ***** Do you remember that delightful Inn At Chester and the Roman wall, and how We walked from Avon clear to Kenilworth? 7845 ***** Faith, if it be, said Old King Cole, There is a word that''s more: Who is it goes to Spain and Troy? 7845 ***** How may I justify the hope that rises That I am giving you to a world of pain, And am a part of your love''s sacrifices? 7845 ***** Is it not written at the last day Heaven and earth shall roll away? 7845 ***** Then said Pantagruel: Heard you not? 7845 ***** What may not happen In this place of summer loneliness? 7845 ***** Whoever they be, said Pantagruel, Why stand at the window and drool? 7845 ***** Why do we thirst for urns beyond urns who know How sweet they are, yet bitter, not enough? 7845 ... CHRISTMAS AT INDIAN POINT Who is that calling through the night, A wail that dies when the wind roars? 7845 ... Do n''t you understand? |
7845 | A crown for blood''s sake? |
7845 | A portion of the royal blood of Europe? |
7845 | Am I of Thee, or do I blend Hereafter with Thee?" |
7845 | And Anne arose, began to keel the pot, But was she answered, Ben? |
7845 | And did not Festus, Before whom Paul stood speaking for himself, Call Paul a mad man? |
7845 | And do you wonder, Seeing what I am, what my fate has been? |
7845 | And even geometries in some brain Before old Gutenberg? |
7845 | And his spirit looks Over the land he loved, with what result? |
7845 | And in that lonely cavern dark and chill I heard again,"Then what is life?" |
7845 | And so his color fades, it well may be The crisis of a long neurosis, well What caused it? |
7845 | And the springs march before me, say,"Behold Here are we, and what would you, can you use us? |
7845 | And the train had gone Five miles or so when I said:"Where you going?" |
7845 | And then the Emperor said:"What have I claimed? |
7845 | And then you say: What is the difference? |
7845 | And they hated you for it, hunted you all over Europe-- Why should they not hate you? |
7845 | And what are Greek and Latin, The lore of Aristotle, Plato to this? |
7845 | And what are we but streams and springs Through which He takes His wanderings? |
7845 | And what cares he for Memphis town, Merneptah the bloody, or Books of the Dead, Pyramids, philosophies of madness or dread? |
7845 | And what is time but an infinite whole Revealed by the breaks in thought, desire? |
7845 | And what''s the hedgerow, what''s the pond? |
7845 | And who to Elsinore? |
7845 | And''tother day, poor Anne Looked long at me and said,"You say,''Tra- la''Sometimes when you''re asleep; why do you so?" |
7845 | Another drink? |
7845 | Are they an asset? |
7845 | At fifty- two, or fifty- five or sixty The life is in the seed-- what''s spring to you? |
7845 | But anyway the lamp is very bad, And every bone in me aches-- and why always Must one be either reading, knitting, talking? |
7845 | But first what have we for the composition of these daughters? |
7845 | But have you thought If you should find it it would only be A tomb like other tombs? |
7845 | But tell me What to omit, and what to stress? |
7845 | But tell me now, have you come together? |
7845 | But the lion of Tennessee asks: Would you take from Spain The land she has lost but in name? |
7845 | But these tears-- for whom Or what are tears? |
7845 | But to resume his argument was this: God is or God is not, but if God is Why pestilence and war, earthquake and famine? |
7845 | But who was England then? |
7845 | But who was England? |
7845 | But who was rested? |
7845 | But you do n''t call this Hamilton an artist And Paine a mere logician and a wrangler? |
7845 | But, fair friends, What strength in place of sex shall steady me? |
7845 | Could he laugh As mother laughed? |
7845 | Did France bar her door? |
7845 | Did old Walt Whitman smoke or did he drink? |
7845 | Did you give up three years of your life To wipe out the sentence that burned the wracked body of Calas? |
7845 | Do n''t you understand? |
7845 | England expended millions on her libels To poison Europe''s mind and make my purpose Obscure or bloody-- how have they availed? |
7845 | FLORENCE And why not on this street? |
7845 | FLORENCE Say, Jack, what is the matter? |
7845 | FLORENCE What''s that? |
7845 | For England of to- day is freer-- why? |
7845 | For what can I do with strife, or what can I do with hate? |
7845 | From time eternal was this earth? |
7845 | God is or God is not, but then what God? |
7845 | Has it not served you?" |
7845 | He tried to find The mother''s laugh and secret for the laugh Which kept her to the end-- but did she laugh? |
7845 | Her will, you say? |
7845 | Here was I locked in And given dope to keep me still lest I Cry out and wake the copper- who''s the copper For such as I was? |
7845 | His mother Lay in that corner there, what if she did? |
7845 | His wife looked up and said,"That man is crazy, ai n''t he? |
7845 | Hold me so bear- like, take my lips with yours, Bury your face in these my russet tresses, And yet not lose your vision? |
7845 | How can you be so? |
7845 | How did it come here? |
7845 | How did the sculptor detain you, you ever so restless, You ever so driven by princes and priests? |
7845 | How does it happen people Are born into the world to read these stories? |
7845 | How shall I tell him Which is the actual and the larger theme, His hero or his hero''s enemies? |
7845 | How should I believe Paul''s story, not my own? |
7845 | I ached all through For my hard labor, why did muscles grow not To hardness and cure body, if''twere body, Or soul if it were soul? |
7845 | I am not sure, but then Which will is better, mine or hers? |
7845 | I could go on, but wherefore tell you more? |
7845 | I desire her, her desire Is not toward me, which of these two desires Shall triumph? |
7845 | I have died A thousand times, and with a valiant soul Have drunk the cup, but why? |
7845 | I hopped from bed, and says,''Who is it?'' |
7845 | I know of one: Where is it that it says that"Jesus wept"? |
7845 | I love this woman, but what is love to you? |
7845 | I used to quote:''Who is my mother and who are my brothers?'' |
7845 | I warned her against you, but how could I tell her Why you were not for her? |
7845 | I wonder why I did it? |
7845 | I''ll ask you something-- As if I were a youth and you a girl-- How were you ruined first? |
7845 | IV Widow La Rue has returned And is rocking on the porch-- What is about to happen? |
7845 | If I die, Slip out of this with Bacchus for a guide, What soul would interdict the poppied way? |
7845 | If he heard me cry How could he raid the magazine? |
7845 | If he raided Where was the court to take me and the rest-- That''s it, where is the court? |
7845 | Is it German, or Russian, or French? |
7845 | Is it so little if I see you not again? |
7845 | JACK No quarreling-- What is the time? |
7845 | JACK What corresponds to marriage To take me from slavery? |
7845 | JACK What time is it? |
7845 | JACK Where are you going, Florence? |
7845 | JACK Why not? |
7845 | Just think for a minute, how the negroes excel, Can you beat them with a banjo or a broiling pan? |
7845 | Look you at Europe, What were it in this day except for France, Napoleon''s France, the revolution''s France? |
7845 | NEANDERTHAL"Then what is life?" |
7845 | Nay, truthful with whom, to what end? |
7845 | No meal has been prepared, where have you been? |
7845 | No? |
7845 | No? |
7845 | Now what''s the good of seeing it? |
7845 | Now what''s the motivating principle Of such a mind? |
7845 | O fie, Ben Jonson, If I am nature''s child am I not all? |
7845 | Once upon the ship, He thinks he''s bound for England, and why not? |
7845 | One can not have them and live, but if one die It might be better than living-- who can say? |
7845 | Or a bit of asafoetida hidden in your pie? |
7845 | Or a little Paris green in your cheese for chard? |
7845 | Or something in your coffee to make your stomach froth? |
7845 | Or the city, or life, or fame, or love or fate? |
7845 | Or the law that drives the weak from the temple''s door? |
7845 | Or the struggle since time began of the rich and poor? |
7845 | Or was it your husband you saw, As he lay by the gate so long ago? |
7845 | Over all How comes it that a sudden feel of life, Its wonder, terror, beauty is like father''s? |
7845 | Pleading,"How canst thou still aver, I love thee, being yet unkind? |
7845 | Rather why is it You master me, even as I mastered him? |
7845 | She had married him-- but why? |
7845 | Shelley, from the deep Why do you come with veiled face, mighty bard, As that unearthly shape was veiled to you At Casa Magni?" |
7845 | So I asked"Were you in Palestine?" |
7845 | So the landscape changes, wills All the changes, did it try Its promises to justify?... |
7845 | Sweet aches are in our breasts: Is it spring, or God, or music, is it you? |
7845 | THE LETTER What does one gain by living? |
7845 | Tell me your desire And what you are?" |
7845 | That lantern on the wall''s the very one They came to see the child with from the inn-- What of it? |
7845 | The bag falls to the floor, and lies there still-- Who now shall pick it up, re- fasten it? |
7845 | The bishop asked:''You''ve brought some money, how much have you brought?'' |
7845 | The friendly clerk-- I knew him always-- said''What will you have? |
7845 | The judgment in English condemns you, where is there a judgment To save you from this? |
7845 | Then I said to my friend:"Suppose he''d up and stick A knife in your side for raggin''him so hard; Or how would you relish some spit in your broth? |
7845 | Then it seemed That smile of hers not wilting me she clapped Hands over eyes and said:"I am afraid-- Oh no, it can not be-- what would they say?" |
7845 | Then why marry him? |
7845 | There are cool spaces of sky between white clouds-- But what are flames and spaces but eyes of blue? |
7845 | This globe may last and breed The race of men till Time cries out"How long?" |
7845 | WIDOW LA RUE I What will happen, Widow La Rue? |
7845 | Was I ill or sick in mind? |
7845 | Well, I must die sometime, And who will get it then? |
7845 | Well, why did she descend And almost lose the money? |
7845 | Were not brains before books? |
7845 | What are these phantasies I have? |
7845 | What by dying Is lost worth having? |
7845 | What good is air if lungs are out, or springs When the mind''s flown so far away no spring, Nor loveliness of earth can call it back? |
7845 | What good, Ben Jonson, if the world could see What face was mine, who wrote these plays and sonnets? |
7845 | What have we seen? |
7845 | What is a man to do whose work is done And does not feel so well, has cancer, say? |
7845 | What is it to your laws or courts? |
7845 | What is the matter? |
7845 | What is the motive of this higher mount? |
7845 | What is this room of mirrors? |
7845 | What matter if your thought Outsoared the Phoenix? |
7845 | What shall I do with it? |
7845 | What should my care be when I have no power To save, guide, mould you? |
7845 | What soul dissatisfaction, sense of wrong, Of being thwarted, stung you? |
7845 | What the daily things Lived through together make them worth the while For their sakes or for life''s? |
7845 | What was Camden like? |
7845 | What was it? |
7845 | What was there to oppose possession? |
7845 | What were you at the start? |
7845 | What will it be as time goes on but peoples Made free through France? |
7845 | What''s on your mind? |
7845 | What''s that? |
7845 | What''s the matter? |
7845 | What''s this? |
7845 | Where do my labors end? |
7845 | Where is my watch? |
7845 | Where''s the denying Of souls through separation? |
7845 | Which has rights above The other? |
7845 | Which will Deserves achievement? |
7845 | Who can say? |
7845 | Who gives her these, The thought ran through me, for her joy alone And not for mine? |
7845 | Who is Sir Galahad?" |
7845 | Who is the Gardener then? |
7845 | Who know a woman? |
7845 | Who was England then? |
7845 | Who was it here before me? |
7845 | Who writes these stories? |
7845 | Why did I do it, eh? |
7845 | Why did I do it? |
7845 | Why do n''t you see? |
7845 | Why look at this: Here is the very manger where he lay-- What is it? |
7845 | Why not sit quietly and think? |
7845 | Why should you not follow your light? |
7845 | Why tell you details And ways with which I maddened him, and whipped The energies of love? |
7845 | Why that bulging brow And analytic keen if not for greatness? |
7845 | Will? |
7845 | With a breed such as lived In your day and your place? |
7845 | Would they lay hands upon you? |
7845 | Would you rise over death like a god? |
7845 | Would you stop war? |
7845 | Yet am I blind to you? |
7845 | You do n''t care, you say, for all I''ve told you? |
7845 | You know these too? |
7845 | You stride about my rooms and open books, And say when did he give you this? |
7845 | You wonder at war? |
41671 | A big flight? |
41671 | A what? |
41671 | About what? |
41671 | Ah-- What''d you say? |
41671 | All night? |
41671 | And if he did n''t,Callahan commented,"he''s a long way back in the Mahela, huh?" |
41671 | And if you ca n''t? |
41671 | And where,Al asked,"will they be come huntin''season?" |
41671 | And you found my tobacco pouch? |
41671 | And you turned him down? |
41671 | Are n''t you afraid to let him run? |
41671 | Are you sure? |
41671 | Are you trying to beat yourself out of seventy- five dollars? 41671 Are-- are you going to join the hunt for Dad?" |
41671 | As big,and a smile lurked in John Wilson''s voice,"as your Damon and Pythias?" |
41671 | But before the season? |
41671 | But does n''t everybody do that? |
41671 | But you heard no shooting? |
41671 | But you''d like one? |
41671 | But-- What good will that do? |
41671 | But--"But what? |
41671 | By any chance, a two- legged coyote? |
41671 | Call your dog, will you? 41671 Can I help?" |
41671 | Can you account for your actions of today? |
41671 | Can you prove all this? |
41671 | Can you tell me the exact story? |
41671 | Could even be a_ true_ story, huh? |
41671 | Dad did n''t step out from beside the rock, or anything like that? |
41671 | Did Smoky have any idea as to who was shooting at what? |
41671 | Did Smoky hear any shooting? |
41671 | Did he come back here? |
41671 | Did n''t you ever hear about me? |
41671 | Did you expect to get it in a week? |
41671 | Did you have your rifle with you? |
41671 | Did you notice anything unusual about that buck? |
41671 | Did you say shoot? |
41671 | Did you see Thornton? |
41671 | Did--? |
41671 | Do n''t you see? |
41671 | Do n''t you think we should have a faucet on this gooseneck? |
41671 | Do you believe Dad shot Smoky? |
41671 | Do you feel all right? |
41671 | Do you have to be so gloomy? |
41671 | Do you own this land? |
41671 | Do you think I''m asking too much money? |
41671 | Do-- Do you want to talk with Dad soon? |
41671 | Do-- do your folks know you''re here? |
41671 | Does n''t anybody hunt anything except deer? |
41671 | Does that trooper really think he, or anyone else, can track Dad? |
41671 | Find any sign? |
41671 | For sure now? |
41671 | For taking Dad to jail? |
41671 | Get your coyote? |
41671 | Go on? |
41671 | Had it been fired? |
41671 | Had n''t you ought to get it first? |
41671 | Has he talked? |
41671 | Have a bite with us, Lorin''? |
41671 | Have they been pushing you pretty hard, Loring? |
41671 | He did? |
41671 | He what? |
41671 | Here? |
41671 | Highly- trained, too, is n''t he? 41671 How about the bullet?" |
41671 | How about you, Jack? |
41671 | How are things? |
41671 | How come? |
41671 | How do you figger it? |
41671 | How do you know he fell there? |
41671 | How do you know he was shot near them three sycamores in Coon Valley? |
41671 | How do you know? |
41671 | How do you know? |
41671 | How long should I wait? |
41671 | How would you feel? |
41671 | How you comin''? |
41671 | Huh? |
41671 | I know but-- What''s Tammie barking at? |
41671 | I mean, since we took him away last night? |
41671 | I say, would you mind if I just wandered about on my own? |
41671 | I see,Ted observed,"that you got my message?" |
41671 | I''ll help you, huh? |
41671 | If you had a choice, would you stay here or at Crestwood? |
41671 | Is he dead? |
41671 | Is he goin''to die? |
41671 | Is n''t it traditional for hunters to be in the woods at dawn? |
41671 | Is that strange? |
41671 | Is the reason good enough for you? |
41671 | Is there a choice? |
41671 | Is there any reason,Al asked,"why a body ca n''t eat first? |
41671 | Is there anything else? |
41671 | Is this yours? |
41671 | Is your dad guilty? |
41671 | It is? |
41671 | Just what did he say? |
41671 | Lonesome for a human being, fella? |
41671 | Lorin'', where was Smoky shot? |
41671 | Loring, has it occurred to anybody, except me, that the back of Glory Rock is a sheer drop? 41671 Lots of grouse?" |
41671 | May I bring the fellows in? |
41671 | Message? |
41671 | Mighty important point,Al said gravely,"but do you figure you got to throw out that much sign? |
41671 | Mind if I smoke? |
41671 | No sign of anything else? |
41671 | No work today? |
41671 | Not even to get your job back? |
41671 | Nothing else? |
41671 | Now this''available for season,''do you think I should say at ten per cent discount? |
41671 | On what grounds? |
41671 | Ready? |
41671 | Ready? |
41671 | S''pose you get about four more parcels of pork chops out and start''em cookin? |
41671 | Seen Damon and Pythias lately? |
41671 | Shall we go? |
41671 | Shall we go? |
41671 | Smoky Delbert give you any trouble? |
41671 | Smoky''s very sure of that? 41671 So that makes Thornton better''n you, huh? |
41671 | So? |
41671 | So? |
41671 | So? |
41671 | Some buck, eh? |
41671 | Somebody finally got him, huh? |
41671 | Ted, do you know anyone at all in the Mahela who lives up to the full letter of the game laws? 41671 Ted?" |
41671 | Tell you what? |
41671 | That is your tobacco pouch? |
41671 | That''s all? 41671 That?" |
41671 | Then I am in the right place? |
41671 | Then he did know Dad had gone up Coon Valley ahead of him? |
41671 | Then he--? |
41671 | Then what is it? 41671 Then you can help him?" |
41671 | Then you crossed back to the Fordham Road? |
41671 | Then you do know where he is? |
41671 | There who is? |
41671 | Think you can stay out of other people''s chicken coops? |
41671 | This is''chow''? |
41671 | This the camp? |
41671 | This yours? |
41671 | Uh-- are you going bear hunting with revolvers? |
41671 | Uh-- how much bear hunting have any of you done? |
41671 | Waitin''for somebody? |
41671 | Want to go? |
41671 | Want to tell me why? |
41671 | Want to tell me? |
41671 | Want to tell me? |
41671 | Was Smoky afraid to go on? |
41671 | Was it bad? |
41671 | Was your father with you today? |
41671 | Well, who could be sure? 41671 What are you going to do?" |
41671 | What are you talking about? |
41671 | What could? |
41671 | What did he tell you? |
41671 | What did you find in Coon Valley? |
41671 | What do we do now? |
41671 | What do you expect to find? |
41671 | What do you mean? |
41671 | What do you suggest I do? |
41671 | What do you suggest, Ted? |
41671 | What do you think your bed''s for? |
41671 | What do you want to know, Ted? |
41671 | What do you want? |
41671 | What for? |
41671 | What goes on? |
41671 | What have you got, Tammie? |
41671 | What is it? |
41671 | What is n''t? |
41671 | What shall I say if they come? |
41671 | What time did you go up Coon Valley? |
41671 | What time do you want me there, Ted? |
41671 | What time? |
41671 | What time? |
41671 | What would you carry if you was huntin''a coyote? 41671 What would you do if you ran across Dad?" |
41671 | What''d you do if you was on your way to jail? 41671 What''d you do to him?" |
41671 | What''d you see? |
41671 | What''s he mad at? |
41671 | What''s he want? |
41671 | What''s in the sack? |
41671 | What''s it like on top? |
41671 | What''s that? |
41671 | What''s the matter? 41671 What''s up?" |
41671 | What''s your way? |
41671 | When did all this happen? |
41671 | When did he leave here? |
41671 | Where do they lurk during deer season? |
41671 | Where is he? |
41671 | Where they hangin''out? |
41671 | Where was he? |
41671 | Where you been the past twenty or twenty- five years, Jack? 41671 Where''d he go?" |
41671 | Where? |
41671 | Where? |
41671 | Which one you aim to get? 41671 Who does n''t violate the law? |
41671 | Who in his right mind would let himself in for this sort of thing? |
41671 | Who''s the brains of this outfit? |
41671 | Who? |
41671 | Why ca n''t you talk? |
41671 | Why ca n''t you tell me what you did with it? |
41671 | Why did n''t you come last night? |
41671 | Why did n''t you stop him? 41671 Why did you laugh?" |
41671 | Why do n''t you find it? |
41671 | Why do n''t you get a different job, Nels? 41671 Why do you want it, Thornton?" |
41671 | Why not? |
41671 | Why not? |
41671 | Why not? |
41671 | Why not? |
41671 | Why should he have been afraid? 41671 Why would n''t he?" |
41671 | Why''s he want those two bucks? |
41671 | Why, did n''t you know? |
41671 | Why? |
41671 | Why? |
41671 | Will a shotgun halt them when they charge? |
41671 | Will you do me a favor? |
41671 | Will you take this pipe? |
41671 | Would you have a little time to talk? |
41671 | Yes? |
41671 | Yes? |
41671 | You are? |
41671 | You can say definitely that they will not charge? |
41671 | You do n''t aim to change your mind? |
41671 | You do? |
41671 | You ever make that crossin''? |
41671 | You feel pretty bitter, do n''t you? |
41671 | You fired Ted? |
41671 | You have? |
41671 | You have? |
41671 | You know of those two bucks they call Damon and Pythias? |
41671 | You mean it? |
41671 | You mean let him get away with it? |
41671 | You mean? |
41671 | You refuse to admit you shot Delbert? |
41671 | You seen your dad? |
41671 | You wo n''t resist? |
41671 | You worked at the old Hawley logging camp? |
41671 | You''re sure now? |
41671 | You''re sure? |
41671 | You''ve never hunted? |
41671 | You--? |
41671 | Your dog, eh? |
41671 | _ Hm- m._ Want me to pick him up for it? |
41671 | A pocketful of pebbles?" |
41671 | Al asked,"Can you think of any more excuses for deep thinkin''?" |
41671 | Al, will you talk to me?" |
41671 | And you?" |
41671 | Are four of us going to eat that?" |
41671 | Beaulieu?" |
41671 | Bee sting you?" |
41671 | Been waitin''long?" |
41671 | But I saw your light and--""What on earth have you been doing?" |
41671 | But he did n''t, yet to say the wrong thing might mean to give offense,"Uh-- aren''t you--?" |
41671 | But how about the opposite slope? |
41671 | But how could Ted report Arthur Beamish''s when Beamish was his guest? |
41671 | But if we''re going to Glory Rock, why ca n''t we drive to the mouth of Coon Valley?" |
41671 | But now that Thornton was leaving, was there any reason why he should be shielded? |
41671 | But perhaps you will tell us where we have the best chance of encountering bears?" |
41671 | But suppose he was wrong? |
41671 | But was he interested in woodcock? |
41671 | But which of the three should he accept? |
41671 | Call him back, will you? |
41671 | Call him back, will you?" |
41671 | Can you arrange that?" |
41671 | Can you let me know at once if it is available? |
41671 | Can you send him up tomorrow?" |
41671 | Can you?'' |
41671 | Come in an''have a cup of coffee?" |
41671 | Damon? |
41671 | Did he shrink from breaking the law? |
41671 | Did you ever cross that way?" |
41671 | Do n''t you know that failing to do so can make you liable to arrest as an accessory after the fact?" |
41671 | Do you have any bright ideas?" |
41671 | Do you know anyone who does n''t take what he wants when he wants it, in season or out?" |
41671 | Do you know where we can get a wet nurse?" |
41671 | Do you mind if I carry a rifle?" |
41671 | Do you think I should return to the town through which we just passed and buy them rifles and revolvers?" |
41671 | Do you think I should say,''Bring extra cots for more than eight?''" |
41671 | Do you think I should say,''deer and small game abundant''?" |
41671 | Do you think you can get him to come back and give himself up?" |
41671 | Do you want the pick or the shovel?" |
41671 | Does it make any difference if those bucks are shot now or six weeks from now?" |
41671 | Does your dad mind laying out?" |
41671 | Everything''s O.K., eh?" |
41671 | Finally Loring Blade asked,"Are you ready, Al?" |
41671 | Finally he murmured,"So now you''re goin''to be a famous resort owner?" |
41671 | Four more packages meant that they would cook thirty pork chops, and what were any four men-- even four ravenous men-- to do with them? |
41671 | Get it?" |
41671 | Had Jack Callahan, nobody''s fool, seen more than he had admitted seeing? |
41671 | Had he slipped back after leaving Ted and found the pack himself? |
41671 | Had this sudden, terrible accusation unseated Al''s reason? |
41671 | Harkness?" |
41671 | He asked,"Are you Ted Harkness?" |
41671 | He does n''t have any grub except the load he cooked the night Loring and I were here-- and was n''t I the dope not to see through that? |
41671 | Help me pack all thet grub we cooked for supper, will you? |
41671 | His captor asked sternly,"What are you doing here?" |
41671 | How about it?" |
41671 | How are things?" |
41671 | How are you and Thornton gettin''along?" |
41671 | How are you doing?" |
41671 | How are you feeling?" |
41671 | How are you going to decide exactly whether you turned him in to settle a grudge or because you''re a believer in conservation? |
41671 | How are you making out, Ted?" |
41671 | How do you like us?" |
41671 | How do you tell''em apart?" |
41671 | How have you been?" |
41671 | How many city people can take a whole season just to go huntin''? |
41671 | How many papers you crumpled so far?" |
41671 | How was his father spending this chilly night-- and where? |
41671 | How''d you manage that?" |
41671 | How''s the boss?" |
41671 | I do not want your camp, but do you want to guide a doddering old man? |
41671 | If there was some idea behind this madness, what could it possibly be? |
41671 | Is Loring home?" |
41671 | Is nine dollars a day all right?" |
41671 | Is the other as big?" |
41671 | Is this deep enough?" |
41671 | It was Dad that rose from behind the rock?" |
41671 | It would be silly to threaten Carl Thornton, and how could he report him to the game warden when he had broken no law? |
41671 | Jack Callahan challenged,"What do you mean by that?" |
41671 | John Wilson asked,"He''s been wounded before, eh?" |
41671 | John Wilson broke it with a quiet,"Is there a story behind it?" |
41671 | John Wilson, looking at the dying embers in the fireplace, asked quietly,"Got your campaign mapped, General?" |
41671 | Just how did one approach an attorney and what did one say to him? |
41671 | Just how much had Callahan seen? |
41671 | Just wait?" |
41671 | Loring Blade asked,"What now?" |
41671 | Making a motion to crumple this paper too, he thought better of it and called,"How''s this, Dad? |
41671 | Meet me at two?" |
41671 | Now do you think it could be the bullet that went through Smoky Delbert?" |
41671 | Now that he was here, just what was he supposed to do? |
41671 | Now who''d think a Boston bull-- What''s that?" |
41671 | Now will you please show us the camp?" |
41671 | Obviously he had guessed wrong, and what now? |
41671 | One you can depend on?" |
41671 | Or Pythias?" |
41671 | Or had n''t Ted heard correctly? |
41671 | Or me?" |
41671 | Pretty warm for this time of year, is n''t it?" |
41671 | See him?" |
41671 | Shall we get out to the house?" |
41671 | Shall we start earning our wages?" |
41671 | Smoky would blackmail him.__ Thornton paying Delbert''s hospital bills._"Did I hit him square?" |
41671 | Something wrong, Ted?" |
41671 | Suppose I had my pouch, could n''t I have lost it when I passed the sycamores?" |
41671 | Ted asked without much interest,"What happened?" |
41671 | Ted asked,"Can you handle the stoves and everything?" |
41671 | Ted asked,"What now?" |
41671 | Ted asked,"You tired?" |
41671 | Ted whispered,"What are we going to do, Tammie?" |
41671 | Ted, do you think he shot Smoky?" |
41671 | That dog will do almost anything you want him to, wo n''t he?" |
41671 | There had to be more than that, but what? |
41671 | There''s more than one side to this, Jack, and suppose you simmer down?" |
41671 | Think I want''em shootin''up you or Tammie?" |
41671 | Think they''ll work?" |
41671 | This works good, huh? |
41671 | Turn handsprings?" |
41671 | Uh-- thought I heard you talking?" |
41671 | Was he afraid of Loring Blade, the game warden? |
41671 | What can I do for you?" |
41671 | What could have happened out in the Mahela? |
41671 | What did the fluttering cloths mean? |
41671 | What do you always say?" |
41671 | What peril did they indicate? |
41671 | What time did he come back last night?" |
41671 | What time do you plan to get out in the morning?" |
41671 | What''s his name?" |
41671 | What''s it worth for you to have it?" |
41671 | What''s wrong?" |
41671 | When the two had finished eating, Ted asked,"Shall we go?" |
41671 | Where do these two big bucks hang out?" |
41671 | Where had they come from? |
41671 | Where was it? |
41671 | Where''s your father now?" |
41671 | Who did shoot this Delbert?" |
41671 | Who expects to get shot?" |
41671 | Who had done this dreadful thing? |
41671 | Who had taken a horse up the valley, and why? |
41671 | Who talked with him after he was shot?" |
41671 | Who''s going to follow Tammie? |
41671 | Why did n''t you tell me we were going to climb the Matterhorn?" |
41671 | Why do n''t you start your men into the hills?" |
41671 | Why?" |
41671 | Why?" |
41671 | Will you eat with us?" |
41671 | Wo n''t you help me to help you?" |
41671 | Wonder how the lucky cuss got it?" |
41671 | Would you care to start at daylight?" |
41671 | Yah?" |
41671 | You brought Smoky''s rifle out?" |
41671 | You do know where he is?" |
41671 | You go down? |
41671 | You hear from your pa, Ted?" |
41671 | You like grouse hunting, eh?" |
41671 | You really think this is all right?" |
41671 | You want to saw wood?" |
41671 | You would n''t change your mind?" |
41671 | You would n''t think fifteen men, or fourteen men and a boy, ate and slept in that old house, would you?" |
41671 | You''ll have some explaining to do, Thornton, and_ can you explain_?" |
41671 | You''re a pretty good deer hunter, are n''t you?" |
41671 | You-- You know where?" |
9876 | About what point,asked my father,"do these suggestions usually gather?" |
9876 | And did she send you out in such a hurry to tell me that? |
9876 | And now she''s dead? |
9876 | And so I am the good old squaw? |
9876 | And the mother? |
9876 | And there were no footsteps near? |
9876 | And will you not get lonely? |
9876 | And you ca n''t give it to me? |
9876 | And you do n''t mind confessing to such cowardice? |
9876 | And you wo n''t let me stay? |
9876 | Are you a visitor here? |
9876 | Are you accustomed to take care of sick persons? |
9876 | Are you coming up, too? |
9876 | Are you waiting to see me? |
9876 | At what? |
9876 | Ca n''t you come down and push? |
9876 | Can I go up to Miss Axtell now? |
9876 | Cruel? 9876 Did you ever go upon the top of a great height, whether of building or earth?" |
9876 | Do n''t wish me to go alone, Sophie? 9876 Do n''t you think we ought to love the place where our lives began, because our father lived here too?" |
9876 | Do you know any Herbert in Redleaf? |
9876 | Do you know the sister? |
9876 | Do you like it? |
9876 | Do you send me away? |
9876 | Even the graves, out there, in the church- yard? |
9876 | Have you not, Herbert? |
9876 | How can we expect a harvest of thought who have not had a seed- time of character? |
9876 | How did these beautiful rainbow- tints get into the shell of the fresh- water clam, buried in the mud at the bottom of our dark river? |
9876 | How did you feel about my going into the tower a few moments ago? |
9876 | How is the old place? |
9876 | How? 9876 I know, I know; but you wo n''t go with me?" |
9876 | I like it? 9876 I? |
9876 | Is he in need of the small salary your church must give its sexton? |
9876 | Is n''t it enough to have a voice, without a face''s coming to torment me too? |
9876 | Is there any harm? |
9876 | Is there any record here, any old, forgotten list of deeds done by the early church? |
9876 | Is there anything for the sexton to do? |
9876 | Is there time for me to take one little look before dinner? |
9876 | Is this Anna? |
9876 | Is this all for her? |
9876 | It has been of woman''s wear,thought I, as I took the little bit from off its fastening- hook;"but how came it here? |
9876 | No, I will ask it for you; and you will ask it for yourself? |
9876 | Not a few moments more?--not even to go back to the old subject? |
9876 | Not enough of the dreary, ghoul- like place yet, Anna? 9876 Nothing more, I do assure you; but why should n''t I?" |
9876 | Of what significance the things you can forget? 9876 Perhaps you were afraid to come up?" |
9876 | Poor in spirit? |
9876 | Shall we go up higher, nearer to the window? |
9876 | Somebody does, then? |
9876 | That is to say,we replied,"the blockheads were not born in Concord; but who said they were? |
9876 | The brother? 9876 Then what is the family?" |
9876 | Thus armed and fortified, do you think they''ll ask other reference of their nurse? |
9876 | To gratify a passing fancy? |
9876 | Was he poor in spirit? |
9876 | Was it voice of man? |
9876 | Well, what of them? |
9876 | What could it have been built for? |
9876 | What does Sophie wish? |
9876 | What does the lady want? |
9876 | What for should I take Aaron up the winding stairs? 9876 What is it like? |
9876 | What is it that keeps me? 9876 What is the matter?" |
9876 | What is there? |
9876 | What shall we do? 9876 What sort of person is he?" |
9876 | What were they, Sophie? |
9876 | What''s the use of going up, Anna? 9876 When did your mother die?" |
9876 | When will you write? |
9876 | Where did it come from? |
9876 | Where? |
9876 | Who is there? |
9876 | Who painted it? |
9876 | Who rings the bell? |
9876 | Who said it? |
9876 | Who will stay with your sister tonight? |
9876 | Who''ll dig her grave? |
9876 | Why are you cruel, uselessly? |
9876 | Why do you look at me so? |
9876 | Why do you wish to go up, just now? |
9876 | Why should I? 9876 Why should I? |
9876 | Will you come below? |
9876 | Will you come with me, Anna? 9876 Will you give me my key?" |
9876 | Will you lend me this hood? |
9876 | With you? 9876 Would he not walk with them?" |
9876 | You are not offended? |
9876 | You do n''t? |
9876 | You look scarcely fit,was the village- physician''s somewhat ungracious comment; and his eyes said, what his lips dared not,--"Who are you?" |
9876 | You wo n''t mind my telling you what it is like? |
9876 | You''ll write? |
9876 | You, Anna? 9876 _ Wo n''t let you_? |
9876 | A few days ago I caught with it this first flash of sunrise,--see, is it not perfect?" |
9876 | Aaron''s own true voice answered me,--"Where are you, Anna?" |
9876 | And did that person time after time return to the charge, till you would have liked to poison him? |
9876 | And here you are sure no one ever comes?" |
9876 | And why should a third be always dabbled over with a clammy perspiration, and prolong all his vowels to twice the usual length? |
9876 | And would not a monarch of sense have been ready to kick the people who thus treated him like a fool? |
9876 | Are not these the classes which most require artificial training? |
9876 | Before proceeding farther, I desire to answer a question which wise educators have asked:--"Do children require special gymnastic training?" |
9876 | Besides, what were you sent into the world for, but to add this observation?" |
9876 | But are not games of skill as attractive as lifting kegs of nails? |
9876 | But how did she get off of the island? |
9876 | But how shall symmetry and vigor be reached? |
9876 | But now the question arose, How was the blue fluid to be applied? |
9876 | But what is your new sexton''s name?" |
9876 | Did he say,"Brothers ar''n''t Gibraltars"? |
9876 | Did you choose staying up so late?" |
9876 | Do you know her?" |
9876 | Do you live near here?" |
9876 | Does any intelligent physiologist doubt that the latter will have done most for the promotion of his health? |
9876 | Does any one think that his body has lost power in this brilliant education? |
9876 | Does anybody suppose he will become erect? |
9876 | Had I, then, come to the end of my line? |
9876 | Have I a voice that_ could command an army_, or shout out orders in a storm at sea? |
9876 | Have I the voice of a man? |
9876 | Have I the voice of a man?" |
9876 | Have you seen him?" |
9876 | He speaks of Cortà © s with contempt: why should he not? |
9876 | Hear Aaron up- stairs: he''s preaching to himself, to convince himself that some thorn in theology grows naturally: could I do that?" |
9876 | Here''s the key,--a great, strong, honest key; where could another be found to open the heavy door? |
9876 | How do I test them? |
9876 | How? |
9876 | I came in with the key,--why not they? |
9876 | I cruel?" |
9876 | I presume not; but are such exercises the best, even for men? |
9876 | I said,"Who would not like to write something which all can read, like''Robinson Crusoe''? |
9876 | I thought there might be a person with that name.--Don''t you get very tired of this hum- drum life?" |
9876 | Indeed, in almost the entire drill, are not these parts held immovably in one constrained position? |
9876 | Is it not a strange mistake to provide a gymnasium for these alone? |
9876 | Is it true, either in intellectual or physical training, that great exertions, under proper conditions and limitations, exhaust the powers of life? |
9876 | Is there any harm in my making his acquaintance?" |
9876 | Is this all, for the sick lady? |
9876 | It asked,--"Did he see you?" |
9876 | It may be asked, What came of the recommendations of Bernard? |
9876 | It was around the bright, cheerful tea- table that Sophie asked,--"Why did you not come down, Anna? |
9876 | Layn aoot taoonshup lains naoou, aancher? |
9876 | Loon''s Island, in Lake Mashapaug in Killingly, was n''t it?" |
9876 | Must he not, for this, and a hundred other defects, have special training? |
9876 | My will keeping me? |
9876 | Need I say that the military drill fails to bring into varied and vigorous play the chest and shoulders? |
9876 | None of these things is chiefly looked to: the question is, Is he agreeable or disagreeable? |
9876 | On the contrary, is it not an exceedingly complicated machine, the symmetrical development of which requires discriminating, studied management? |
9876 | One question still is unresolved,--Why do frogs stay and be tickled? |
9876 | Shall we throttle the rascal in broad day, or grope in the dark after the impersonal weasand of his crime? |
9876 | She went to send her headaching husband half a mile away, to offer consolation, unto whom? |
9876 | So, could I get down to them, to the two friendly, anxious faces that peered up at me? |
9876 | The following sentence constituted the whole of the reply of the royal representative: for what else could such a double- dealer say? |
9876 | The one lying dead, never more to be disturbed, where was she? |
9876 | The vexing question is, What conglomerated the mass? |
9876 | Then I asked,--"Why do n''t you always drive two miles an hour?" |
9876 | There is the sun, a great round bulb of liquid electricity, open to all the eyes that look into the sky; but do you fancy any one owns that sun but I? |
9876 | Was he dead? |
9876 | Was the recipient worthy, or the gift true? |
9876 | Well, what does she? |
9876 | What are the means? |
9876 | What contained it once? |
9876 | What could have made him shake so? |
9876 | What did he paint it for, if he did n''t like it?" |
9876 | What do you know of taking care of sick people?" |
9876 | What does Miss Nightingale know of Lettie?" |
9876 | What have you to say? |
9876 | What is the feeling like?" |
9876 | What is the law like?" |
9876 | What is this upon the window- bar? |
9876 | What made you think of such a thing?" |
9876 | What precision, permit me to ask, is possible in"putting up"a heavy dumb- bell? |
9876 | What rogue ever felt the clutch of a stern phrase at his throat, with a good opinion of it? |
9876 | What should we do with you?" |
9876 | What, indeed, can quench such fires? |
9876 | What_ must_ its storms be to evolve such marble foam as that which the shore of our earth receives? |
9876 | Where is the school? |
9876 | Who but the Patriot? |
9876 | Who hath sinned?" |
9876 | Who on such a morn would stir? |
9876 | Who will admit that he does not know all that is to be known in horse- matters? |
9876 | Who? |
9876 | Why can they not live as far apart as possible, and each be a man by himself? |
9876 | Why did I do it? |
9876 | Why did I shut the door? |
9876 | Why should another walk with his nose in the air, and his eyes rolled up till they seem likely to roll out? |
9876 | Why?" |
9876 | Will you sit on this step? |
9876 | Wo n''t you come away, for now?" |
9876 | Would he come out? |
9876 | Would not the brain, which had only slow exercise in his isolated life, become bold, brilliant, and dashing, by bold, brilliant, and dashing efforts? |
9876 | Would the talking man of our_ duo_ go over and feed their ears with a fiery harangue? |
9876 | Would they look for me, now I was not there? |
9876 | _ Is not this equally true of the body?_ Is the body one single organ, which, if exercised, is sure to grow in the right way? |
9876 | _ Is not this equally true of the body?_ Is the body one single organ, which, if exercised, is sure to grow in the right way? |
9876 | _ What can be done?_ Few questions have been repeated with such intense anxiety. |
9876 | _ Will_ you take away your sympathy? |
9876 | and who does not see with regret that his page is not solid with a right materialistic treatment, which delights everybody?" |
9876 | is it_ you_ speaking to_ me_? |
9876 | joy or sorrow? |
9876 | what art thou?" |
9876 | what is that? |
9876 | where? |
9876 | whodger doon up thurr? |
34281 | A circus or a town cowboy? |
34281 | Abilene? 34281 Abilene?" |
34281 | Ai n''t it wonderful? 34281 All ready?" |
34281 | Am I worrying? |
34281 | And he do n''t even know your name? 34281 And what do you aim to do now?" |
34281 | And what,said Lafe, whose mind was on other things,"what did the girl do then?" |
34281 | And you done let me have the Home Sweet Home waltz, too? |
34281 | And you were Hughie''s friend? |
34281 | Anything wrong, boy? |
34281 | Are n''t there any whites on the place? |
34281 | Are you hurt, Moffatt? 34281 Bob who? |
34281 | Borrow some money? |
34281 | But why,Johnson said, much amazed,"why did n''t you get him then? |
34281 | Calling you? |
34281 | Cattle? |
34281 | Come home to- night? 34281 Did I ever tell you how Bud Walton run it over that big Slim Terry? |
34281 | Did n''t you see that li''l firefly? 34281 Did you ever feel kind of sudden like you''d done something before?" |
34281 | Did you expect me to holler, Johnson? |
34281 | Did you have any other reason, Terry, for shooting this man? |
34281 | Did you notice? |
34281 | Did you think I could n''t tell a two- year- old from a three, Floyd? 34281 Did you think I did n''t know that? |
34281 | Do about it? 34281 Do n''t you know where he is?" |
34281 | Do n''t you see nobody besides us, boy? |
34281 | Do n''t you understand? 34281 Do we? |
34281 | Do what? |
34281 | Do you call them your prayers? |
34281 | Do you mean to say you do n''t want him to come? |
34281 | Do you reckon we''ll be killed, Dad? 34281 Do you want to see what I wrote to him?" |
34281 | Does this here party belong to you, ma''am? 34281 Doggone your fat head, why ca n''t you lift your feet? |
34281 | Everybody is sure to know the row is over me? |
34281 | Excuse me, ma''am, will you, please? |
34281 | Feel any better, now? |
34281 | Figure it? |
34281 | Go along with you? 34281 Going to be with us, Ben?" |
34281 | Got any bread? |
34281 | Got the ring? |
34281 | Harvard''87? |
34281 | Has she done begun to cut your hair yet, Lafe? |
34281 | Hello,he cried,"back already?" |
34281 | Hetty,she panted,"where is she?" |
34281 | Him? 34281 His time? |
34281 | Ho, have n''t you? |
34281 | Hobby? 34281 How about that one, Lafe?" |
34281 | How did you get here? 34281 How did you get here?" |
34281 | How did you know where it came from? |
34281 | How did you know where to hunt? 34281 How did you know? |
34281 | How do you know it was done, then? |
34281 | How goes it? |
34281 | How goes it? |
34281 | How should I know? |
34281 | How''ll we know they fit her? |
34281 | How''re the boys off for beddin''? |
34281 | How''re you feeling? |
34281 | How''s Bob getting along? |
34281 | How''s the bridge, Floyd? |
34281 | How-- throw in with you? |
34281 | How--? |
34281 | How? |
34281 | Huh- huh? |
34281 | Huh- huh? |
34281 | I can go then, Mr. Horne, sir? |
34281 | I do n''t need to ask if she''s happy? |
34281 | I know it''s silly-- but you''ll be awful careful, wo n''t you, Lafe? |
34281 | I reckon he''d ought to give this here Wilkins a better job and present him with a purse, hey? |
34281 | I reckon this lady knows her way about, ma''am? |
34281 | I reckon you''ll hang me anyhow, if I do n''t? |
34281 | I reckon you''re feeling better? 34281 I said I would, did n''t I?" |
34281 | I say,he broke out abruptly in English,"is n''t your name Toole?" |
34281 | I wonder,said he,"what''s the reason?" |
34281 | If a man ca n''t roast his friends, who can? |
34281 | Is he-- what''s wrong with him, Lafe? |
34281 | Is n''t it funny I should n''t have thought about you and her before? 34281 Is n''t it just like heaven? |
34281 | Is that so? 34281 Is that so?" |
34281 | Is that so? |
34281 | Is that you, Lafe? 34281 It does, does it?" |
34281 | It is n''t, hey? 34281 It must be right hard doing that''rithmetic all day long?" |
34281 | It''s right queer,Shortredge continued,"ai n''t it?" |
34281 | Jiminez? |
34281 | Johnsing, you said? |
34281 | Judy, what''s the matter, dear? |
34281 | Just look at that dark, Sally, will you? |
34281 | Know her? 34281 Lafe Johnson is married now, you say?" |
34281 | Land''s sake, Lafe,cried Dave,"what do you aim to do now?" |
34281 | Look a- here, Mr. Lafe, what''re you driving at? |
34281 | Ma''am? |
34281 | Many''s the time I''ve helped him out,he said, reverting to the subject after dinner,"and what do I get? |
34281 | Martha, how dare you say such a thing? 34281 Matter? |
34281 | My trunk? 34281 No, but honest--""Do you think I could write to him after going away without a word to-- to marry a man I''d never set eyes on? |
34281 | Notice what? |
34281 | Now, I wonder if that lady meant something? |
34281 | Now, that''d be horrible, would n''t it? |
34281 | Off in your tally, pardner? |
34281 | One thousand and seventy- six, and those five little fellows make-- what do they make, now? |
34281 | One throw, or best out of three? |
34281 | Or,Lafe resumed,"what if I put it up this way to some of them terrible fighters? |
34281 | Out you go,he ordered,"do you hear me? |
34281 | Pablo Jiminez? |
34281 | Pluckier? 34281 Quit crowding there, will you?" |
34281 | Ready? |
34281 | Runnin''by? 34281 Say, Lafe, you''ll give me a fair count, wo n''t you, boy? |
34281 | Say, Lafe,began the cook,"this here nester, Ben Walsh, that just come in--""Well?" |
34281 | Say, are you looking for trouble? |
34281 | Say, you speak French, do n''t you? |
34281 | Say,cried the gentleman of the peg- tops,"ai n''t I got anything to say in this? |
34281 | See that high one yonder? 34281 So you think a feller ought to tell only what he figures folks will believe? |
34281 | So you think he''s going to rob you? 34281 So your name ai n''t Wilkins? |
34281 | Somebody''ll find room for me, do n''t you reckon? |
34281 | Split her tongue? |
34281 | Steve Moffatt? |
34281 | Stories? 34281 Suppose they should n''t happen to fit her right snug, ma''am, we''ll leave her at The Tanks?" |
34281 | Supposing he was to get me? 34281 Surely you do n''t want to hear from him, do you? |
34281 | Teach me what? |
34281 | That poor creature-- Sarah-- you remember Jackson? |
34281 | The Moffatts? |
34281 | The best man to open it-- I wonder now what a gunman-- what Mr. Moffatt here-- would say to that? |
34281 | Then why are you worrying so now? |
34281 | There was n''t no call for her to say that? |
34281 | They said you could n''t speak-- what does this mean, anyway? 34281 Throw dice?" |
34281 | Thunderation, what for? |
34281 | Well, then, what do you find to talk about all the time? 34281 Well, what''re you aiming to do?" |
34281 | Well, what''re you going to do about it? |
34281 | Well,he said finally, with an uncertain laugh,"that''s different again, ai n''t it? |
34281 | Well? 34281 Well? |
34281 | Well? |
34281 | Well? |
34281 | Well? |
34281 | Well? |
34281 | Well? |
34281 | Wha- what-- who''s there? |
34281 | What about this little ol''country now, hey? |
34281 | What could she do? 34281 What did Tilly do?" |
34281 | What did you hit him with that there stool for? |
34281 | What did you let that feller have? |
34281 | What did you say? |
34281 | What difference is there between you and the others? 34281 What do you know about this?" |
34281 | What do you mean by taking him out on the porch as you did last night? |
34281 | What do you think of her, hey? 34281 What do you think of that there girl with the yallow hair?" |
34281 | What do you want me to do? 34281 What do you want your slicker for? |
34281 | What do you want? |
34281 | What do you want? |
34281 | What does she mean by that? |
34281 | What does she want? |
34281 | What does this mean? 34281 What fine fellow of mine?" |
34281 | What for do you let these here fellers get off them bum jokes? |
34281 | What for you do n''t hitch him to the coffee pot? |
34281 | What for? |
34281 | What for? |
34281 | What for? |
34281 | What good are bachelors, anyhow? |
34281 | What is it? |
34281 | What is it? |
34281 | What made you? |
34281 | What makes you go to say them things then? |
34281 | What on earth''s going to happen to you? 34281 What the Sam Hill are you, anyhow?" |
34281 | What the hell do you want? |
34281 | What time is it? 34281 What was the trouble about?" |
34281 | What was the trouble last night? |
34281 | What were you hanging round here for? 34281 What''d I tell you, Buf''lo? |
34281 | What''d you give that feller Steve? |
34281 | What''re you doing? |
34281 | What''re you getting all swelled up about, Lafe? |
34281 | What''re you looking so scared about? |
34281 | What''re you thinking about? |
34281 | What''s got into him? |
34281 | What''s got into you, anyhow? 34281 What''s he doing here? |
34281 | What''s he done now? |
34281 | What''s hurting you? |
34281 | What''s queer? |
34281 | What''s that girl doing here? |
34281 | What''s that? 34281 What''s the matter, Lafe? |
34281 | What''s the matter, Lafe? |
34281 | What''s the meaning of it, Lafe Johnson? 34281 What''s the trouble here?" |
34281 | What''s the use? |
34281 | What''s the use? |
34281 | What''s this I hear? 34281 What''s this I hear?" |
34281 | What''s this all about? |
34281 | What''s this nester got to do with Steve Moffatt or his kin? |
34281 | What''s this, Lafe Johnson? |
34281 | What''s this? |
34281 | What''s wrong with you, anyhow? 34281 What? |
34281 | What? 34281 Whatever are you thinking about, Lafe?" |
34281 | Where did that fool Mexican go to? |
34281 | Where did you drop from? 34281 Where did you find it?" |
34281 | Where does this here party live? 34281 Where has she gone? |
34281 | Where''re we going? |
34281 | Where''re you going? |
34281 | Who asked you to flirt? 34281 Who did it?" |
34281 | Who is this here Steve, Haverty? |
34281 | Who killed him then? |
34281 | Who said you were anything else? 34281 Who told you this?" |
34281 | Who''re you, anyway? 34281 Who''re you?" |
34281 | Who''s that? 34281 Who''s them there ladies?" |
34281 | Who''s there, I say? |
34281 | Who''s there? |
34281 | Who? 34281 Who? |
34281 | Who? 34281 Whose horse was shot first?" |
34281 | Why could n''t he wait? 34281 Why do n''t we drive on?" |
34281 | Why do n''t you leave Lafe alone? |
34281 | Why do n''t you say a word? |
34281 | Why do n''t you throw it all up? |
34281 | Why not get some of the boys to round him up? |
34281 | Why not? 34281 Why not? |
34281 | Why not? |
34281 | Why should n''t I be? |
34281 | Why shouldn''t--? 34281 Why the hell did n''t you stop? |
34281 | Why, Lafe,Hetty remonstrated,"do n''t you see? |
34281 | Why, how do you figure it? 34281 Why, it ca n''t be-- Hetty, she wouldn''t-- say, it must be a joke-- what does it mean?" |
34281 | Why, you baby, do n''t you see? 34281 Why, you mean to say you do n''t know? |
34281 | Why, you''re going to take me along, ai n''t you? 34281 Why? |
34281 | Will Nugget do? 34281 Will you help?" |
34281 | Wo n''t you get down and visit, Jeff? |
34281 | Would he, now? 34281 Yes, but-- well, I might-- you''ll look after her, wo n''t you, Lafe?" |
34281 | Yes? 34281 You ai n''t got anything to eat, have you?" |
34281 | You aim to tell her, Miz MacFarlane? |
34281 | You certainly do n''t lose no time, do you, Lafe Johnson? |
34281 | You coming, too? |
34281 | You do fine to ask, do n''t you, Lafe Johnson? 34281 You do n''t believe that old woman''s tale, do you?" |
34281 | You do n''t see? |
34281 | You do, do you? 34281 You do? |
34281 | You fired three, hey, Jeff? |
34281 | You got a new gun, Lafe? |
34281 | You heard what he said, did n''t you? |
34281 | You mean my job? 34281 You mean you''re through with me, Lafe Johnson?" |
34281 | You reckon you''re a married woman, I take it, ma''am?'' |
34281 | You say he''s been married before? |
34281 | You sick? |
34281 | You think so? |
34281 | You travel well heeled? |
34281 | You wo n''t let the ol''man kill me, will you, son? |
34281 | You''d like to know, would n''t you? 34281 You''re awful kind, are n''t you?" |
34281 | _ We_ will? 34281 A man''s pluckier or he do n''t think of these things when he''s younger-- don''t you reckon? 34281 A steak with onions? |
34281 | A stoodent, you said he was?" |
34281 | A widow?" |
34281 | After a moment he inquired, without looking at her:"You done give me two Paul Joneses, did n''t you?" |
34281 | Afterwards, he--""He what?" |
34281 | Ai n''t I got any rights? |
34281 | Ai n''t a man boss of his own wife? |
34281 | Ai n''t a man got any rights in this country? |
34281 | Ai n''t it hell?" |
34281 | Ai n''t that the tally?" |
34281 | Ai n''t you seen him before?" |
34281 | Ai n''t you written to him?" |
34281 | And for heaven''s sake, what is there in it? |
34281 | And he do n''t care how even it is, does he, Moffatt?" |
34281 | And let a sweet girl like her marry a man like you?" |
34281 | And what has ol''Horne got to say to that general, or whatever he is?" |
34281 | And you''re going to tell me all that nonsense? |
34281 | Are they all as beautiful as that?" |
34281 | Are you his wife?" |
34281 | At last he said, essaying a sneer:"I reckon you''ve got the world by the tail with a down- hill pull, ai n''t you?" |
34281 | At last he said:"You''d have me quit? |
34281 | At last:"So that''s what he is? |
34281 | Besides, in your circle or in mine, what earthly honor is accorded the man so palely good that he never takes a jaunt into the pleasant by- ways? |
34281 | Besides, what earthly use was there in defying a whole outfit? |
34281 | Bud was shot in front, was n''t he? |
34281 | Buf''lo? |
34281 | Buf''lo?" |
34281 | Buffalo asked suddenly:"What made you draw off so sudden that way, Lafe?" |
34281 | But why, then, had the two not come to meet him? |
34281 | But you''re too good for me now all of a sudden, ai n''t you? |
34281 | But you- all wo n''t kill me, now? |
34281 | CHAPTER X A JOURNEY TO SATAN''S KINGDOM"What''re you giving us?" |
34281 | CHAPTER XIII AND HETTY COMES TO BADGER TO LIVE"Where is she?" |
34281 | Ca n''t we never have nothing else?" |
34281 | Ca n''t you see? |
34281 | Charlie and James? |
34281 | Coroner.--"Did you shoot Bud Walton?" |
34281 | Coroner.--"Where did Walton''s shot go?" |
34281 | Coroner.--"Where did you get this here book?" |
34281 | Coroner.--"Who sent for you?" |
34281 | Coroner.--"You''ve killed six men, ai n''t you?" |
34281 | Could we?" |
34281 | Cry on your shoulder? |
34281 | Did I sing that before? |
34281 | Did n''t I send you your fare? |
34281 | Did n''t you and Mrs. Brown hide her out?" |
34281 | Did n''t you see her? |
34281 | Did you notice? |
34281 | Did you say he owed you fifty- seven, Lafe? |
34281 | Do n''t you reckon? |
34281 | Do n''t you reckon?" |
34281 | Do n''t you reckon?" |
34281 | Do n''t you reckon?" |
34281 | Do n''t you think he would?" |
34281 | Do you get that? |
34281 | Do you hear that? |
34281 | Do you hear? |
34281 | Do you hear?" |
34281 | Do you know anything about this?" |
34281 | Do you know why he wanted to shoot? |
34281 | Do you mind how we used to wonder what was on top of that ol''mountain, me and you? |
34281 | Do you reckon I''ve got nothing better to talk about?" |
34281 | Do you reckon you can handle him yourself, or will I take him along?" |
34281 | Do you remember that roundup on the Lazy L? |
34281 | Do you remember, Lafe, the grass fights we used to have? |
34281 | Do you see that?" |
34281 | Do you think I''ll help you cheat Mr. Horne by flirting with Lafe? |
34281 | Does she know how to swear? |
34281 | Ever notice?" |
34281 | Finally he asked:"Did you notice it, too?" |
34281 | Gee, ai n''t the heat a fright? |
34281 | Got anything to eat?" |
34281 | Gracious, what''s got into you, Sally? |
34281 | Gracious, what''s happened? |
34281 | Had he not repeated three times for Lafe in the election? |
34281 | Had she no friends while working in the city? |
34281 | Had the two met? |
34281 | Have n''t you ever felt that way, Dan?" |
34281 | Have you boys got anything to eat? |
34281 | He can fix teeth pretty good, ca n''t he?" |
34281 | He had a shrewd notion that Lafe was the lady''s admirer, with an eye to the property; but what booted it? |
34281 | He''s gone to jail, I suppose you know? |
34281 | Hetty was saying to me only the other day-- say, what''re you so red in the face about?" |
34281 | Hetty, where are you?" |
34281 | Hey, Dan?" |
34281 | Hey, Lafe? |
34281 | Hey, ol''feller? |
34281 | Hey? |
34281 | Hey? |
34281 | Hey? |
34281 | Hey? |
34281 | Hey? |
34281 | Hey?" |
34281 | His first care was to talk with the proprietor of the Fashion, who said:"The hammer was on the wrong chamber? |
34281 | Hold still, ca n''t you, till I light this cigarette? |
34281 | How about li''l''Charlie and James, that''s the dead image of you? |
34281 | How about this air? |
34281 | How did it happen?" |
34281 | How did it sound?" |
34281 | How had the hammer happened on that? |
34281 | How is Hetty?" |
34281 | How often has he had the habit? |
34281 | How on earth did I ever forget it? |
34281 | How''re you better than this fellow you ran off-- this Jackson?" |
34281 | Huh? |
34281 | Hurt bad?" |
34281 | I can run my wife alone, ca n''t I?" |
34281 | I do n''t rightly know, but--""And these-- these wives and fam''lies? |
34281 | I hope there ai n''t nothing wrong, Lafe?" |
34281 | I no sooner get him out of the cells for deserting, than off he goes and-- guess what he wants to do now?" |
34281 | I reckon that was just a mistake, do n''t you? |
34281 | I reckon you ai n''t forgot that, have you?" |
34281 | I suppose Hetty''s a baby? |
34281 | I suppose you think you''re doing something mighty fine to ask me, do n''t you?" |
34281 | I wonder what they are?" |
34281 | If she''d only got a different start--""What about it?" |
34281 | If the other feller was a mite quicker, I wonder if he''d-- What do you think?" |
34281 | In a chill dawn the roper called to Johnson:"Want Casey Jones?" |
34281 | Is it a go?" |
34281 | Is n''t it strange, Lafe? |
34281 | It do n''t, hey? |
34281 | It was five years since he had seen her, was n''t it? |
34281 | It would be utterly useless, he told her-- who ever heard of such a proposition made to serious men? |
34281 | It''s Ferrier?" |
34281 | It''s a small world, is n''t it? |
34281 | Johnson?" |
34281 | Johnson?" |
34281 | Lafe asked;"what I done then? |
34281 | Lafe?" |
34281 | Lafe?" |
34281 | Married? |
34281 | Matter?" |
34281 | Me and you never used to run away, did we? |
34281 | Notice? |
34281 | Now, are you satisfied?" |
34281 | Oh, he does? |
34281 | Oh, what shall I do? |
34281 | Oh, you mean-- them?" |
34281 | Presently she asked:"Judy, have you ever heard from Harry?" |
34281 | Promise? |
34281 | Quit being sheriff?" |
34281 | Resign? |
34281 | Said Mr. Johnson, knowing well to the contrary:"Running sheep?" |
34281 | Savez?" |
34281 | Say, Lafe, what''re you going to do with me?" |
34281 | Say, do n''t women do queer things? |
34281 | Say, have you got one? |
34281 | Send him fifty dollars-- had Hetty ever in her life heard anything to equal that? |
34281 | Seventy a month?" |
34281 | She said:"Were n''t you sick last night, Mr. Buf''lo? |
34281 | So keep him in a good humor, Sally, will you? |
34281 | So that''s Steve Moffatt?" |
34281 | Stick around?" |
34281 | Still holding his horse by the cheek of the bridle, he said in amazement:"Ma''am?" |
34281 | That smile she smothers, now--""Have you noticed that, too? |
34281 | That''s a fine asset-- what Bob owes-- ain''t it?" |
34281 | That''s a fine way for a li''l feller to pray, ai n''t it? |
34281 | The coroner.--"Did you expect him last night?" |
34281 | Then he leaned toward him and remarked, smilingly:"Say, you do n''t eat enough to fatten a steer, do you?" |
34281 | Then someone said:"What''s the matter with you, Lafe?" |
34281 | This is the first time me and you have been here together, ai n''t it? |
34281 | This wife? |
34281 | True, she occasionally snatches a half day to herself; but guess what the busybody does then? |
34281 | Two days later:"Now guess what?" |
34281 | Understand? |
34281 | Understand? |
34281 | Vining?" |
34281 | WELL? |
34281 | Walsh?" |
34281 | Want a job? |
34281 | Was he gone crazy? |
34281 | Was n''t it grand of him?" |
34281 | Was n''t it inhuman? |
34281 | Was n''t it noble of him? |
34281 | We''ll--""I wonder,"said Miss Ferrier, without a trace of resentment,"I wonder if there''s more than one man on earth who is n''t a brute?" |
34281 | Were n''t they enough?" |
34281 | Were n''t you, Lafe?" |
34281 | What about me that you left in Abilene, back in Texas? |
34281 | What can I do? |
34281 | What can you expect from a pig but a grunt?" |
34281 | What did you hear? |
34281 | What did you lend it to him for, then?" |
34281 | What do you make''em?" |
34281 | What do you mean by running by that way?" |
34281 | What do you say if we trail him?" |
34281 | What do you talk that way for? |
34281 | What do you think of that-- hey?" |
34281 | What do you think you are, anyway?" |
34281 | What do you think you''re doing, butting into my private affairs this way? |
34281 | What do you think? |
34281 | What do you want that I should do?" |
34281 | What do you want to know?" |
34281 | What does he want? |
34281 | What does she want to go and tell them lies for? |
34281 | What good does it do?" |
34281 | What had he on his mind? |
34281 | What is a year in a lifetime?" |
34281 | What made you think Hetty was up there?" |
34281 | What of it?" |
34281 | What sort of an idiot did Buffalo take him to be, anyhow? |
34281 | What was he doing there? |
34281 | What''d you do this for?" |
34281 | What''d you like? |
34281 | What''d you say, judge? |
34281 | What''d you say? |
34281 | What''re you going to do about it? |
34281 | What''re you going to do about it?" |
34281 | What''re you going to do that for?" |
34281 | What''re you going to do? |
34281 | What''re you hugging him for?" |
34281 | What''s got into you, Hetty?" |
34281 | What''s got into your head now?" |
34281 | What''s it all about? |
34281 | What''s that?" |
34281 | What''s the idea?" |
34281 | What''s the matter, anyhow? |
34281 | What''s the matter?" |
34281 | What? |
34281 | What?" |
34281 | When did you write to Buf''lo? |
34281 | Where are they?" |
34281 | Where could she go?" |
34281 | Where is she?" |
34281 | Where''d we put him?" |
34281 | Where''re you going?" |
34281 | Where''s Lafe?" |
34281 | Where''s my gun?" |
34281 | Where''s the bucket? |
34281 | Who could say at what moment a pair of desperadoes, with prior claims on the Jug, might not ride up the trail? |
34281 | Who done told you that? |
34281 | Who is this lady?" |
34281 | Who''s that, I say?" |
34281 | Who''s that?" |
34281 | Why could n''t his luck have made him lean with the other hand? |
34281 | Why did n''t you speak out?" |
34281 | Why did n''t you tell that at the inquest?" |
34281 | Why did you do it? |
34281 | Why did you do it?" |
34281 | Why do n''t you take a chance?" |
34281 | Why do n''t you write to him?" |
34281 | Why had she run away? |
34281 | Why should n''t I? |
34281 | Why should n''t he?" |
34281 | Why? |
34281 | Why?" |
34281 | Why?" |
34281 | Will nothing sober you? |
34281 | Will you leave me alone to dress?" |
34281 | Will you?" |
34281 | Will you?" |
34281 | Works for the Tumbling K. You''ve heard of him, Lafe? |
34281 | Would he never stand still? |
34281 | Would n''t she knock you cold?" |
34281 | Would n''t that most scare you? |
34281 | You ai n''t? |
34281 | You believe that, do n''t you? |
34281 | You going to the fight? |
34281 | You keep your mouth shut about me-- do you hear? |
34281 | You knew my sister Kitty, back in Texas, did n''t you, Buf''lo? |
34281 | You mad just because Steve done took your girl?" |
34281 | You pay attention to--""Where''ll you take him?" |
34281 | You reckon--""Where''s your outfit, ma''am?" |
34281 | You remember ol''Rooker? |
34281 | You sit there and say you ai n''t my wife? |
34281 | You wrote to Buf''lo? |
34281 | You''d have me back down when they-- all these here people-- done put me in just because they thought I was the best man to clean up this here place? |
34281 | You''re going to give me a chance at him, too, ai n''t you?" |
34281 | You''re sheriff, ai n''t you?" |
34281 | Your name''s Johnson, ai n''t it? |
34281 | _ Dear Friend:_ How are you? |
30298 | ''Twas me hailed yez, and what of it? |
30298 | A coward? 30298 A summons? |
30298 | Am I so engaged in affairs that I can not see the obvious, my dear? |
30298 | An officer, did ye say? |
30298 | And did I, Mr. Jefferson? 30298 And how did Arcturus perform for you this morning?" |
30298 | And no man has come into the camp from below-- no horseman? |
30298 | And so Captain Lewis is going to have his way as usual? 30298 And what have you found?" |
30298 | And what of that, my son? 30298 And what of you, Governor?" |
30298 | And what then? |
30298 | And why not? 30298 And why not?" |
30298 | And yet you try to evade the truth? 30298 And you are done your ride?" |
30298 | And you did not fear for me, then-- gone overnight in the woods? |
30298 | And you did that? 30298 And you followed me? |
30298 | And you say you will not relinquish me, you will not let me go to that fate which surely is mine? 30298 And you waited-- so long?" |
30298 | And your powder? |
30298 | Are you still carrying all the weight of the entire world? |
30298 | Are you sure, Governor, that your strength is sufficient? |
30298 | Are your men ready, your supplies gathered together? |
30298 | As I thought, Will,said Lewis, nodding; and again, to the Indian girl:"Do you remember this place?" |
30298 | As long as I can? |
30298 | As you say, your case is hopeless? |
30298 | Beaver? |
30298 | But shall I let that stain rest on his name? |
30298 | But what then? 30298 But why have you come? |
30298 | But you will-- you will come back again? |
30298 | But your husband is not here? 30298 But,"she still expostulated, looking up at him,"how can you cook? |
30298 | But--_suppose he does not know_? |
30298 | Can you fancy what all this means to me? |
30298 | Can you then call it good fortune? |
30298 | Capt''in,she said one day,"what for you no laff? |
30298 | Captain,began the victim,"what do you mean? |
30298 | Captain,inquired Chouteau at length,"your luggage, your boxes-- where are they?" |
30298 | Certainly you carried it for me-- why did you not bring it to me long ago? |
30298 | Come back-- when? |
30298 | Coming back to_ you_? 30298 Coming back?" |
30298 | Could a few francs transfer all that marvelous country from Spain to France? 30298 Did I know men, then?" |
30298 | Did I not say right? 30298 Did he ever speak to you of her?" |
30298 | Did you get my letters? |
30298 | Did you wish to see me? |
30298 | Divide and conquer? |
30298 | Divide that unknown country, the West, and how long would this republic endure? |
30298 | Do not I love him also? 30298 Do you believe that of me-- and you my father?" |
30298 | Do you forget your friends so soon? 30298 Does a woman''s wish mean nothing to you? |
30298 | Excuse me, sor, ye are sayin''ye are goin''up the Missouri? 30298 For both of us?" |
30298 | Forgotten him? 30298 Gass, Patrick Gass, you said?" |
30298 | George,said he to young Shannon,"George, saw ye ever the like of yon? |
30298 | Go back? 30298 Go, then, my savage gentleman, and let me----""And let you never see my face again?" |
30298 | Going away-- where, then, my friend? |
30298 | Guilty as I have been, sinning as I have sinned-- tell me, was I alone in the wrong? 30298 Had I no eyes for what went on at my side this very evening, at Mr. Jefferson''s dinner- table? |
30298 | Hand and glove, then, so soon? 30298 Has any boat passed up the river within the last day-- for instance, while we were away at the hunt?" |
30298 | Have I not seen it? 30298 He rides always with his rifle across his saddle?" |
30298 | He starts tomorrow-- is that sure? |
30298 | He told you what? |
30298 | Hold with it? 30298 Hold with the theory of Colonel Burr, sir?" |
30298 | How can I? 30298 How can we help meeting here in the society of this little town, whose people are like one family? |
30298 | How did you know? |
30298 | How do you know, mother? 30298 How do you know?" |
30298 | How is your salt, Will? |
30298 | How long do you suppose his Majesty will endure such slights as they put on us here day by day? 30298 How, then?" |
30298 | I have touched you on the raw once more, have n''t I, Merne? |
30298 | I march only with destiny, yonder-- do you not see, gentlemen? |
30298 | If you can not leave me happiness, can you not at least leave me partial peace of mind? |
30298 | Is Shannon here? |
30298 | Is it not a beautiful world, Madam? |
30298 | Is it so? |
30298 | Is not my father also? 30298 Is that the reason?" |
30298 | Just what do you mean? |
30298 | Listen-- tell me, Will, why did you do this? |
30298 | Loaded, I presume-- and his pistols? |
30298 | Madam,he inquired,"could you entertain me and my party for the night? |
30298 | Make down my bed for me-- I am ill. And tell me, where is my powder? 30298 Mebbe we could n''t, eh? |
30298 | Mr. Jefferson, how is he? |
30298 | Mr. Jefferson,ventured he,"you will pardon me----""Yes, my son?" |
30298 | My heart-- did I say that I had need of another, a better? 30298 My matches-- my thermometers-- my instruments-- how did they perform?" |
30298 | No? 30298 Perhaps, my dear,"said he at last,"you come regarding Captain Lewis?" |
30298 | Plans? 30298 Purchase? |
30298 | Saw you ever such nights, Merne, in all your life? 30298 Say you so?" |
30298 | Shall I fetch your coat? |
30298 | Shall I fire on yez to make yez answer a civil question? 30298 Shall we cast off?" |
30298 | She is at Richmond, Merne? |
30298 | So you are ready, Captain Lewis? |
30298 | Some game? |
30298 | Suppose, under coercion, our sovereign did cede it to Napoleon, who claims it now? 30298 Tell me"--he lifted his own reins now to proceed--"you saw nothing of my daughter, Mrs. Alston? |
30298 | Tell me, Merne, what are you thinking of? 30298 Tell me, can we get beyond the Mississippi this fall, do you think?" |
30298 | That is to say, you know him well? |
30298 | The beaver-- did you find the beaver yonder? |
30298 | Then what do you mean by saying something about the way of a woman with a man? |
30298 | Then you mean that you will go on? |
30298 | There is some mighty Hand that seems to guide us-- is it not the truth? |
30298 | There would be prospects for him? |
30298 | Think you that I have won? |
30298 | Think you that I would ask of you anything to my own dishonor, or to your dishonor? 30298 Think you that I would have come here for any other man?" |
30298 | This republic, what is it? 30298 Torment you, sir?" |
30298 | Treachery? 30298 Treasure?" |
30298 | Tut, tut, Merne-- moralizing again? |
30298 | We are going to start? |
30298 | We''ll be off at sunup? |
30298 | Well, what of that? 30298 What Great Father is that?" |
30298 | What are you doing here? |
30298 | What are you saying? 30298 What benefit, indeed, to me? |
30298 | What can I do, father? |
30298 | What changed you? |
30298 | What did he say? |
30298 | What did she promise you? |
30298 | What do you mean, Colonel Burr? |
30298 | What do you mean, Merne? 30298 What do you mean, Theodosia? |
30298 | What do you mean? 30298 What do you mean?" |
30298 | What halted the cause of Colonel Burr here in the West? 30298 What have I done? |
30298 | What have I done? |
30298 | What have I done? |
30298 | What is it, Captain? |
30298 | What is it, Captain? |
30298 | What is it, Cruzatte? |
30298 | What is it, Merne? 30298 What is it, Merne?" |
30298 | What is it, Merne? |
30298 | What is it, Theodosia? |
30298 | What is it, boy? |
30298 | What is it, father-- are you ill? |
30298 | What is it, my son? |
30298 | What is it, sir? |
30298 | What is it, then, your excellency? |
30298 | What is it? |
30298 | What is it? |
30298 | What is that you''re saying? |
30298 | What is the matter with you, Merne? |
30298 | What is wrong with the Governor, think you? |
30298 | What letter? 30298 What river is this which goes on to the left?" |
30298 | What shall you do? 30298 What sort of men have you in your party, Merne?" |
30298 | What treasure? 30298 What woman, father?" |
30298 | What''s wrong, Merne? |
30298 | What, is it, George? |
30298 | What, then? |
30298 | What? 30298 What? |
30298 | What? 30298 What?" |
30298 | When are you coming back to me, Merne? |
30298 | When could we learn? |
30298 | When was all this? |
30298 | Where is he? |
30298 | Where, then, could we meet after this is over? |
30298 | Which is the river? 30298 Which is the roight river, then?" |
30298 | Which way, Captain Lewis-- upstream or down? |
30298 | Which way, Sacajawea? |
30298 | Which way, Sacajawea? |
30298 | Which way, Will? |
30298 | Who brought it? |
30298 | Who calls there? 30298 Who goes there?" |
30298 | Who hailed us? |
30298 | Who is she, Henry? |
30298 | Who shall make the fire? 30298 Whom had he ever harmed?" |
30298 | Why are you here? 30298 Why are you here?" |
30298 | Why did Colonel Burr hesitate, why did he give up his plans here-- why, indeed, did he fail? 30298 Why did I do what? |
30298 | Why did you come thus, unattended? 30298 Why did you kill it, Cruzatte?" |
30298 | Why do you give it to me now, boy? |
30298 | Why do you think----"Am I not your leader? 30298 Why is it that you always come to torment me the more? |
30298 | Why might we not walk down with you to the wharf, if you are so soon to go? |
30298 | Why must you see him? |
30298 | Why not enlist with us? 30298 Why not, Merne?" |
30298 | Why not, then? |
30298 | Why should I not know? |
30298 | Why should she not? 30298 Why should the spring grudge a draft to a soul aflame with an undying thirst? |
30298 | Why should we not go also? |
30298 | Why? 30298 Will Spain fight?" |
30298 | Will,said he at length,"do n''t you recall what I was telling you this very morning? |
30298 | Wo n''t you take my hand, Merne? |
30298 | Wo n''t you? |
30298 | Would Spain fight-- and would Great Britain, if need were and the time came? |
30298 | Would you match them for me in the East? 30298 Yes, Sergeant Ordway?" |
30298 | Yes, but are you happy? 30298 Yes, my son?" |
30298 | Yes? 30298 You also have caught the secret of this climate, eh? |
30298 | You can speak thus with me? |
30298 | You do n''t mean that we should return? |
30298 | You found the sea? 30298 You give me no long shrift, mother?" |
30298 | You have been with the colors? 30298 You hear that, Merne?" |
30298 | You know him, then? |
30298 | You left him well? |
30298 | You promised them a country, Colonel Burr-- from what? |
30298 | You refuse, then, Mr. Jefferson? 30298 You say the Tenth?" |
30298 | You should be, Merne, but are you? |
30298 | You think I will not do? |
30298 | You think it aisy to find a way across yonder range? 30298 You will explain more fully, Colonel Burr?" |
30298 | You will love, my boy, but with your nature how could love mean happiness to you? 30298 You will see him in the morning?" |
30298 | You-- give your presence to one who is now a social pariah? 30298 Your Excellency plans to go by land, then, and not by sea?" |
30298 | Your brother, General Clark, how is he? |
30298 | Your burden is grievous hard, and yet----"Yes, my son? |
30298 | Your men, will they be free to make return up the river with trading parties? |
30298 | _ All bridges burned?_The deep voice of Aaron Burr almost trembled. |
30298 | _ Letters?_said he at length. |
30298 | _ What letters?_Her eyes looked up at him luminously. |
30298 | ''Tis a monstrous good likeness, they tell me; but would you not rather it were myself? |
30298 | ''Twas a fair New York maid, was it not? |
30298 | ***** What of Theodosia Alston, loyal and lofty soul, blameless wife, devoted and pathetic adherent to the fallen fortunes of her ill- starred father? |
30298 | A statue to her? |
30298 | A torment? |
30298 | Across what wide prairies did you come-- among what hills-- through what vast forests? |
30298 | After a time the President went on gently:"My dear, would you wish him to come back-- would you condemn him further to the tortures of the damned? |
30298 | After all, what is life? |
30298 | Against that, what could he measure? |
30298 | Agree with him? |
30298 | Ah, did he not see it now? |
30298 | Ah, you can not tell? |
30298 | Am I not Meriwether, too?" |
30298 | Am I not your mother, and therefore a woman? |
30298 | And as for you? |
30298 | And can we talk freely as such among ourselves?" |
30298 | And did he?" |
30298 | And do we not know, my daughter, who that woman is?" |
30298 | And how d''ye know jist how the Alleghanies was crossed first? |
30298 | And she-- what had been her perils? |
30298 | And should a woman complain? |
30298 | And what for me? |
30298 | And where is my rifle- powder? |
30298 | And why not? |
30298 | And why send you?" |
30298 | And why should she not ride with a gallant at sunrise for an early cup of coffee, egad?" |
30298 | And would you halt him while he is trying to do his duty as a man and a soldier? |
30298 | And you call me by that name? |
30298 | And you will not hear new evidence?" |
30298 | And you would do that-- you would take that chance?" |
30298 | Are all the men on the roll tonight?" |
30298 | Are any of your men able to strike the eye of a deer, the head of a grouse, at fifty paces with the rifle? |
30298 | Are my words good in your ears?" |
30298 | Are other faces of women in your mind? |
30298 | Are the men ready? |
30298 | Are the winds keen and biting? |
30298 | Are they so much to you as you thought they would be? |
30298 | Are we such men, gentlemen? |
30298 | Are you alone, aloof, deserted, perhaps suffering, with none to comfort you? |
30298 | Are you among the Gauls, the Goths, the Visigoths, the Huns, the Vandals, or the Cimbri? |
30298 | Are you cold and hungry? |
30298 | Are you in rags as you read this? |
30298 | Are you in the mountains? |
30298 | Are you mad?" |
30298 | Are you my enemy, too? |
30298 | Are you on the prairie still, Meriwether Lewis? |
30298 | Are you ready to start?" |
30298 | Are you ready, Captain Lewis? |
30298 | Are you warm? |
30298 | Are you well fed? |
30298 | Arguing, justifying, defending? |
30298 | At what time are you going to turn back and come to us once more? |
30298 | Breathed you ever such air as these plains carry in the nighttime? |
30298 | But Spain still rules the South, just as Britain rules the middle country out beyond; and what is left? |
30298 | But after that?" |
30298 | But how? |
30298 | But if you came with me to my villages, women would say,''Who is that woman there? |
30298 | But in what way could this effect our friend, Captain Lewis? |
30298 | But now tell me, boy, what can I do for you-- what can I ever do for you?" |
30298 | But now-- you know our other new interpreter, the sullen chap, Charbonneau-- that polygamous scamp with two or three Indian wives?" |
30298 | But suppose all the world were set to wondering? |
30298 | But tell me, Merne, can you not tear her from your soul? |
30298 | But tell me, what would make you most happy now, of these things remaining? |
30298 | But then, you said, you come to me about him?" |
30298 | But to what end-- what is the purpose of all this? |
30298 | But to what purpose?" |
30298 | But what then?" |
30298 | But what were you saying now?" |
30298 | But where is Sacajawea?" |
30298 | But why did not his laugh sound high like that of his friend? |
30298 | But why-- why? |
30298 | But will you stay there? |
30298 | But you have heard the last news regarding him?" |
30298 | But you-- how can you be content to punish yourself for so long? |
30298 | But, seriously, why take life so hard, Merne? |
30298 | But, that being so beautiful, ought I to allow you to turn it to ruin? |
30298 | Buy land? |
30298 | By what possible title could that region yonder ever come to this republic? |
30298 | CHAPTER VI WHICH WAY? |
30298 | CHAPTER XII WHAT VOICE HAD CALLED? |
30298 | Ca n''t I ask a place in a good man''s heart-- an innocent, clean place? |
30298 | Ca n''t the Governor of the new Territory wear a coat that shows his own quality? |
30298 | Can I forgive you? |
30298 | Can I not see your life-- all your life-- as plainly as if it were written? |
30298 | Can you begin to see what responsibility rested on you? |
30298 | Can you do what we can? |
30298 | Can you forget that time-- can you forget what you said? |
30298 | Can you get an extra man or two? |
30298 | Can you make him out, Drouillard?" |
30298 | Can you make the thunder come? |
30298 | Can you not hear me now, calling to you across all the distances to come back to me? |
30298 | Can you see me, Meriwether Lewis, your childhood friend? |
30298 | Captain Meriwether Lewis, will you stand up for a moment? |
30298 | Come what may, no matter what power shall move you, you will be faithful in this great trust? |
30298 | Could I fail to observe his look to you-- and, yes, am I not sensible to what your eyes said to him in reply?" |
30298 | Could I save him from himself-- and from myself?" |
30298 | Dead? |
30298 | Did I say I had need of courage and resolution-- all these things combined? |
30298 | Did I say that I had need of eyes and brains, of thews and sinews, of calm nerves and steady blood? |
30298 | Did any eye see Meriwether Lewis as he sat there in the dark at his last camp fire? |
30298 | Did any guilty eye look on him making his last fight? |
30298 | Did ever a wandering flake of ashes, melting, rest on its bosom for so great a journey as that toward the sea? |
30298 | Did he turn back? |
30298 | Did it carry a scattered drop of a man''s lifeblood, little by little thinning, thinning on its long journey? |
30298 | Did she-- not wait?" |
30298 | Did the little brook in Tennessee ever find its way down to the sea? |
30298 | Did the sound of a voice in the wilderness, passing across the unknown leagues, ever reach an ear that heard? |
30298 | Did they make it the first toime they thried? |
30298 | Did you think that this country could do that for either of us?" |
30298 | Do I make you suffer by looking at you with reproach in my eyes-- as I do now? |
30298 | Do I not know you, then? |
30298 | Do I not know-- your mother? |
30298 | Do I not know? |
30298 | Do we not collect the revenues? |
30298 | Do you begin to see?" |
30298 | Do you blame me now?" |
30298 | Do you call that leadership, Captain Lewis? |
30298 | Do you forget that promise? |
30298 | Do you hear?" |
30298 | Do you not remember?" |
30298 | Do you see me now? |
30298 | Do you suppose I did not know whose they were?" |
30298 | Do you think I am sincere?" |
30298 | Do you think I speak only in despair, my boy? |
30298 | Do you think I would ask this for myself? |
30298 | Do you think that an officer of the army has no better business than that? |
30298 | Do you think this is not hard for me also?" |
30298 | Do you understand?" |
30298 | Do you want to be drummed out of camp tomorrow morning? |
30298 | Do you want to be shot? |
30298 | Do you want to be whipped? |
30298 | Do you want to go part way with us? |
30298 | Do you wish to leave me still feeling that I am in your debt? |
30298 | Do you wish to make yet happier the woman whom you have so many times made happy-- who has cherished so much ambition for you? |
30298 | Does Spain not govern it still? |
30298 | Does a man never forget? |
30298 | Does every girl dream of a continuous courtship and find a dull answer in the facts? |
30298 | Does n''t a man have two lungs, two arms, two limbs, two eyes? |
30298 | Does n''t he marry the one at hand-- the one that is ready and waiting? |
30298 | Does not your duty lie toward the east, and not further toward the west? |
30298 | Does something take mine to you, across all the wilderness, across all the miles, across all the long and bitter months? |
30298 | Does the snow lie deep? |
30298 | Doubtless you have important papers?" |
30298 | Duty? |
30298 | Failed? |
30298 | From whom?" |
30298 | Go back to her-- how could he, now? |
30298 | Go on, therefore, if you would ruin me, my father-- your own future; but will you go on if you face possible ruin_ for your own country_ by so doing? |
30298 | Had it taught him to forget? |
30298 | Had the hardships of the wilderness at last taken their toll of him-- as had sometimes happened to other men? |
30298 | Happiness? |
30298 | Have I no appeal for you?" |
30298 | Have n''t I told you to be more careful about these things? |
30298 | Have not your ears been deaf to me, even when I spoke to you direct? |
30298 | Have not your eyes thus far been blind to me? |
30298 | Have they lost themselves as women''s faces so often-- so soon-- are lost from a man''s mind? |
30298 | Have you bodily comforts? |
30298 | Have you found that lonely grave which is sometimes the reward of the adventurer thither? |
30298 | Have you found the dinosaur or the dragon or the great serpents of a foregone day? |
30298 | Have you found the great unicorn or the mammoth or the mastadon which Mr. Jefferson said you were likely to meet? |
30298 | Have you grown savage, my friend-- have you come to be just a man like the others? |
30298 | Have you horses for the journey?" |
30298 | Have you no arts of the toilet that can overcome the story of your megrims? |
30298 | Have you not heard me? |
30298 | Have you physical well- being? |
30298 | He sought to disrupt this country? |
30298 | Heavy, eh?" |
30298 | How can I answer all these questions? |
30298 | How can I repay you for what you have done today? |
30298 | How can we women read their hearts-- what do we know of men? |
30298 | How can you make the lodge? |
30298 | How can you mind my garrulous pen-- my vain pen-- my wicked, wicked, wicked, shameful pen-- since you can not see what it says? |
30298 | How could I-- how can I-- with this terrible thought in my soul that I am writing to a man whose eyes can not see, whose ears can not hear? |
30298 | How could that be?" |
30298 | How could they tell of it? |
30298 | How had they reached him? |
30298 | How long will it be before you come back to higher office and higher place? |
30298 | How long, great river, was your journey, sufficient to afford so tremendous a gathering of the waters? |
30298 | How many air there in your party?" |
30298 | How many thousands of hours will it take to ascend to the mountains? |
30298 | How many you''ll shot, Captain?" |
30298 | How often does a woman ever confess her own, her inner and real heart? |
30298 | How will you get your boats across the mountains? |
30298 | I can but guess how or where these presents may find you; for how shall I know how wise or how faithful my messenger has been? |
30298 | I do n''t want you to go away, Merne, but if you do-- if you must-- won''t you come back? |
30298 | I have lost you, then, it seems? |
30298 | I may be dead as you read-- would you care? |
30298 | If I knew as absolute truth that conviction now in my heart-- that you never can come back-- how then could I go on? |
30298 | If he laid that wish on us, ought we not to respect it? |
30298 | If so, do you sleep well? |
30298 | If the Great Father has such medicine as this I give you, do you think we could go back to him and say the Sioux would not let us pass? |
30298 | If we have failed, why did we fail? |
30298 | If we succeed, what then?" |
30298 | If ye said it where he could hear ye-- that man ahead-- do you know what he would do to you?" |
30298 | If you go yonder, what will be the fate of Meriwether Lewis? |
30298 | In these unsettled times, who knows what may happen? |
30298 | In two days, or four, or six? |
30298 | In what labor was the President of the United States engaged on this particularly eventful day? |
30298 | In what region grew this great pine which swims with you to the sea? |
30298 | Is all the world''s misery yours? |
30298 | Is he alone?" |
30298 | Is it always to remain with you? |
30298 | Is it not four in the afternoon?" |
30298 | Is it not my business to know? |
30298 | Is it not so?" |
30298 | Is it not so?" |
30298 | Is it not true? |
30298 | Is it not true? |
30298 | Is it winter? |
30298 | Is my recompense to be only your assertion that I torment you, that I torture you? |
30298 | Is n''t it enough to be astronomer and doctor and bookkeeper and record- keeper and all that? |
30298 | Is not the whole system of law enforced under the flag of Spain, all along the great river yonder? |
30298 | Is the taste of all your triumphs so sweet as you have dreamed, Meriwether Lewis? |
30298 | Is there any among you who has a black skin, like the man with us? |
30298 | Is there any news?" |
30298 | Is there anything I can do? |
30298 | Is there anything in all this talk I have heard about Colonel Burr? |
30298 | Is there no house near by? |
30298 | Is there no reward for that? |
30298 | Is there no torture for me as well? |
30298 | Is there none in a man''s-- in yours-- for me? |
30298 | Is this not Eden? |
30298 | Is this the placing his Majesty''s minister should have at the President''s table? |
30298 | Is this what we should demand here?" |
30298 | It draws you, does it not?" |
30298 | It is not that woman?" |
30298 | It is your right to believe that he and I were-- that is to say, we might have been-- ah, sir, how can I speak?" |
30298 | It was for him, yes-- but whence had it come? |
30298 | Jefferson?" |
30298 | Jefferson?----""You surely have heard that my administration is in sad disrepute? |
30298 | Livingston, Monroe, and the others-- what are they doing with Napoleon Bonaparte? |
30298 | Look here, my man, do you want to serve?" |
30298 | Love? |
30298 | Major Neely, would you be so kind as to join the men and assure them of bringing on the horses?" |
30298 | May I give you a cup of coffee there?" |
30298 | May not we shield him-- and her-- no matter what the cost to us? |
30298 | Merne, was_ that_ why the wilderness called to you? |
30298 | Merne, what is wrong?" |
30298 | Minister?" |
30298 | My boy has done all that? |
30298 | My son kill himself? |
30298 | No, he had delayed, he had gone on, and he had cost her-- what? |
30298 | No, why buy it, when taking it was so much more simple and delightful? |
30298 | Of course, I know you do n''t practise what you preach-- who does?" |
30298 | Oh, I know-- I know, but why should you meet?" |
30298 | Oh, Merne-- may I not call you Merne once more before I let you go?" |
30298 | Oh, Theo, what have I done?" |
30298 | Oh, wo n''t you, Merne?" |
30298 | Only the question is, at what sacrifice, through what appeal to his chivalry, can his assistance be carried to us?" |
30298 | Papers, perhaps-- bills-- documents-- money? |
30298 | Perhaps, however, you do not hold with the theory of Colonel Burr?" |
30298 | Sacajawea, what of her? |
30298 | Shall I get you some sort of bitter herbs? |
30298 | Shall I let you go down in savagery? |
30298 | Shall I, his friend and his chief, halt him at such a time? |
30298 | Shall I, then, who have been his scholar and his friend?" |
30298 | Shall you condemn him, or shall you rescue him? |
30298 | She might have a second cup of your good coffee?" |
30298 | Should I complain? |
30298 | Should I not now be happy?" |
30298 | Should one ally one''s self with a foredoomed failure? |
30298 | Should you call that a torment? |
30298 | Should you call the flowers that change in sweetness as we ride along through the wood a torment? |
30298 | Some face, eh? |
30298 | Something there-- yes, eh?" |
30298 | Sor, I ask yer pardon--''twas only the whisky made me feel sportin''like at the time, do ye mind?" |
30298 | Still, what difference, whether or not you be living? |
30298 | Suppose we join you there?" |
30298 | Suppose we leave it to my daughter to fashion her own campaign? |
30298 | Suppose, my dear madam, there were a woman concerned in this matter?" |
30298 | Tell me, did you know this when you came to me?" |
30298 | Tell me, do you see me now before you? |
30298 | Tell me, do you think there was but one woman made for each of us men in all the world? |
30298 | Tell me, have you heard anything of Colonel Burr''s plan? |
30298 | Tell me, how about that old affair of which you once used to confide to me when we were soldiering together here, years back? |
30298 | Tell me, is he bound down the river? |
30298 | Tell me, why is it that I think of you lying where the wind is sweet in the trees? |
30298 | Tell me, why is it that in the glimpses the sages give us of paradise they no more than lift the curtain-- and let it fall again?" |
30298 | Tell me-- and believe that I am not blind-- is not Captain Lewis going into the Missouri country in order to forget a certain woman? |
30298 | The servants paid no attention to the shots, if they had heard them-- and why should they not have heard them? |
30298 | The thought that I have done this covertly, secretly-- what do you think that costs me?" |
30298 | Then there is another?" |
30298 | There was to have been a dinner, was there not-- or am I mistaken of the hour? |
30298 | There-- have I not said all that a woman could say to a man, living or dead? |
30298 | They both love you-- do I not know?" |
30298 | They sent me----""They? |
30298 | This wilderness which you love, the wilderness to which you fled for your comfort-- what has it done for you? |
30298 | To her he was-- what? |
30298 | To the contrary, shall I allow you to hasten into the usual ruin of a man? |
30298 | To what end, my friend? |
30298 | To whom shall I present the greetings of his British Majesty?" |
30298 | Tomorrow? |
30298 | Torment you? |
30298 | Vows? |
30298 | WHAT VOICE HAD CALLED? |
30298 | WHICH WAY? |
30298 | Was I wrong?" |
30298 | Was Meriwether Lewis indeed gone mad? |
30298 | Was ever thinking woman who could doubt what a strong man would do? |
30298 | Was it Gass, Cruzatte, Drouillard, Reuben Fields, or McNeal? |
30298 | Was it a uniform, do you believe? |
30298 | Was it any wonder that they stood now, grave and dignified, feeling almost for the first time the weight of what they had done? |
30298 | Was it in defiance or in compliance that this act was done? |
30298 | Was it not true what she had said? |
30298 | Was not he, who had forgotten honor, subject now to any command that she might give him? |
30298 | We believe, or try to believe, or say that we believe; but always----""And a woman may divide not love, only love of love itself?" |
30298 | We could not afford to wait months-- three months, four, six-- has it been so long as that since you left us? |
30298 | We missed her at the house, and have feared her abduction by some bold young Virginian, eh?" |
30298 | Were that not a wiser thing? |
30298 | Were there, after all, those great Stony Mountains of which men told fables? |
30298 | Were they all done-- should he never hear from her again? |
30298 | Were you trying to run away without ever saying good- by to me? |
30298 | What adversities have been yours? |
30298 | What am I writing now? |
30298 | What avail now, if he did return? |
30298 | What benefit to you?" |
30298 | What can I do?" |
30298 | What can I give you in return for all that-- in return for these?" |
30298 | What cascades and rapids lie on ahead? |
30298 | What cavalier at any time of the world has not instinctively leaped forward at such sound? |
30298 | What concern is that of yours? |
30298 | What did I say?" |
30298 | What did it mean-- about the water? |
30298 | What did she mean?" |
30298 | What do they weigh with me-- with you? |
30298 | What do you know? |
30298 | What do you make of it? |
30298 | What do you mean?" |
30298 | What do you mean?" |
30298 | What does he here? |
30298 | What does it say?" |
30298 | What face was it? |
30298 | What fat lands reared this heavy trunk, which sinks at last, to be buried in the sands? |
30298 | What for you all time think, think, think? |
30298 | What for you no eat? |
30298 | What had it done for him, after all? |
30298 | What hand pointed out the way for her? |
30298 | What has it done?" |
30298 | What have I done? |
30298 | What have I done?" |
30298 | What have vows to do with this? |
30298 | What if accident had befallen either of them? |
30298 | What is devotion-- what is your country? |
30298 | What is it that you plan? |
30298 | What is it that you_ see_ when you lie awake at night under the stars? |
30298 | What is it you are saying? |
30298 | What is it?" |
30298 | What is the condition?" |
30298 | What is the latest news in the village, Merne?" |
30298 | What is this you tell me? |
30298 | What is your impulse? |
30298 | What is your motive? |
30298 | What jewels lie under your flood? |
30298 | What lay beyond it? |
30298 | What manner of men are you that you will not listen to reason? |
30298 | What matter? |
30298 | What messenger had brought them? |
30298 | What must she think of him now-- that he was not only a dishonorable man, but also a coward running away from the responsibility of what he had done? |
30298 | What need now to ask you to come back? |
30298 | What need to reproach you any further? |
30298 | What news for us?" |
30298 | What of Lewis, then gone so long? |
30298 | What plans? |
30298 | What purchase?" |
30298 | What rich minerals float impalpably in your tawny waters? |
30298 | What shall I say-- what can we say to each other? |
30298 | What should he do-- cast this letter from him into the river? |
30298 | What should the public know of a life such as his? |
30298 | What then?" |
30298 | What was I saying, Meriwether Lewis, to you but now, even though you were blind and deaf? |
30298 | What was it she had said? |
30298 | What was it she had written to him long ago? |
30298 | What was it that she said? |
30298 | What was the leaning of the Governor of the new Territory, a man closer to the administration at Washington than any other? |
30298 | What were her thoughts? |
30298 | What would make you happiest?" |
30298 | What, Merne? |
30298 | What, forsake Mr. Jefferson-- leave me?" |
30298 | What? |
30298 | What? |
30298 | What? |
30298 | When are you going to come back to us, Merne?" |
30298 | When one loses, what mercy is shown to him? |
30298 | When will it be, my son? |
30298 | Whence came these messages, and how, by whose hand? |
30298 | Where are the bullets for my pistols? |
30298 | Where are the other men? |
30298 | Where are you? |
30298 | Where is Major Neely? |
30298 | Where, then, is his suite?" |
30298 | Which do you prefer-- what do you decide to do? |
30298 | Which enterprise, think you, will win? |
30298 | Which is our river here?" |
30298 | Which of these had secretly carried the letter? |
30298 | Which of your men, Ordway, will best serve to find Shannon and meet us up the river?" |
30298 | Which was the stronger? |
30298 | Which was the way? |
30298 | Which was the way? |
30298 | Which was the way? |
30298 | Which, now, was the Missouri? |
30298 | Who are they?" |
30298 | Who are you strangers, who come from so far?" |
30298 | Who are you that would stop us?" |
30298 | Who can tell? |
30298 | Who goes?" |
30298 | Who guided her in such unbelievably strange fashion? |
30298 | Who had brought those mysterious letters? |
30298 | Who is she?" |
30298 | Who is this new man that is so careless? |
30298 | Who knows the way across? |
30298 | Who shall make tea? |
30298 | Who shall mend your moccasins? |
30298 | Who shall spread down the robes? |
30298 | Whoever he was, why did he not bring another? |
30298 | Whose letter is it, Merne? |
30298 | Why are we not away for the journey home?" |
30298 | Why deceive your heart about it, since I have not deceived my own? |
30298 | Why did Meriwether Lewis never laugh? |
30298 | Why did he always think, think, think? |
30298 | Why did she make it? |
30298 | Why did you not wait one day?" |
30298 | Why do n''t you answer?" |
30298 | Why do n''t you relax-- why do n''t you swim with the current for a time? |
30298 | Why do we delay? |
30298 | Why do you not exult-- what is it you can not forget? |
30298 | Why do you not keep the horses up? |
30298 | Why fly in the face of prophecy and of Providence? |
30298 | Why had there grown between him and his friend that thin, indefinable reserve? |
30298 | Why have they not come up?" |
30298 | Why have you kept secrets from your commanding officer? |
30298 | Why linger? |
30298 | Why not come with us, and not attempt the impossible? |
30298 | Why not turn, then, to a future which offers certainties? |
30298 | Why should I not? |
30298 | Why should he pay so little heed to the playful advances of Arcturus, inviting him for a run along the shady road? |
30298 | Why should not your mother know?" |
30298 | Why should we care to note his curious concern over details? |
30298 | Why should you seek to stop me when I am trying to blot your face out of my mind? |
30298 | Why you want to go more farther West? |
30298 | Why? |
30298 | Why? |
30298 | Will it be six months hence?" |
30298 | Will such a man forget his promise always to kiss away the tears of that companion to whom he has come in rescue? |
30298 | Will you always see me with tears in my eyes? |
30298 | Will you fight me, or are you afraid?" |
30298 | Will you forget this?" |
30298 | Will you go?" |
30298 | Will you not also listen to the call of your own ambition? |
30298 | Will you throw that away, for the sake of a few dried skins and flowers? |
30298 | Will, what shall I do? |
30298 | Would any of the tribesmen like to go to the far East, to see the Great Father? |
30298 | Would you ask him back-- for any cause?" |
30298 | Would you call that treason-- conspiracy? |
30298 | Would you excuse me for just a moment?" |
30298 | Would you ruin me? |
30298 | Would you see his career blighted when it should be but begun?" |
30298 | Would you see me go to ruin?" |
30298 | Would you shame yourself-- and her-- and me?" |
30298 | York rides ahead, do you see? |
30298 | You are a man altogether, then?" |
30298 | You are happy now, are you not?" |
30298 | You ask me what to tell him? |
30298 | You ask me why these things were? |
30298 | You do not wish to be my boy any longer? |
30298 | You know his castle there?" |
30298 | You know how his heart was racked at times?" |
30298 | You mean to tell me you are still so foolish? |
30298 | You said fifty thousand?" |
30298 | You said those other gentlemen were to join you there?" |
30298 | You say you will not let me be savage? |
30298 | You still refuse?" |
30298 | You will love-- why should you not, a man fit to love and be loved by any woman? |
30298 | You will not obey me as your officer, and will not fight me as a man? |
30298 | You will not reopen this case?" |
30298 | You would go with me-- do you know what is our journey?" |
30298 | [ Illustration:"''Oh, Theo, what have I done?''"] |
30298 | _ Ask him to come back to Theodosia Burr and happiness_--do you understand?" |
30298 | _ Does_ no one know?" |
30298 | _ Mon Dieu_, what shall we do?" |
30298 | was his sole announcement"50"''Oh, Theo, what have I done?''" |
34697 | A million what? |
34697 | Ai n''t you scair''t to let him tote a rifle? |
34697 | Already? |
34697 | And I pick my own mules? |
34697 | And how do you think,Bibbers was saying when Joe joined the group,"I got this?" |
34697 | And if He meant them to shoot, I suppose they''d be born with a rifle in their hands? |
34697 | And she means much to you? |
34697 | And which of the three are you going to honor? |
34697 | And why would n''t they tell you that at Axton? 34697 And you,"the other guessed,"aim to go?" |
34697 | Any complaints? |
34697 | Any of you got anything to say? |
34697 | Are n''t you about finished, Mother? |
34697 | Are n''t you tired? |
34697 | Are they all right? |
34697 | Are they comin'', Pa? 34697 Are we going to the Trevelyans''barn dance Saturday night, Mother?" |
34697 | Are you John Seeley? |
34697 | Are you afraid to stay with the youngsters for a while? |
34697 | Are you all right? |
34697 | Are you all right? |
34697 | Are you awake, Barbara? |
34697 | Are you glad we came, darling? |
34697 | Are you going out? |
34697 | Are you going to cut more trees? |
34697 | Are you going to winter at Laramie? |
34697 | Are you happy, Daddy? |
34697 | Are you running out on me? |
34697 | Are you staying with us? |
34697 | Are you sure? |
34697 | Are you tired, darling? |
34697 | Barbara, is it your wish to talk with Private Gearey for five minutes? |
34697 | Better save those for the kids, had n''t you? |
34697 | But do n''t you miss your friends in Missouri? |
34697 | But we''ll get one, huh? |
34697 | But what if there''s a whole mob of them? |
34697 | But you do n''t know where he came from? |
34697 | By not explaining, you hoped to make a fool of me, is that it? |
34697 | Ca n''t the wind change its mind? |
34697 | Ca n''t we get out of sight of those blasted--"Your message? |
34697 | Can I go up by Pa? 34697 Can I have it, Pa?" |
34697 | Can I help you with it, Daddy? |
34697 | Can I help you, Ma? |
34697 | Can I help you, sir? |
34697 | Can I take the rifle an''go huntin'', Pa? |
34697 | Can I use the rifle? |
34697 | Can Mike go too? |
34697 | Can a lone wagon get through? |
34697 | Can a man figure on finding something to do through the winter? |
34697 | Can we get down the Trail? |
34697 | Can we get quarters? |
34697 | Can you feed the youngsters and yourself in the wagon? |
34697 | Can you find out? |
34697 | Can you slip down this knoll, see if you can work around behind''em, and scare''em toward me? |
34697 | Can you stand up? |
34697 | Can you tell me where John Seeley lives? |
34697 | Cash deal? |
34697 | Come next spring? |
34697 | Depends on how you look at things, do n''t it? |
34697 | Did Tad have it again? |
34697 | Did Tad tell you? |
34697 | Did he say anything about the quarters we''ll find there? 34697 Did it hurt?" |
34697 | Did n''t anyone ever tell you that a horse ca n''t outrun a coyote? |
34697 | Did n''t he help you? |
34697 | Did they have horses? |
34697 | Did you aim at his ear? |
34697 | Did you bring a case of smallpox here? |
34697 | Did you get him, Pa? |
34697 | Did you get him? |
34697 | Did you have a good day? |
34697 | Did you have any trouble? |
34697 | Did you know a man named Seeley? |
34697 | Did you know also that the army is n''t selling any mules? |
34697 | Did you know the storm was coming? |
34697 | Did you know, when you received this animal, that it was army property? |
34697 | Did you say antelope? |
34697 | Did your mother or sister tell you to get the worms and tackle? |
34697 | Do I have to take a bath? 34697 Do I pay you before you start or after you finish?" |
34697 | Do n''t you ever think of anything else? |
34697 | Do n''t you have any children? |
34697 | Do n''t you know better than to fool around with wildcats? |
34697 | Do n''t you see we ca n''t do it? 34697 Do n''t you want him to know, dear?" |
34697 | Do they buy such things? |
34697 | Do you believe in love? |
34697 | Do you have proof that what you''ve said is true? |
34697 | Do you hear anything? |
34697 | Do you know right where they are, Tad? |
34697 | Do you know what? |
34697 | Do you mean to tell me,Ellis demanded righteously,"that you will not offer hospitalization to this sick child?" |
34697 | Do you mean you can single out just one escort? |
34697 | Do you realize, Mr. Tower, that we shall have to take the mule and detain you until we have investigated? |
34697 | Do you suppose he''s in trouble? |
34697 | Do you suppose they''ll come tonight, Pa? |
34697 | Do you think he''ll work with one? |
34697 | Do you think they''ll keep them in the guardhouse very long, Mother? |
34697 | Do you think we''ll have Indian fights, Pa? |
34697 | Do you think you can keep those youngsters busy today, so they wo n''t bother your mother and sister? |
34697 | Do you think you can make another crop? |
34697 | Do you think you should give it away? |
34697 | Do you want the doctor? |
34697 | Do you want to call them, Joe? 34697 Do you want to ride ahead this morning?" |
34697 | Do you want,Bibbers blustered,"to make something of it?" |
34697 | Do-- do you think it''s right--? 34697 Don''t-- don''t you think we''d better go back?" |
34697 | Everything was all right, huh? |
34697 | Going on to Oregon when the weather breaks? |
34697 | Going to Laramie? |
34697 | Got your seeding done? |
34697 | Hang on to them, will you? |
34697 | Has Gearey been sparking your daughter? |
34697 | Have another one? |
34697 | Have n''t I told you to leave that rifle alone? |
34697 | Have you asked her? |
34697 | Have you had breakfast? |
34697 | Have you reflected upon your ardent suitors''fist- fight of last night? |
34697 | Hear that, Emma? |
34697 | How about Indian trouble? |
34697 | How about Mike? |
34697 | How about free land? |
34697 | How about hauling some of this timber while I work a bit more on the foundation? |
34697 | How about taking the job you just saw left vacant? 34697 How are the Indians now?" |
34697 | How are you doing? |
34697 | How are you traveling? |
34697 | How come what? |
34697 | How come you did n''t give them back their mule? |
34697 | How come, Pa? |
34697 | How come? |
34697 | How could you when you''re away all day long? |
34697 | How did you ride out the storm? |
34697 | How do I get to Oregon? |
34697 | How do you know? |
34697 | How do you like it? |
34697 | How far are we from Oregon? |
34697 | How far can I get this season? |
34697 | How far can I get? |
34697 | How high did you hold on him? |
34697 | How is she? |
34697 | How is the baby? |
34697 | How is the youngster? |
34697 | How many are going with you? |
34697 | How many are there? |
34697 | How many do you have? |
34697 | How many more years will it take? |
34697 | How many years? |
34697 | How much did you eat? |
34697 | How much do you think it''s worth? |
34697 | How was it today? |
34697 | How''d you know I''d go fishing this afternoon? |
34697 | I know, but would you want Clover to suffer? 34697 I thought you''d gone to see Buster Trevelyan?" |
34697 | I wondered if you''ve changed your mind? |
34697 | Indians bother you much? |
34697 | Indians? |
34697 | Is n''t it badly rumpled? |
34697 | Is n''t that cutting our time very short? |
34697 | Is n''t this weather wonderful? |
34697 | Is one team of mules enough? |
34697 | Is something wrong? |
34697 | Is that the only reason you knew? |
34697 | Is that your dog? |
34697 | Is there anything else? |
34697 | Is there something I may do for you? |
34697 | Is there--? |
34697 | Is this Oregon? |
34697 | Is this Oregon? |
34697 | Is this Oregon? |
34697 | Is this your little beast? |
34697 | It does n''t seem possible, does it? |
34697 | It''s Oregon, is n''t it, mama? |
34697 | It''s almost the last one, is n''t it? |
34697 | It''s like being born again, is n''t it? |
34697 | It''s nothing-- nothing at all.--Uh-- May I ask you a question? |
34697 | Jim? |
34697 | Just how did you expect us to move on without another mule? |
34697 | Keep them near the wagon, will you? |
34697 | Land? 34697 Like riding on feathers,"Joe agreed and he called back to his daughter,"How do you like this, Bobby?" |
34697 | Loafing again, huh? |
34697 | Martha was so tickled to see the hen that she said,''Why do n''t you take them two pigs, Henry? 34697 Maybe Mom will fix them tonight, huh?" |
34697 | Maybe you''ll stay and help us eat these? |
34697 | Me? 34697 Missed, huh?" |
34697 | Mother, what_ would_ I tell them? 34697 No harm in hinting, is there?" |
34697 | Nothing,Joe admitted,"but womenfolk don''t--""Do n''t what?" |
34697 | Oh, Joe, do you suppose--? |
34697 | On what? |
34697 | Reckon we can make it? |
34697 | Reckon you could keep them moving? |
34697 | Say, what are you so gosh darn low about? |
34697 | See anything? |
34697 | Sergeant--? |
34697 | Shall I shorten the stirrups? |
34697 | She saved her tears for you, did n''t she? |
34697 | Since when did you have to have things sociable? |
34697 | Smoke? |
34697 | So you can too, huh? 34697 So?" |
34697 | So? |
34697 | Start the bellows will you, honey? |
34697 | Suppose I borrow some boards from Jake Favors and lay them across those chunks? 34697 Suppose a mule dies and you have to buy another? |
34697 | Suppose an emigrant without any money comes through? |
34697 | Suppose old Mike had been loose, and pitched into those dogs like he wanted to? 34697 Suppose they come after us?" |
34697 | Sure, Pa. You want buffalo too? |
34697 | Take these to your mother, will you? 34697 That your stock?" |
34697 | That''s it, huh? |
34697 | The fire should be out, huh? |
34697 | Then we should make it in tomorrow? |
34697 | Then you do get freight in winter? |
34697 | Therefore you knew that this one was stolen from the army? |
34697 | Think it will snow, Pa? |
34697 | Think you got him? |
34697 | Time for bed, darling? |
34697 | Too proud to explain, is that it? |
34697 | Want to go there? |
34697 | Want to go to the hospital? |
34697 | Want to see me, eh? 34697 Want to stay and work for me?" |
34697 | Want to swap your wolf pelt for it? |
34697 | Was Mr. Seeley sure that we can reach Laramie before winter closes in? |
34697 | Was he drunk? |
34697 | Was he runnin''? |
34697 | Was it nice there? |
34697 | Was that a war party? |
34697 | Was there nobody at the store? |
34697 | Was-- was he sure there''ll be no Indian trouble? |
34697 | We ca n''t get through? |
34697 | We need meat, do n''t we? |
34697 | We''d best keep Bobby away from him, do n''t you think? |
34697 | We''ve come a right smart ways without seein''any, ai n''t we? |
34697 | Well? |
34697 | Wh-- where are we? |
34697 | Whar''d you l''arn that? |
34697 | What are they? |
34697 | What are they? |
34697 | What are you driving at? |
34697 | What are you going to do now, Mother? |
34697 | What are you going to do, Joe? |
34697 | What are you smiling about, Mother? |
34697 | What can I do for you? |
34697 | What did she say? |
34697 | What did they say? |
34697 | What did you do to Tad? |
34697 | What did you say to that? |
34697 | What did you say? |
34697 | What did you say? |
34697 | What did you tell him, Joe? |
34697 | What did you tell them? |
34697 | What do you mean? |
34697 | What do you need? |
34697 | What do you think about it? |
34697 | What do you think happened? |
34697 | What do you think it is? |
34697 | What do you think of it? |
34697 | What do you want of me? |
34697 | What do you want, Joe? |
34697 | What else will I need? |
34697 | What else? |
34697 | What else_ could_ you have told him? |
34697 | What for? 34697 What happened, Ellis?" |
34697 | What happened? |
34697 | What is it, Tad? |
34697 | What is it, mother? |
34697 | What is it? |
34697 | What man? |
34697 | What on earth could have brought that on? |
34697 | What right did you have to take us away from our home? 34697 What sort?" |
34697 | What would you have done? |
34697 | What would you most regret, Ellis? |
34697 | What you been doing? |
34697 | What''d you shoot at? |
34697 | What''s it like, Emma? |
34697 | What''s my business? |
34697 | What''s the best way? |
34697 | What''s the dog barking at? |
34697 | What''s the matter with the child? |
34697 | What''s the matter? |
34697 | What''s the matter? |
34697 | What''s wrong now, teacher? |
34697 | What''s wrong, Pa? |
34697 | What? |
34697 | What? |
34697 | What? |
34697 | When we startin'', Pa? |
34697 | Where did you get it? |
34697 | Where does he come from? |
34697 | Where''d you get him? |
34697 | Where''s the wagon? |
34697 | Where''s your booie knives? |
34697 | Where? |
34697 | Who did he shoot at? |
34697 | Who in this family would eat Clover, Joe? 34697 Who is it?" |
34697 | Who you think I am? 34697 Who''s the fourth rifle?" |
34697 | Why are you so much against the west? 34697 Why ca n''t you make''em fine?" |
34697 | Why could n''t they have waited until we came along? |
34697 | Why did you bring us to this terrible place? |
34697 | Why did you take the mule? |
34697 | Why do aspens shake, Jim? |
34697 | Why do n''t you come along? |
34697 | Why do n''t you come to Oregon? 34697 Why do n''t you fix it, Pa?" |
34697 | Why do n''t you go fishing and do your pondering, Daddy? 34697 Why do n''t you?" |
34697 | Why do you say that? |
34697 | Why do you want to know about Gearey, Emma? |
34697 | Why not? |
34697 | Why should I? |
34697 | Why the blazes do n''t you? 34697 Why?" |
34697 | Why? |
34697 | Why? |
34697 | Will she wear a bonnet? |
34697 | Win what? |
34697 | Wonder if I can borrow boards to make a table and benches? |
34697 | Would n''t you like to do other things? |
34697 | Would n''t you like to see it out? |
34697 | Would n''t you like to see some? |
34697 | Would you have some whisky? |
34697 | Would you mind very much if I did not go with you? |
34697 | Would you mind walking me to the store, Ellis? 34697 Yeah?" |
34697 | Yeah? |
34697 | Yes, Ma? |
34697 | Yes? |
34697 | Yes? |
34697 | Yes? |
34697 | Yes? |
34697 | You an Oregon emmy- grant? |
34697 | You and Bobby feed the youngsters and have your own supper, will you? 34697 You are n''t tired?" |
34697 | You butchering now? |
34697 | You can finish the building yourself, ca n''t you? |
34697 | You did n''t like it? |
34697 | You do n''t aim just to point your nose west and follow it? |
34697 | You do n''t figure on gettin''to Oregon this season, do you? |
34697 | You do n''t want me to be a hired man again, do you, Emma? |
34697 | You do trust me, Emma? |
34697 | You goin''to winter at Laramie? |
34697 | You going to plant again? |
34697 | You guess? 34697 You have an army mule in your possession?" |
34697 | You have? |
34697 | You knew this all the time? |
34697 | You know Ellis ai n''t lettin''that girl child of your''n outen his sight? 34697 You lost a horse?" |
34697 | You never have luck, do you? |
34697 | You thinkin''of goin''? |
34697 | You want a fi''? |
34697 | You want a free hand, huh? |
34697 | You want to buy the metal for your axles? |
34697 | You were willing to take a chance, were n''t you? 34697 You wo n''t like leaving the stove behind?" |
34697 | You would n''t want to sell or trade a couple of those hens, would you? |
34697 | You''re a mule man, huh? |
34697 | _ Where_ did you get it? |
34697 | A little excitement stole his nervousness and he said to Emma,"Quite a place, huh?" |
34697 | After a moment, the youngster spoke,"Why did n''t you go to the store with Dad?" |
34697 | Ai n''t that so, Ellis?" |
34697 | Alfred asked,"How many stones I got?" |
34697 | All right?" |
34697 | All right?" |
34697 | And is n''t it exciting?" |
34697 | And-- Joe still thought of her as very fragile-- could she bear up under the hardships of such a long journey? |
34697 | Anybody hungry hereabouts?" |
34697 | Are there places along the way where we might buy new provisions?" |
34697 | Are they really comin''?'' |
34697 | Are you coming over tonight?" |
34697 | As for Barbara, Ellis seemed smitten, sure enough, but would he be respectful and take good care of her on the jaunt to Laramie? |
34697 | Barbara asked anxiously,"Is Ellis coming?" |
34697 | Barbara asked,"Is something the matter, Daddy?" |
34697 | Barbara said steadily,"Mother, will you bring me a pillow?" |
34697 | Besides, did n''t they call you a hayseed?" |
34697 | But because he did not know how to ask, Joe said only,"Have you asked Barbara?" |
34697 | But no man could really know unless he tried the journey himself; how could Grandpa Seeley have forecast the rain and the sea of mud? |
34697 | But what about payment? |
34697 | But what did you say you''re going to do to Joe?" |
34697 | But why the anger? |
34697 | But, though Tad would be wild with joy at the very thought, was the west really a place for Barbara? |
34697 | Ca n''t you wait until we see some?" |
34697 | Can I borrow a currycomb and brush?" |
34697 | Can I go tell Buster Trevelyan?" |
34697 | Can I shoot a buffalo, Pa? |
34697 | Can I?" |
34697 | Can we ford?" |
34697 | Can you catch your chickens?" |
34697 | Can you shoot?" |
34697 | Can you tie that one?" |
34697 | Comin'', Ellis?" |
34697 | Could Joe, Jim Snedeker, and whoever else might happen to be around Snedeker''s post, defend Joe''s family? |
34697 | Could it be that she had misjudged him? |
34697 | Dawn came softly and Tad called,"Pa.""Yes?" |
34697 | Did you bring plenty of bullets?" |
34697 | Did you sleep well?" |
34697 | Do n''t the place smell sort of funny?" |
34697 | Do n''t you know?" |
34697 | Do we need any more, Pa?" |
34697 | Do you have any objections?" |
34697 | Do you have this animal with you?" |
34697 | Do you know how far behind the rest you are?" |
34697 | Do you know they''s even crazy talk of a railroad an''wire line clean across the kentry? |
34697 | Do you know whar you''re goin''in Oregon?" |
34697 | Do you see my light?" |
34697 | Do you think they''ve gone?" |
34697 | Do you think we''ll get all the way to Oregon without findin''any?" |
34697 | Do you want to know how they measure land in the west? |
34697 | Elias Dorrance asked,"What will you do now?" |
34697 | Elias?" |
34697 | Ellis asked,"Want to bring a sled up while I skin these? |
34697 | Emma asked casually,"Joe, do you know anything about this young man, Hugo Gearey?" |
34697 | Emma asked,"Are you all right, Joe?" |
34697 | Emma asked,"Did you get a lot done?" |
34697 | Emma asked,"Pop some more corn, will you?" |
34697 | Emma said,"Is something wrong?" |
34697 | Emma said,"May we have some fresh water, Joe?" |
34697 | Emma saw it too, and the alarm she felt was plain in her voice,"What''s the matter?" |
34697 | Emma says you''re going to Oregon?" |
34697 | Emma spoke softly,"She''s been very fretful since noon, and did n''t you notice that she ate very little?" |
34697 | Emma''s heart ached for him, but what could she do? |
34697 | For instance, though they probably could camp beside the wagon much of the time, suppose there were stormy nights and they had to sleep inside? |
34697 | For that matter, suppose they did attack? |
34697 | Get lost?" |
34697 | Had it come from some castle in England, or perhaps Spain? |
34697 | Had n''t you better knock off for a while and get some sleep?" |
34697 | Have you hunted buffalo?" |
34697 | Have you seen my daughter?" |
34697 | He asked,"Your family is at Snedeker''s, eh?" |
34697 | He blurted,"How would you like to go west?" |
34697 | He clenched his long rifle and whispered,"See them?" |
34697 | He heard a shouted,"Where are you?" |
34697 | He left, and Grandpa asked Joe,"What do you want to know about?" |
34697 | He said suddenly,"Joe, what do you think of women?" |
34697 | He said with honest surprise,"_ I_ made it easy for her?" |
34697 | He said,"How about gathering stones for a fireplace, Tad?" |
34697 | He said,"That''s my rifle too, huh?" |
34697 | He said,"What''s wrong?" |
34697 | He was burdened by an overwhelming sense of clumsy inadequateness, and though he knew he could do nothing he asked anyway,"Can I do anything for you?" |
34697 | Henry, do you want the front or the rear?" |
34697 | Her voice was shocked,"Joe, did you see what those women were wearing?" |
34697 | How about my freckle- faced son?" |
34697 | How about over there under the first tree?" |
34697 | How about the south wall?" |
34697 | How are the pigs?" |
34697 | How are the youngsters?" |
34697 | How are your mules?" |
34697 | How did it go today?" |
34697 | How do you like him?" |
34697 | How far is it?" |
34697 | How many more hurts would she have in the west? |
34697 | How many other muddy rivers and creeks had he forded? |
34697 | How many proposals have you had?" |
34697 | How many times must I tell you to wipe the mud from your shoes before you come in?" |
34697 | How will you feel when there is_ nothing_ to eat-- nothing for the babies, nothing for any of us? |
34697 | How''d you keep warm?" |
34697 | Huh?" |
34697 | If you knew these two men were thieves, why did you not take them into custody?" |
34697 | Independence had its allure, but she had her children to think of and who knew what evil lurked in a place like this? |
34697 | Is it all taken?" |
34697 | Is it the same fever?" |
34697 | Is n''t it cold?" |
34697 | Is n''t it monotonous?" |
34697 | Is there any chance of getting out of the storm?" |
34697 | Is there any safety in the wilderness?_ Her hand stilled, then resolutely took up its stroking again. |
34697 | It had depth and breadth, but was n''t that what they''d hoped to find? |
34697 | Jim, when can we expect grass?" |
34697 | Joe asked in some astonishment,"On the Oregon Trail?" |
34697 | Joe asked wonderingly,"Who did he assault?" |
34697 | Joe called,"Emma, get the kids on the floor, will you? |
34697 | Joe fell back on a stock question,"Where''s Tad?" |
34697 | Joe said dryly,"Eleanor has the manners of a pig, huh?" |
34697 | Joe said gently,"Leave the women and kids here unprotected?" |
34697 | Joe said happily,"Have some more, Joey? |
34697 | Joe said in astonishment,"What the dickens happened to you?" |
34697 | Joe said sternly,"What''s that you said?" |
34697 | Joe said,"Do n''t seem like tonight is Christmas Eve, does it?" |
34697 | Joe said,"Keep your eye peeled for antelope, will you? |
34697 | Joe said,"You got one, huh?" |
34697 | Joe, I''m--""Yes?" |
34697 | Just for an hour?" |
34697 | Know what I decided?" |
34697 | Land, my friend? |
34697 | Little Joe asked,"How far is Oregon?" |
34697 | May I go?" |
34697 | May I see you-- soon?" |
34697 | May I stay with Marcia tonight?" |
34697 | May I tell you about-- about before I came to Snedeker''s?" |
34697 | No man could possibly ask more than that from any other man, and who knew what a fool steer would decide to do? |
34697 | Only, can he make things safe? |
34697 | Or had the Indians, whom Major Dismuke respected and Winterson scorned, finally attacked? |
34697 | Pete finished his breakfast, and after a moment''s silence he said,"Who''ll I pay, Joe? |
34697 | Pres''dent of the Unitey States?" |
34697 | Really?" |
34697 | Reckon you saw Sophie?" |
34697 | Say, you do n''t have a team of horses or mules to sell, do you?" |
34697 | Send somebody to Camp Axton to bring the soldiers?" |
34697 | Shall I go tomorrow morning or would you rather I stayed here?" |
34697 | Shall we bring your mare mule in and shoe her?" |
34697 | She asked,"How long do you think it will take you, Joe?" |
34697 | She asked,"What did you do then, Ellis?" |
34697 | She lifted her face then, startled by her own audacity, and said,"Want to see me do it?" |
34697 | She looked tired and worn, or was that his imagination? |
34697 | She said airily,"What do n''t you like?" |
34697 | She said, dazedly,"It''s-- it''s hard to believe, is n''t it? |
34697 | She said,"Why do n''t you take a walk, Joe?" |
34697 | She smiled knowingly,"Do you miss Missouri, Joe?" |
34697 | She whispered through the curtain,"Tad?" |
34697 | Sit there?" |
34697 | Snedeker addressed the youth,"Ai n''t he a heck of a emmy- grant, Ellis?" |
34697 | Snedeker had said that Ellis had followed a girl all the way from Maryland, and what sort of trouble was he in? |
34697 | Somethin''we can do for you?" |
34697 | Suddenly remembering, Joe asked,"Sergeant, can you tell me anything about this Hugo Gearey?" |
34697 | Suppose Ellis married and deserted Barbara? |
34697 | Suppose a man owned everything on his land and the land too? |
34697 | Suppose baby Emma became desperately ill along the way and had only a wagon for shelter? |
34697 | Suppose there was another river that could not be forded, one Gaystell had n''t mentioned? |
34697 | Suppose we had n''t come through? |
34697 | Tad asked eagerly,"Can I take the rifle and go see my buffalo, Pa?" |
34697 | Tad asked too casually,"What''d you find out this morning, Pa?" |
34697 | Tad asked, puzzled,"What are we going to do with it, Pa?" |
34697 | Tad knelt near by, watching and admiring every move, and Joe said patiently,"Move a little away, will you? |
34697 | Tad whispered,"Pa.""Yes?" |
34697 | Tad, walk with me, will you?" |
34697 | The children watched concernedly and Emma asked,"Is she going to die, Joe?" |
34697 | The constable looked annoyed, but started reading,"I hereby restrict and enjoin you, under clause A--""Now is n''t that something?" |
34697 | The day I left Vermont my brother Enos said,''Henry, what are you going to do if Indians attack?'' |
34697 | The most a person looking for cattle in the black of night could do was guess, and if the guess went wrong, what then? |
34697 | The obvious answer was that Winterson''s house itself was burning, but why? |
34697 | The reason? |
34697 | The tight pants some of those men got on would n''t last too long if they got off in the brush, huh? |
34697 | Then the silence became awkward and he asked,"Where''s Tad?" |
34697 | Then, turning to Dunbar he said, with strict military formality,"Sergeant Dunbar, may I have five minutes alone with Miss Tower? |
34697 | Then,"Joe?" |
34697 | There was a rising note of alarm in Emma''s voice,"Where are you going?" |
34697 | There was another silence, and Ellis said thoughtfully,"Joe--""Yes?" |
34697 | There was quick impatience in his voice as he repeated her words,"Our own land? |
34697 | They did not know that a blazing fire can be seen a very long way at night, and who could be sure what savage beings prowled this lonely land? |
34697 | They had to have an ax or how would they chop wood? |
34697 | Think I''d of let those kids go if I had?" |
34697 | Think one of us should try slipping out to Camp Axton tonight?" |
34697 | Think you can find the place?" |
34697 | Tower?" |
34697 | Tower?" |
34697 | Tower?" |
34697 | Tower?" |
34697 | Want to ride him?" |
34697 | Want to sell me your standing hay?" |
34697 | Want to work it up for me?" |
34697 | Was Barbara equal to such a trip? |
34697 | Was Laramie a big place? |
34697 | Was Mother worried?" |
34697 | Was he looking for trouble with Ellis, perhaps more than he had any need to? |
34697 | Was it an accidental fire? |
34697 | Was it right to uproot her, to tear her away from everything she knew and loved? |
34697 | Was this the end? |
34697 | We''re taking eggs too, are n''t we? |
34697 | Were the houses good? |
34697 | Were there any white women at Laramie? |
34697 | What about him?" |
34697 | What are we going to do now? |
34697 | What are you goin''to do, Pa?" |
34697 | What are you going to do if Joe sells more wood or the hay?" |
34697 | What are you going to do with it?" |
34697 | What are you going to do with it?" |
34697 | What are your wishes?" |
34697 | What could you do except shoot her?" |
34697 | What did you think we''d do? |
34697 | What do you aim to do about it?" |
34697 | What do you do, Joe?" |
34697 | What do you want to hear?" |
34697 | What if you have to stock up on flour?" |
34697 | What other willful and dishonest actions was he capable of? |
34697 | What was going on inside that lovely young head? |
34697 | What was his Bobby getting into? |
34697 | What were the women wearing? |
34697 | What were you thinking of when you were her age?" |
34697 | What would she want me for?" |
34697 | What''d you do? |
34697 | What''s comin''?" |
34697 | What''s new?" |
34697 | What-- and who-- would lie ahead? |
34697 | When are you leaving?" |
34697 | When do you aim to leave?" |
34697 | When the storekeeper had held up for his attention a small jug of maple syrup from a shipment newly arrived, and had inquired,"Like one of these?" |
34697 | When''s the big day?" |
34697 | Where are your wagons?" |
34697 | Where did you come from?" |
34697 | Where''d you learn this trick?" |
34697 | Where''s yours?" |
34697 | Who besides Watson would have thought of such a thing?" |
34697 | Who hits the trail on a night like this?" |
34697 | Who told you?" |
34697 | Who were the people, now probably long dead, who had made merry over it? |
34697 | Why be stingy?'' |
34697 | Why not see him-- just for an hour?_"She tossed her head and said, with an effort at indifference,"Possibly. |
34697 | Why was he here at an isolated trading post? |
34697 | Why would a husband and father take his family from civilization into an untamed land? |
34697 | Why''nt you tease him into fightin''? |
34697 | Will you find out?" |
34697 | Will you let Barbara go with me?" |
34697 | Will you marry me?" |
34697 | Would he come later if she should take a turn for the worse?" |
34697 | Would it be bad at all if he knew that his children were going to find opportunities which they could never have here? |
34697 | Would it ever be that bad if land was something between a man and his God, and not between a man and his banker? |
34697 | Would n''t a man rid himself of that burden if he went to see for himself? |
34697 | Would the west offer her anything to compensate for what she would lose by leaving Missouri? |
34697 | Would this be the end of her life, before she had fully lived? |
34697 | Would twenty- five dollars be right?" |
34697 | You Oregon- bound?" |
34697 | You did n''t suppose I was going to let you come all the way to Oregon to languish in a cabin, did you? |
34697 | You drink?" |
34697 | You going in for cattle?" |
34697 | You got a milk cow?" |
34697 | You got any money?" |
34697 | You know that?" |
34697 | You or Elias?" |
34697 | You sure?" |
34697 | You were at college in Washington, you say?" |
34697 | You''d like to have your dishes, would n''t you?" |
34697 | Young''un, you mind that short rifle in my rack?" |
34697 | Your dogs tackled--""Is that your dog?" |
34697 | Your folks with you?" |
42925 | A King to check or hinder us in our rights? 42925 A King?" |
42925 | A credit? |
42925 | A fort at the Prairie? |
42925 | A thousand people? 42925 Am I your wife?" |
42925 | An interpreter? |
42925 | An''now who be ye, an''whar are ye from? |
42925 | And Vigo? 42925 And beyond?" |
42925 | And can you go? |
42925 | And did they open their ears? |
42925 | And did you name a river for Sacajawea, too? |
42925 | And do we not all swear by the King? |
42925 | And does he yet live? |
42925 | And have you any kine- pox? 42925 And have you never served in the field?" |
42925 | And have_ you_ no word of yourself or of Kentucky? |
42925 | And my Mandan? |
42925 | And pray, when will that be? |
42925 | And related to all those great people? |
42925 | And so the Spaniards have come to terms? |
42925 | And the Pawnees? |
42925 | And the land? |
42925 | And was Cresap guilty? |
42925 | And was that when the Spanish lady was here? |
42925 | And was your father a chief, and your father''s father? |
42925 | And what are these bills for? |
42925 | And what became of her finally? |
42925 | And what has William been doing? |
42925 | And what have you learned? |
42925 | And what have you named the young soldier? |
42925 | And what if England wins? |
42925 | And what is the news from Virginia? |
42925 | And what makes your hair so white? |
42925 | And where? |
42925 | And whom shall we call Father, the British at Malden or the Americans at St. Louis? 42925 And will the Americans not trade?" |
42925 | And will you join them? |
42925 | And will you march with the minute men? |
42925 | And will you not come to my father''s house? |
42925 | And you are no longer in the army? |
42925 | And you call us lily flowers? |
42925 | And your great brother, George Rogers Clark? |
42925 | And, sir, may I lead that exploration? |
42925 | Any more of ye? |
42925 | Any settlers comin''? 42925 Are you an officer?" |
42925 | Are you my husband? |
42925 | Boone? 42925 Boundaries?" |
42925 | But Colonel Clark said the weather was warm? |
42925 | But whom can we send on such a monumental enterprise? |
42925 | Can I be of any assistance? |
42925 | Can not provision be made to better their condition? 42925 Can they have spanned the ravine in this brief time?" |
42925 | Can we make one? |
42925 | Can you refute the charge? |
42925 | Captinne, you remember w''en we reach de rivers and you knew not which to follow? 42925 Clark, the invincible, where is he?" |
42925 | Colonel Clark? 42925 Come you alone?" |
42925 | Congress? |
42925 | De country? 42925 Deed not de great Napoleon guarantee our leebertee?" |
42925 | Departed? 42925 Did he intend to do it?" |
42925 | Did he not in the late war deal severely with the hostile tribes? 42925 Did that prevent Governor Hamilton from sending an armed force of British and Indians to besiege Boonsboro?" |
42925 | Did you get the powder? |
42925 | Did you not say the conquerors of Vincennes waded through the drowned lands in February? |
42925 | Did you sign? |
42925 | Do you make gunpowder of them? 42925 Do you remember, Dan,"Phillips would say,"when we had you prisoner at Detroit? |
42925 | Do you see that high, narrow, rocky island at the head of the rapids? 42925 Do you see those hunters?" |
42925 | Do you stand for France, revolution and infidelity? |
42925 | Do you take us for savages? |
42925 | Do you think Americans would strip women and children and take the bread out of their mouths? 42925 Do you think I can take Detroit?" |
42925 | Does he want you to lead an exploring party to the Pacific Ocean? |
42925 | Does not the fame of your youthful achievements linger yet around the woods of Monticello? 42925 Done? |
42925 | Done? 42925 For are not our messengers coming?" |
42925 | For why? 42925 Franklin a great orator? |
42925 | From the south? 42925 General Clark seized Spanish goods?" |
42925 | Go back now? 42925 Go? |
42925 | God knows we would help you if we could, but how do we even know that Kentucky will belong to us? 42925 Going? |
42925 | Has he no recognition? |
42925 | Have they wigwams and much buffalo? |
42925 | Have you found us a tract? |
42925 | Have you heard of John Jacob Astor? |
42925 | Have you spoken thus to all the tribes? |
42925 | Here, Sacajawea, does this belong to your people? |
42925 | Hey and away, and what news? |
42925 | His boats passed in safety, why not ours? |
42925 | How could he do that? |
42925 | How did it happen? |
42925 | How did you dress this sausage so quick, Charboneau? 42925 How did you escape?" |
42925 | How many chiefs will accompany us to Washington? |
42925 | How many of the Clackamas nation? |
42925 | How many of you can stay with me? |
42925 | How much do I owe ye? |
42925 | How much money do you think it would take? |
42925 | How much will you pay for the whole province? |
42925 | How old are you? |
42925 | How? 42925 Hull surrendered?" |
42925 | Hull? |
42925 | I hope my son has been a credit to his country? |
42925 | Is he a chief? 42925 Is it not dangerous to invade the Shawnee country?" |
42925 | Is it, really, now? 42925 Is our fur trade to be cut off by these beggarly rebels and Spaniards? |
42925 | Is there any hope there? 42925 Is this the young Virginian that is sending home all the western Governors?" |
42925 | Jefferson-- bought New Orleans? 42925 Kenton? |
42925 | Land, mother? 42925 Let me fight with you?" |
42925 | Mackinac? 42925 Marie, Marie Antoinette,--did she not use her influence in behalf of Franklin''s mission to secure the acknowledgment of American independence? |
42925 | May I have your portrait as a typical handsome American? |
42925 | May I stay for the night? |
42925 | Miss Judy? |
42925 | Money? 42925 Move Boone and Kenton and Logan back?" |
42925 | My boy- brother in the hands of those monsters? |
42925 | My father,said Wabasha,"what is this I see on the floor before me? |
42925 | My pretty cousin going to marry that ugly man? |
42925 | Napoleon? 42925 Now what shall you do with me?" |
42925 | Now who will go with me? |
42925 | Now, in case we never reach the United States,said Lewis,"what then?" |
42925 | Of what use are beaver? |
42925 | Patterick Hennery? 42925 Peace?" |
42925 | Prairie du Chien lost? 42925 Retreat?" |
42925 | Rising Moose? |
42925 | Science, did you say? 42925 See de colour? |
42925 | Shall I become an Arnold and give up my country? 42925 Shall we accept the missionaries? |
42925 | Shall we be butchered by the Sacs? |
42925 | Shall we expel these American traders from the North Pacific? |
42925 | Shall we listen to Tecumseh? |
42925 | Shall we submit? 42925 Slavery in Missouri?" |
42925 | So remote a frontier? 42925 Son of Boone, de great hunter? |
42925 | Take it, man? 42925 Tecumseh? |
42925 | The Americans taken San Loui''? |
42925 | The Assembly adjourned? 42925 The Big Knives?" |
42925 | The Cherokees sold Kentucky? 42925 The English? |
42925 | The nature of the Insurrection? |
42925 | The precious pier glass my dead mother brought over from France? 42925 The son of Governor Clark of the Lewis and Clark expedition, did you say?" |
42925 | They are going to meet in Williamsburg, eh? 42925 Those Bostonians, are they undermining our trade in furs with China?" |
42925 | To the disadvantage of the whites? 42925 Travel by night? |
42925 | Traveller''s Rist, is it? |
42925 | Uncle Clark, when did you first have this carriage? 42925 Virginia is straining every nerve to help Washington; how can she be expected to waste gunpowder on Kentucky?" |
42925 | Wapato? 42925 War with England is inevitable; shall we be able to defend Louisiana? |
42925 | Warm, did you say? 42925 We haf a stockade, you note it? |
42925 | Well, Pompey, did you overtake Colonel Tarleton? |
42925 | Well, sirrah, did you get the powder? |
42925 | What Kaintucke? |
42925 | What accident has happened to your hand? |
42925 | What are you doing? |
42925 | What can have become of Richard? |
42925 | What can it be? |
42925 | What did he say? |
42925 | What did he use? |
42925 | What did we find? 42925 What did we find? |
42925 | What did we find? 42925 What did you find?" |
42925 | What do they say? |
42925 | What do they say? |
42925 | What do you mean? |
42925 | What does it matter to those people beyond the Alleghanies? 42925 What does it mean?" |
42925 | What ees wanted? |
42925 | What for? |
42925 | What has become of my captured Governors? |
42925 | What have we learned? 42925 What have you done?" |
42925 | What is Tecumseh doing? |
42925 | What is it? |
42925 | What is it? |
42925 | What is it? |
42925 | What is that noise at the river? |
42925 | What is the cause of your war? |
42925 | What is the matter? |
42925 | What is this I hear of those Bostonians? |
42925 | What is your plan? |
42925 | What luck? |
42925 | What news of the winter? |
42925 | What next, massa? |
42925 | What now will you have? |
42925 | What shall we give to you? |
42925 | What was it that defeated us? 42925 What wicked design have they on our country?" |
42925 | What will Congress do? |
42925 | What will Kentucky do? |
42925 | What will you pay for all Louisiana? |
42925 | What wish you? |
42925 | What would I have done with the Queen? |
42925 | What, Edmund gone, too? |
42925 | What, Hunt who kept an Indian shop here on the Rue? |
42925 | What? 42925 What? |
42925 | What? 42925 What? |
42925 | What? 42925 What? |
42925 | What? 42925 What?" |
42925 | When did they shoot at your man? |
42925 | When did they start? |
42925 | Where are you going, now? |
42925 | Where are you going? |
42925 | Where do they hide themselves all winter? 42925 Where do you come from and what business have you here?" |
42925 | Where from? 42925 Where is Captain Lewis?" |
42925 | Where is Patrick Gass? |
42925 | Where is my old friend, Daniel Boone? |
42925 | Where is my powder? 42925 Where is our national honour? |
42925 | Where is the garrison? 42925 Where is your master? |
42925 | Where you come from? |
42925 | Which is the true Missouri? |
42925 | Which way did he go? |
42925 | White men, did you say? 42925 Who are these traders?" |
42925 | Who commands at Cahokia? |
42925 | Who could have brought this letter? |
42925 | Who gave you leave to hunt on Osage lands? |
42925 | Who has suffered more for the King than we self- same Cavaliers, we who have given Virginia her most honourable name--''The Old Dominion''? 42925 Who is Black Hawk?" |
42925 | Who owned the peltries the Osages took? |
42925 | Who, then? |
42925 | Why are we safe from Bonaparte? |
42925 | Why did the Indians fall upon us while the Governor sat in the Shawnee towns? |
42925 | Why did you go to war? |
42925 | Why do n''t he go? |
42925 | Why do you go into the wilderness? |
42925 | Why do you live so isolated? |
42925 | Why have you disobeyed my orders? |
42925 | Why is my lord safe in the enemy''s country? |
42925 | Why need we fear? 42925 Why not let us fight?" |
42925 | Why should it not continue over the old Detroit trail to Montreal? |
42925 | Why these fortifications, these bastions and stone towers? |
42925 | Why, then, do you interrupt it? |
42925 | Why, what is the matter? |
42925 | Why? |
42925 | Will anything short of the complete conquest of the Canadas enable us to prevent their influence on our Indians? |
42925 | Will it dismember the Union for the Louisianians to break their fetter from Spain and thereby give us a market clear of duty? 42925 Will the gorge break?" |
42925 | Will you command the army at Detroit? |
42925 | Will you do that? |
42925 | William, have you brought the mulberry cuttings? |
42925 | William, have you the catalpa seeds? |
42925 | You laugh? |
42925 | You? 42925 _ Kah mesika Illahee?_--Where is your country?" |
42925 | _ Katah mesika chaco?_inquired Captain Lewis. |
42925 | _What river is this, Dorion?" |
42925 | About eighteen? |
42925 | Again Lewis put the question,"What stream, Dorion?" |
42925 | An attack? |
42925 | And Arnold? |
42925 | And Fanny? |
42925 | And Menard''s? |
42925 | And again in the Autumn,--"What is it?" |
42925 | And by means of a_ Clark_ at that? |
42925 | And is this to be the end of all our fought- for liberty, that Napoleon should rule America?" |
42925 | And that diaphanous cloud,--was it a dress? |
42925 | And the beautiful Donna De Leyba? |
42925 | And what do you say of the Osage lands? |
42925 | And who can tell it? |
42925 | And who is to pay the bills incurred in the Illinois conquest? |
42925 | And who swore better by the King? |
42925 | And why should he not? |
42925 | And yet Wabasha, dignified and of superior understanding, when asked,"Wabasha? |
42925 | Are not our relation wit de Indian friendly? |
42925 | Are we not Americans?" |
42925 | Are you going to build?" |
42925 | As Washington went forty years before to inquire of the French,"Why are you building forts on the Ohio?" |
42925 | Bones? |
42925 | But Virginia, bankrupt, impoverished, prostrate, answered only,--"We have given you land warrants, what more can you ask?" |
42925 | But from what old treasure stores did those girls bring garments, homespun and new and woolly and warm, prepared against this day of reunion? |
42925 | But how could that be when Milly married while Meriwether was away soldiering on the Ohio? |
42925 | But the Donna? |
42925 | But the chief asked me,''Can ye run fast?'' |
42925 | But what could she do? |
42925 | But when did George Rogers Clark ever stop to eat when there was fighting on hand? |
42925 | But where was Dunmore? |
42925 | By what right does he speak?" |
42925 | Can genius surmount destitution? |
42925 | Can we restore fortifications that are in ruins? |
42925 | Can you fit me out in the name of Virginia?" |
42925 | Can you help?" |
42925 | Close the Mississippi for twenty- five years as a price of commercial advantage on the Atlantic coast? |
42925 | Could I have done with less? |
42925 | Could he dream what destruction lay in their course? |
42925 | Could he hold the lawless West? |
42925 | Could he then foresee that Judith would become his wife, or that the verdant Judith Basin would be the last retreat of the buffalo? |
42925 | Could it be possible that the Governor meant all these fine phrases? |
42925 | Could it have been a corrupted tradition of the crucifixion of Christ? |
42925 | Could such a prize be foregone for any defect of eyesight? |
42925 | De cannon at gates? |
42925 | Did he cast regretful eyes this way? |
42925 | Did he commit suicide in a moment of aberration, or was he foully murdered by an unknown hand on that 11th of October, 1809? |
42925 | Did he hope yet to win consent to his marriage with Louisa? |
42925 | Did not Patrick Henry''s father drink the King''s health at the head of his regiment? |
42925 | Did some poor stranded mariner teach the savage this semi- civilised architecture, or was it evolved by his own genius? |
42925 | Did the Spaniard still hope to stay? |
42925 | Did you say the Virginians had come?" |
42925 | Do they preserve you from sickness? |
42925 | Do they serve you beyond the grave?" |
42925 | Do you ask? |
42925 | Do you recall his thoughtfulness in sending for our horses when we feared they might be stolen? |
42925 | Had he not from childhood obeyed John Clark''s command,"Look after your young master"? |
42925 | Had he not led rangers from Fairfax''s lodge to the farthest edge of Bottetourt? |
42925 | Had not the Shawnees harried his border for years? |
42925 | Had some Spanish sailor told of a shore"like his own green Arragon"? |
42925 | Had they brought back gold then what might have been the effect upon the restless, heaving East? |
42925 | Hamilton, with the blood of many a borderer on his head,--what had he to hope? |
42925 | He had lately purchased a three- and- a- half arpent piece of land north of St. Louis for a home for his mother,--or was it for Maria? |
42925 | He was locally regarded as a great literary man, for had not the journals of his expedition been given to the world? |
42925 | His village? |
42925 | How can that be?" |
42925 | How could boats be made to go against the current? |
42925 | How could they withstand the onslaught of Hamilton and his artillery? |
42925 | How did you come?" |
42925 | How long since they burned our boats and cargoes at Fort Bellevue? |
42925 | How much more remained to conquer? |
42925 | How old were you then? |
42925 | How soon might the theatre of action come over the sea? |
42925 | How would you like to lead such a party? |
42925 | I dislike old John Clark? |
42925 | II_ THE CLARK HOME_"What do you see, William?" |
42925 | IX_ THE ROMANCE OF THE MANDANS_"What will they find?" |
42925 | IX_ TRADE FOLLOWS THE FLAG_"_ Bon jour_, Ms''ieu, you want to know where dat Captinne?" |
42925 | If she died who would unlock the Gates of the Mountains? |
42925 | Is he to control us also?" |
42925 | Is he well and enjoying the fruits of his valour?" |
42925 | Is that the boom of distant cannon? |
42925 | Is that true?" |
42925 | Is that why people call our George the''Washington of the West''?" |
42925 | Is this all you promised at the beginning of the war? |
42925 | It was a dastardly deed, but what arm had yet compassed the lawless frontier? |
42925 | Judith, did you say? |
42925 | Kentucky, even Pittsburg, looked for an immediate savage inundation,--for was not all that misty West full of warriors? |
42925 | Louis?" |
42925 | May I inquire whence you come?" |
42925 | Must Kentucky lie still and be scalped?" |
42925 | Now what can be done?" |
42925 | Of all men in the world why should Meriwether Lewis commit suicide? |
42925 | Paint my pictur''?" |
42925 | Patterick Hennery? |
42925 | Pierre Cruzatte was near- sighted and one- eyed, but what of that? |
42925 | Pittsburg? |
42925 | See it boil and roll?" |
42925 | Shall I, a private individual?" |
42925 | Shall we hearken to their teaching?" |
42925 | Should that dismay a trader?" |
42925 | Starving did you say? |
42925 | That same old yarn to frighten the people? |
42925 | The Indian? |
42925 | The Sioux? |
42925 | The Virginians? |
42925 | The battle of Point Pleasant? |
42925 | The frontiersman? |
42925 | The owl inquired,"Who? |
42925 | The scintillating blue eyes burned with an inward light, emitting fire, as Patrick Henry leaned to inquire,"What would you do in case of a repulse?" |
42925 | The young commandant read and bowed his head,--was it a moment of irresolution? |
42925 | Then turning to his brother,"Do you remember Pierre Drouillard, the Frenchman that saved Kenton? |
42925 | Then what bulwark will you have to shield you from the savages? |
42925 | They were pleased to hear of your safe return...."As to Napoleon... the news of his having abdicated the throne--""Napoleon abdicated?" |
42925 | To the sources of the Mississippi? |
42925 | Twenty- five years must we be cut off when the Wilderness Road is thronged with packtrains, when the Ohio is black with flatboats? |
42925 | Twenty- five years when our grain is rotting? |
42925 | Two bobs and a flirt in the dirty Missouri?" |
42925 | Very often the Captains caught themselves asking:"Charboneau, when will dinner be ready?" |
42925 | Wabasha, the Sioux, and Matchekewis--""How do you know?" |
42925 | Wapato?" |
42925 | Was Jefferson thinking of those days when George Rogers Clark gave drafts on New Orleans for the conquest of Illinois? |
42925 | Was he killed by the Indians, or was he drowned? |
42925 | Was it a beginning of that strange new malady that by the next Spring had grown into a devouring plague,--the dreaded Asiatic cholera? |
42925 | Was it because he bore the name of Clark? |
42925 | Was not France our friend in the time of trouble?" |
42925 | Was that the woodpecker? |
42925 | Weeks before, when the land was ringing with his valour, the President had congratulated him and asked,"Do you remember me?" |
42925 | Well, where have you been? |
42925 | Were they not next- door neighbours, hobnobbing over the fence as it were? |
42925 | What Governor before ever lost his head on such a charge? |
42925 | What are your defences?" |
42925 | What arrangement did you make with the Foxes about boundaries?" |
42925 | What did the Governor do? |
42925 | What did they trade at the Saskatchewan? |
42925 | What does the Governor mean? |
42925 | What does this mean?" |
42925 | What had happened? |
42925 | What has Congress? |
42925 | What hope with a foreign nation at our gates? |
42925 | What if he had won Rebecca? |
42925 | What little bird whispered"Oregon"in Carver''s ear? |
42925 | What news?" |
42925 | What shall we have left?" |
42925 | What was he saying? |
42925 | What was he trying to do? |
42925 | What?" |
42925 | What?" |
42925 | When before had Wabasha stood? |
42925 | When was it new?" |
42925 | Where are those promises you made? |
42925 | Where are you going?" |
42925 | Where do they think we are going to pen our people? |
42925 | Where do they think we are going to ship our produce? |
42925 | Where have you been? |
42925 | Where is the Governor?" |
42925 | Where lay that line? |
42925 | Where was Joshua Grinder? |
42925 | Where was Neely himself? |
42925 | Where were those servants? |
42925 | Which was preferable, the tyranny of kings or the Indian firestake? |
42925 | Who better than Clark knew the border and the Indian? |
42925 | Who but chiefs should visit there? |
42925 | Who can tell? |
42925 | Who could say at what hour the waters would resound with their whoops? |
42925 | Who has told it? |
42925 | Who is right and who is wrong? |
42925 | Who is there to mourn for Logan? |
42925 | Who knows what Clark would have called warm weather in February? |
42925 | Who knows what fortune may do for you?" |
42925 | Who shall refuse us? |
42925 | Who shall relieve our distresses?" |
42925 | Who then shall pay it but Congress? |
42925 | Who? |
42925 | Who?" |
42925 | Why, instead of peaceably following the game and providing for your families, do you send out war parties to destroy each other? |
42925 | Why, of all that army, had Wayne chosen the young lieutenant of the Fourth Sub- Legion for this errand? |
42925 | Will Americans endure that? |
42925 | Will Black Hawk apply that spark? |
42925 | Will these presents pay for the men we lost? |
42925 | Will you march with us on New Orleans?" |
42925 | Will you not command of both side de river? |
42925 | Will_ they_ find the Shining Mountains and the River of the West? |
42925 | With an armed boat?" |
42925 | Would Canada now be a peaceful sister of the States? |
42925 | Would he be apt to let the United States get ahead of him? |
42925 | Would he survive a winter among the Blackfeet? |
42925 | Would they not act as a barrier to tribes more remote? |
42925 | XI_ A PRISONER OF WAR_"A prisoner of war? |
42925 | are ye going to run aff and leave me all to mesilf?" |
42925 | bought the Mississippi? |
42925 | bought the entire boundless West?" |
42925 | going to war?" |
42925 | he cried,"and be the divil, will yez try to make sport of mesilf?" |
42925 | still hope to conquer America? |
42925 | who cud tek cah o''Mars Clahk so well as old Yawk?" |
59536 | ''The queen will fight?'' 59536 A little more bacon, I guess, now, Mr. Bob? |
59536 | All good little war workers, are n''t you? |
59536 | And Marian got up too? 59536 And how do you feel about that?" |
59536 | And the stork,--what did he say? |
59536 | And went to the aviation field? |
59536 | And where did it all happen, Elizabeth? |
59536 | Are any of the others wounded? |
59536 | Are n''t you coming out a little while, Lucy? 59536 Are n''t you rushing things a little?" |
59536 | Are you going to New York, Father? |
59536 | Are you looking for me, daughter? |
59536 | Are you sure it does n''t hurt now? |
59536 | Are you wondering what on earth got me up at this hour? |
59536 | But Marian-- you took her too? |
59536 | But are you the only officer imprisoned here? |
59536 | But can he leave here? |
59536 | But do you think he''ll go back to fight? 59536 But how about the Boches? |
59536 | But there''s not much harm in watching them fly, do you think, Lucy? 59536 But we''ll have something to eat first, sha n''t we? |
59536 | But what did the doctor say who saw the bandage? |
59536 | But what was wrong with your hand? |
59536 | But what were you going to say? |
59536 | But what will you do, Cousin Henry? 59536 But what''s the matter with her pulse, Miss Thomas?" |
59536 | But, Lucy,she asked with a new wonder,"why are n''t you sure? |
59536 | Ca n''t I do anything? 59536 Can you tell us where we are going?" |
59536 | Captain Bertrand-- do you think he is any better? |
59536 | Come to the Red Cross to- morrow morning, Lucy? 59536 Could I go over there and see it, do you think?" |
59536 | Did I, Elizabeth? |
59536 | Did Lucy tell you what we think, Marian? |
59536 | Did Miss Lucy say they''d be right down? |
59536 | Did he? |
59536 | Did they come? |
59536 | Do Father and Mother know? |
59536 | Do n''t I know it? |
59536 | Do n''t I, though? 59536 Do n''t feel well, Lieutenant?" |
59536 | Do n''t you find it good? |
59536 | Do n''t you like shepherd''s pie? |
59536 | Do n''t you wish you could thank that dear old Elizabeth? |
59536 | Do you think Bob will go back to the war? |
59536 | Does he hear from him? 59536 Does n''t he?" |
59536 | Does n''t sound very promising to you, does it? 59536 Drink all this now, ca n''t you? |
59536 | Elizabeth and Karl? |
59536 | Good gracious, did she catch fire? |
59536 | Good- bye? |
59536 | Has your father sent you any more new ones? |
59536 | Have I seen that one? 59536 Have n''t you ever seen her, Lucy? |
59536 | Have you any dressings-- bandages-- I could use for the wounded prisoners? |
59536 | Have you any idea where they are now? |
59536 | Have you seen the new forts beyond the village? |
59536 | He may have some milk right on the table by my plate, may n''t he, Lucy? |
59536 | He''s safe there, Marie, do n''t you think so? 59536 Here''s the aviation field-- see it? |
59536 | How about me? |
59536 | How are you, Elizabeth? 59536 How can any one say, Dad, that this war has n''t the chances for heroism that other wars had? |
59536 | How did you get away? |
59536 | How do you mean? |
59536 | How far have you gone, Marian? |
59536 | How long have you been here, Captain? |
59536 | How long was he in the war? |
59536 | How nearly through are you, Lucy? 59536 How soon do we stop?" |
59536 | How soon do you want it? |
59536 | I fasten your dress, Miss Lucy, shall I? |
59536 | I frightened you, I fear? |
59536 | I guess I''d better make a good infantryman first,--is that it? |
59536 | I guess we wo n''t go out on the sea- wall to- day, said Lucy;unless you especially wish to?" |
59536 | I have seen a spy from the American army across there with the French, and whom do you think it was? 59536 I know all about it, so I may hear what you say to them, may n''t I?" |
59536 | I think she''ll like it here, do n''t you, Julia? |
59536 | I''ll promise not to go again without telling you, so wo n''t you forgive me this time? |
59536 | I''m pretty worthless, are n''t I? |
59536 | Is Elizabeth very sick, Lucy? |
59536 | Is Father in his office? |
59536 | Is every one out? 59536 Is it to Germany?" |
59536 | Is it you, Elizabeth? |
59536 | Is it you, Karl, home so early? |
59536 | Is n''t he a cunning little fellow, Marian? |
59536 | Is n''t it cold? |
59536 | Is n''t it lots nicer since Bob made the Germans let him go? |
59536 | Is n''t she cruel? |
59536 | Is n''t the water pretty, William? |
59536 | Is she nice? 59536 Is your cousin going to stay with you all summer?" |
59536 | It should be around eighty, should n''t it? |
59536 | It_ is_ pretty, is n''t it? |
59536 | Karl make any more of those fluffy muffins now, Elizabeth? |
59536 | Karl-- here? 59536 Lucy, what do you think? |
59536 | Marian, do you remember saying that she and Karl were dangerous to have around? 59536 May I ask your name and where you were taken?" |
59536 | May I take these home to finish, Mrs. Houston? 59536 Might I ask your name?" |
59536 | Mr. Harding,she burst out,"do you,--you do n''t think I am a chatterbox,--I mean that I tell everything I know,--do you?" |
59536 | Mr. Harding,she faltered,"have n''t you time to tell us good- bye?" |
59536 | Must I treat you roughly to get it? 59536 Now the frog comes hopping in, does n''t he?" |
59536 | Oh, Bob, was n''t it great? |
59536 | Oh, Cousin Henry-- do you m- mean it? |
59536 | Oh, I''m so glad, Marian,cried Lucy warmly,"but I do n''t want you to go away a bit-- will you have to?" |
59536 | Oh, Julia, how can you do them so fast? 59536 Oh, Mr. Bob, why did you come here? |
59536 | Oh, do n''t you suppose Captain Jourdin would come to see us if you asked him? |
59536 | Oh, does her tooth ache again? 59536 Oh, is n''t this nice?" |
59536 | Oh, let''s have him, let''s keep him,--mayn''t we, Lucy? |
59536 | Oh, poor little thing,--she''s still ill, then? |
59536 | Oh, then, ca n''t you play tennis this afternoon, either? |
59536 | Oh, what, Mother? 59536 Oh, who is it? |
59536 | Really? |
59536 | Say, is n''t that fine? 59536 Shall I light the candles?" |
59536 | She took Marian along, you say? 59536 She wants to join, does n''t she?" |
59536 | Something hard about a father? 59536 Supposing that I knew something to tell, and the orders were secret-- would you expect me to?" |
59536 | Take her with me, Bob, will you? 59536 Tell me, what is it?" |
59536 | The Lieutenant expects to see service on the other side very shortly? |
59536 | Then why does n''t he get this poor fellow moved? 59536 There was n''t any danger, anyway, was there, Dad? |
59536 | There''s a meadow just to the left,he said at last,"north of the village-- see it? |
59536 | They are n''t going to separate us, Benton? |
59536 | Think they have softened his heart, Bob,--is that the idea? |
59536 | Undo it, Cousin Sally, wo n''t you? 59536 Want chocolate in yours?" |
59536 | Was he ever taken prisoner? |
59536 | Was n''t it? |
59536 | We''ll sit down in your room here and have a story, shall we? |
59536 | We''ll walk over with you,--shall we, Marian? 59536 Well, do n''t go up again just now, Bob, will you? |
59536 | Well, have you left him anything? 59536 Well, son, how do you feel about it?" |
59536 | Well, what have you guessed? |
59536 | Well, what is it this morning, daughter? |
59536 | Were you at the aviation field again this afternoon? |
59536 | Were you in the one that flew over the harbor an hour ago? |
59536 | What are you going to do, Mother? |
59536 | What did you hear? 59536 What do you think?" |
59536 | What else would I do? |
59536 | What happened to your hand? |
59536 | What is her temperature, Miss Gordon? |
59536 | What is it? |
59536 | What is the matter there? |
59536 | What on earth happened? 59536 What shall I tell?" |
59536 | What time shall we reach our destination? |
59536 | What''s got into that child, anyway? |
59536 | What''s the matter? 59536 What''s this?" |
59536 | What, can you really feel ill because you think you''re going to? |
59536 | What? 59536 When are they coming? |
59536 | When may I see you again, Captain? 59536 Where are you going?" |
59536 | Where did you hear it, anyway? |
59536 | Where is my blanket? |
59536 | Where is the doctor? |
59536 | Where you going, Lucy? |
59536 | Where''s Bob? |
59536 | Where? |
59536 | Who are these for? |
59536 | Whom do you think I have seen? |
59536 | Why do n''t you get out and stretch your legs? 59536 Why do n''t you try a little?" |
59536 | Why does n''t every one live in the South, I wonder? 59536 Why not, Miss? |
59536 | Why, Lucy? |
59536 | Why, what in the world is it? |
59536 | Why, what''s happened to your thumb, Bob? |
59536 | Why, you''ve always had a governess, Marian, have n''t you? |
59536 | Will you button my dress for me, Lucy? 59536 Will you go now,--this second?" |
59536 | Will you stay here for a while and attend to the customers while I do my figuring? 59536 Will you tell me how far they go? |
59536 | Will you wait here until I bring the clothes, or will you come with me to my house? |
59536 | Will you? 59536 William-- why do you always get so tied up with everything? |
59536 | Wo n''t they let us go anywhere else? |
59536 | Wo n''t you please send back one when you get over there? |
59536 | Wo n''t you tell some of the things he''s done? |
59536 | Would n''t it be queer to have them come back to you from nobody knows where? |
59536 | Would n''t that be great? 59536 Would you have me betray the Fatherland?" |
59536 | Yes, he sent word we were to expect them on the noon boat, and, oh, Mother, what do you suppose Marian will be like? |
59536 | Yes, is n''t it? |
59536 | Yes, is n''t she nice? |
59536 | You admit having come down by accident with Captain Benton this morning? |
59536 | You are ill, Captain? 59536 You do n''t know just where he is, do you, Lucy?" |
59536 | You have heard nothing of it? |
59536 | You have n''t had any letters from home, Sergeant? 59536 You know what you''ll get if you are caught-- out of uniform?" |
59536 | You mean we may walk in that little space in front at this time? |
59536 | You mean you are ill? |
59536 | You say when you saw him at the outskirts of the village he was dressed in peasant''s clothes, Müller? |
59536 | You tell your mother, will you? |
59536 | You wo n''t tell me, will you? |
59536 | You''ll write-- I mean often, every day, wo n''t you? |
59536 | Your blanket? |
59536 | Your mother not back yet from town, Miss Lucy? |
59536 | Your name''s Happy, do you hear? |
59536 | _ Anglais?_he asked, his voice quavering with astonishment, and his eyes wandering all over Bob as though puzzled beyond words at his presence. |
59536 | *****[ Illustration:"IS THE TWENTY- EIGHTH GOING OVER THIS WEEK?"] |
59536 | A month is n''t so awfully long, is it? |
59536 | A prisoner?" |
59536 | Almost a smile hovered over her lips, and at sight of it Lucy sprang forward, crying,"What is it, Mother? |
59536 | And Captain Brent is here too, is n''t he? |
59536 | And a poached egg?" |
59536 | And after Marian''s almost fainting yesterday, even though she did act so bully afterward, what do you think about her joining? |
59536 | And has n''t your father been rushed to death, lately, without giving any particular reason?" |
59536 | And now was the home regiment to follow? |
59536 | And while the little princess look up after him she see the sky through the chimney- top----""And the house was all gone, was n''t it?" |
59536 | Andrews?" |
59536 | Any quinine? |
59536 | Are n''t these the silliest sentences?" |
59536 | Are n''t you coming out to parade?" |
59536 | Are you here?" |
59536 | Are you quite sure about that reward?" |
59536 | Are you sure she''s none the worse for it?" |
59536 | Are you worse?" |
59536 | At sight of him he settled back again, inquiring with mild mockery,"Well, did you persuade the Germans to confide anything to you? |
59536 | Bob Gordon?" |
59536 | Bob gave him no time to voice his displeasure, but on entering the room said in such German as he could muster:"Where is the doctor? |
59536 | But do n''t you still miss the old Twenty- Eighth? |
59536 | But go on, Mother, wo n''t you?" |
59536 | But it''s enough to cheer up a little on-- isn''t it, Lucy?" |
59536 | CAPTAIN LUCY 322 Illustrations PAGE"IS THE TWENTY- EIGHTH GOING OVER THIS WEEK?" |
59536 | Ca n''t he see that he''s dying on his hands? |
59536 | Ca n''t we, Marian?" |
59536 | Ca n''t you come in?" |
59536 | Can he get letters?" |
59536 | Can you think of a place?" |
59536 | Captain Bertrand is very ill. Why have n''t you had him taken away?" |
59536 | Come on, so we can write and tell him how much you''ve done-- won''t you?" |
59536 | Come with me?" |
59536 | Could there be better proof than this of our loyalty?" |
59536 | Could they not see me?" |
59536 | Could you-- will you lend me those clothes you wear while I go quickly into the village and return? |
59536 | Did Father hear from them?" |
59536 | Did he do wonderful things first, Captain Brent? |
59536 | Did the dentist hurt much?" |
59536 | Did you contrive long for your escape?" |
59536 | Did you expect it?" |
59536 | Did you expect to get away if nobody appeared to be in sight?" |
59536 | Do come up and see Elizabeth when you get your things off, wo n''t you?" |
59536 | Do n''t we owe them anything, Karl, that you are so ready to harm them?" |
59536 | Do n''t you know what she''s like?" |
59536 | Do n''t you think she has grown to be a very pleasant little guest?" |
59536 | Do n''t you think they could use him for something in the spy line?" |
59536 | Do you know Lucy and Marian went down to the dock to see them off? |
59536 | Do you like her?" |
59536 | Do you mind calling up Julia and Mr. Lewis, Marian, and telling them we ca n''t play with them this afternoon?" |
59536 | Do you remember the day long ago when he fell off his horse, how you picked him up and carried him in the house? |
59536 | Does he mean Mexico?" |
59536 | Does she look as if I had?" |
59536 | Fly a little lower, ca n''t you?" |
59536 | Have you any request to make?" |
59536 | Have you forgotten that?" |
59536 | Have you forgotten the long, happy years we spent there? |
59536 | Have you told any one?" |
59536 | He got up, nodding shortly in acknowledgment, but the only reply he vouchsafed was the inquiry, in English,"You some money perhaps have?" |
59536 | He rose a moment later to take leave, and Captain Brent, lingering a few moments after him, said,"Do you know what he''s hoping for? |
59536 | He said huskily to the doctor,"You''ll do your best for him, wo n''t you, Herr Doctor?" |
59536 | He seems very ill. Is there nothing that can be done for him? |
59536 | He seized the speaking tube and shouted,"What''s the matter?" |
59536 | He told the Frenchman where he came from and the length of his service, finally asking,"Can you give me any idea of where we are, Captain?" |
59536 | He wanted to ask,"Who are you?" |
59536 | He''d come if you asked him, would n''t he, Captain Brent?" |
59536 | How about it?" |
59536 | How do you feel about Karl living here since we are at war? |
59536 | How long would the war last? |
59536 | How would you like to be sent into Germany as a factory hand?" |
59536 | Hurry up now, though, wo n''t you, Bob, and put on your uniform?" |
59536 | I do n''t believe she will, anyway-- why should she? |
59536 | I hate seeing people go, do n''t you?" |
59536 | I never said so, anyway, so why the row with me?" |
59536 | I wonder what I was dreaming of?" |
59536 | I''ll ask Father to tell me,--wouldn''t any secret be safe with us? |
59536 | I''m sure you want to do everything you can to get well soon, do n''t you?" |
59536 | In the village-- in the fellow''s clothes?" |
59536 | Inside his own door he found Bob coming down- stairs and accosted him with,"Well, any news for you, Bob?" |
59536 | Is it Bob?" |
59536 | Is it a secret to every one outside of the regiment?" |
59536 | Is she hurt?" |
59536 | It is a little better, yes? |
59536 | It was closed, but yielded to his touch, and saying softly,"May I come in, Captain?" |
59536 | It''s not quite so cold to- day, do you think so, Lucy?" |
59536 | It''s on the new land beyond the Infantry Quarters, is n''t it, Lucy?" |
59536 | Karl frowned, staring at her with hard eyes, but she faltered,"You wo n''t give him up, Karl? |
59536 | Lucy, is it you?" |
59536 | Major Gordon stopped lighting his pipe to ask in surprise,"What, have you heard it already?" |
59536 | Marian looked doubtful and asked,"How far is it?" |
59536 | May I come and see you?" |
59536 | May I sit down on the little brother''s sled?" |
59536 | Nothing for me?" |
59536 | Of course, there''s nothing like safety first, but who is there on this post to be afraid of? |
59536 | Our first- aid class begins to- day-- you have n''t forgotten it? |
59536 | Outside, somewhere-- what was happening, anyway? |
59536 | Shall I proceed?" |
59536 | She laughed at the delight in his face as she said:"You''re surprised, are n''t you, Father, to see me so fat and strong? |
59536 | Sort of like to join the army yourself, would n''t you?" |
59536 | Suppose you could do anything to keep me from losing the nail, Elizabeth? |
59536 | The three girls walked home together as far as the Gordons''and Julia said, as they discussed the morning''s work:"Is n''t she a nice, jolly person? |
59536 | The words of an old song came into his mind:"Do they miss me at home, do they miss me, When the shadows darkly fall?" |
59536 | Then as the shock of her recognition of him outweighed his curiosity he asked, bewildered,"Who knows I am here? |
59536 | Then before Mr. Harding could answer she persisted,"Is the Twenty- Eighth going over this week? |
59536 | Want to come, William?" |
59536 | Was he ever taken prisoner?" |
59536 | Was this Bob, who had never been able to move quickly enough? |
59536 | We''re going out, are n''t we?" |
59536 | Well, did they let you fly?" |
59536 | What a slacker you are, anyway-- can''t you grin and bear it, as other fellows do?" |
59536 | What are you standing there for?" |
59536 | What can I do?" |
59536 | What do you say to my inviting them all to our house afterward, to play games and have ice- cream? |
59536 | What do you think of it, Marian?" |
59536 | What do you think? |
59536 | What good would it do them to know that he was lost? |
59536 | What is it? |
59536 | What on earth for? |
59536 | What put that idea into your head?" |
59536 | What should I have done without you?" |
59536 | What time do you report?" |
59536 | What time is it? |
59536 | What would you say?" |
59536 | What''s a day or two, anyway? |
59536 | What''s his name?" |
59536 | What''s the kodak for?" |
59536 | What''s the matter?" |
59536 | What''s the use in having cold ears and a frozen face, and being nearly blown off your feet? |
59536 | What_ can_ you do, if the Germans do n''t want to let him go?" |
59536 | When can he come here?" |
59536 | When did you get back?" |
59536 | When the opportunity came she demanded, breathlessly,"Was he badly wounded? |
59536 | Where did you get him?" |
59536 | Where do we go from here?'' |
59536 | Where is it? |
59536 | Where is your obedience?" |
59536 | Where was the push made?" |
59536 | Where would Bob be, anyway, a year from now, if the war still went on? |
59536 | Why would n''t you tell me?" |
59536 | Will you come, Marian?" |
59536 | Will you come, Marian?" |
59536 | William seemed quite willing to help her get it, for he asked:"Do you mind pulling Happy, too, Lucy? |
59536 | Wo n''t you get up, Lucy, so we can take him for a walk around the post before school? |
59536 | Wo n''t you tell me?" |
59536 | Wo n''t you?" |
59536 | Would you like that?" |
59536 | Would you think so if I learned what we want to know about the block- houses before it''s dark enough to start? |
59536 | You are n''t any of you too old to like Blind Man''s Buff and Stage- Coach and Winks, are you?" |
59536 | You remember?" |
59536 | You will believe me?" |
59536 | Your father is an officer on the post?" |
59536 | _ Zwei_ Bob knew, but two what? |
59536 | and you went down in the night?" |
2988 | 23--and a lawyer? |
2988 | APPENDIX K A SUBSTITUTE FOR RULOFF HAVE WE A SIDNEY CARTON AMONG US? |
2988 | Am I right? |
2988 | Am I saying that the pulpit does not do its share toward disseminating the marrow, the meat of the gospel of Christ? |
2988 | Am I to go away and let them have peace and quiet for a year and a half, and then come back and only lecture them twice? |
2988 | America? |
2988 | And could we now? |
2988 | And do you think that you have added just the right smear of polish to the closing clause of the sentence? |
2988 | And ignorantly& unthinkingly? |
2988 | And shall we see Susy? |
2988 | And what is a man without energy? |
2988 | And what is the appendix for? |
2988 | And what the flavor can surpass Of sugar, spirit, lemons? |
2988 | And when the man draws them well why do they stir my admiration? |
2988 | And why should it be otherwise? |
2988 | And why should n''t I be? |
2988 | And will Mark Twain never write such another? |
2988 | Anything left of Hoffman? ” “ No, ” I said. |
2988 | Are the Blue and the Gray one to- day? |
2988 | Are the two things identical? |
2988 | Are there in Sir Walter''s novels passages done in good English--English which is neither slovenly nor involved? |
2988 | Are there passages which burn with real fire-- not punk, fox- fire, make- believe? |
2988 | Are there passages whose English is not poor& thin& commonplace, but is of a quality above that? |
2988 | Are you sure it was clams? |
2988 | Are you? ” I did not pursue the subject, and since then I have not traveled on my''nom de guerre''enough to hurt. |
2988 | Are you? ” That broke the ice. |
2988 | As concerns the man who has gone unpunished eleven million years, is it your belief that in life he did his duty by his microbes? |
2988 | At first he looked at the culprit thoughtfully, then he made some inquiries: “ Did you strike him first? ” Captain Klinefelter asked. |
2988 | At forty what do you do? |
2988 | B.--Look here, are you charging storage? |
2988 | Better lo''ed ye canna be, Will ye no come back again? |
2988 | Blasphemy? |
2988 | Bright? |
2988 | But I have n''t lost my temper, and I''ve made Livy lie down most of the time; could anybody make her lie down all the time? |
2988 | But ca n''t I get it in anywhere? |
2988 | But in the mean time what do you do? |
2988 | But to cease teaching and go back to the beginning again, was it not pitiable-- that spectacle? |
2988 | But what if it produce that in spite of you? |
2988 | But what is the use of remembering all these bitter details? |
2988 | But what of that? |
2988 | But what were you doing on the inside? |
2988 | By searching? |
2988 | By the way, third''s a lucky number for length of days, is n''t it? |
2988 | Ca n''t you tell her it always makes you sick to go home late at night or something like that? |
2988 | Can I support such grief as this? |
2988 | Can not the''Californian''afford to keep Mark all to itself? |
2988 | Can the curse of the Deity beautify a land? |
2988 | Can you conceive of a man''s getting himself into a sweat over so diminutive a provocation? |
2988 | Can you read him and keep your respect for him? |
2988 | Clara, dear, after the luncheon-- I hate to put this on you-- but could you do two or three little shopping- errands for me? |
2988 | Clemens said: “ Trowbridge, are you still alive? |
2988 | Clemens said: “ What is it? ” Wilberforce impressively answered: “ It is the Holy Grail. ” Clemens naturally started with surprise. |
2988 | Clemens, I am not embarrassed, are you? ” So he remembered that first, long- ago meeting. |
2988 | Clemens, will you tell me where Mr. Charles Dudley Warner lives? ” This was the chance! |
2988 | Continuing he said: Do you know the prettiest fancy and the neatest that ever shot through Harte''s brain? |
2988 | Could she feel the wrinkles in my hand through her hair? |
2988 | Could you lend an admirer$ 1.50 to buy a hymn- book with? |
2988 | Curious, but did n''t Florence want a Cromwell? |
2988 | DEAR CHAMP CLARK,--Is the new copyright law acceptable to me? |
2988 | DEAR PAMELA,--Will you take this$ 15& buy some candy or other trifle for yourself& Sam& his wife to remind you that we remember you? |
2988 | DOES THE RACE OF MAN LOVE A LORD? |
2988 | Did I ever tell you the plot of it? |
2988 | Did I know jean''s value? |
2988 | Did he know how to write English,& did n''t do it because he did n''t want to? |
2988 | Did it? |
2988 | Did n''t you know that? |
2988 | Did you get that key to- day?'' |
2988 | Did you get wet? |
2988 | Did you have any bets on us? |
2988 | Did you want to saddle that disaster upon us for life? ” He was blowing off steam, and I knew it and encouraged it. |
2988 | Do n''t you care more about the wretchedness of others than anything that happens to you?'' |
2988 | Do n''t you feel well? ” Jean said that she had a little stomack- ache, and so thought she would lie down. |
2988 | Do n''t you hear me? |
2988 | Do n''t you know that I have expended money in this country but have made none myself? |
2988 | Do n''t you know that I have never held in my hands a gold or silver bar that belonged to me? |
2988 | Do n''t you know that I have only talked, as yet, but proved nothing? |
2988 | Do n''t you know that it''s all talk and no cider so far? |
2988 | Do n''t you know that undemonstrated human calculations wo n''t do to bet on? |
2988 | Do n''t you know they are calling for you? ” They remained in Keokuk a week, and Susy starts to tell something of their visit there. |
2988 | Do n''t you realize that you ought not to intrude your help in a delicate art like that with your limitations? |
2988 | Do serenity and peace brood over you after you have done such a thing? |
2988 | Do they even resemble each other? |
2988 | Do they live in---- ” “ In this street? |
2988 | Do you admire the race(& consequently yourself)? |
2988 | Do you hear? ” The slim, youthful person trembled a good deal, and said: “ I would, Mr. Clemens, I would indeed, sir, if I could. |
2988 | Do you know any one who does know him? ” “ Yes, I know his most intimate friend. ” “ Then he is the man for you to approach. |
2988 | Do you know that shock? |
2988 | Do you know that shock? |
2988 | Do you remember? |
2988 | Do you see the big, plain house over there with the placard in the third floor window? |
2988 | Do you suppose you could get me a key that would fit my trunk?'' |
2988 | Do you think I wrote the second one to give that man pleasure? |
2988 | Do you think you could teach it arithmetic? ” Joy was uncertain. |
2988 | Do you want to bring the lightning? ” “ You know the lightning did come last week, mama, and struck the new church, and burnt it down. |
2988 | Does he ever chain the reader''s interest& make him reluctant to lay the book down? |
2988 | Does he keep boarders? ” “ What an idea! |
2988 | Does he keep him in mind years and years and go on contriving miseries for him? |
2988 | Does he take an oath or make a promise of any sort?--or does n''t he leave himself entirely free? |
2988 | Does man regard the difference? |
2988 | Does one build a boarding- house for the sake of the boarding- house itself or for the sake of the boarders? |
2988 | Does this sound like shouting? |
2988 | Does your wife give you rats, like that, when you go a little one- sided? |
2988 | Dreaming of what? |
2988 | Familiar? |
2988 | For 6 days now my story in the Christmas Harper''s “ Was it Heaven? |
2988 | Further along he refers to one of his reforms: Smoke? |
2988 | Give him a good sound thrashing; do you hear? |
2988 | Goodness, who is there I have n''t known? |
2988 | Had we no moral duty to perform? |
2988 | Has he funny characters that are funny, and humorous passages that are humorous? |
2988 | Has he heroes& heroines who are not cads and cadesses? |
2988 | Has he heroes& heroines whom the reader admires-- admires and knows why? |
2988 | Has he paused& taken thought? |
2988 | Has he personages whose acts& talk correspond with their characters as described by him? |
2988 | Have I got to learn the shape of the river according to all these five hundred thousand different ways? |
2988 | Have n''t I told you so, over and over again? ” “ It''s awful cruel, mama! |
2988 | Have n''t you read anything at all about Joan of Arc? |
2988 | Have you a memorandum of the route we took, or the names of any of the stations we stopped at? |
2988 | Have you been secreted in the closet or lurking on the shed roof? |
2988 | Have you developed any novelties of conduct since you left Mr. Murray''s,& have they been of a character to move the concern of your friends? |
2988 | Have you ever been like that? |
2988 | Have you forgotten early twitterings of your own? |
2988 | He commended man to multiply& replenish- what? |
2988 | He did not suspect what had happened until he heard one of the daughters ask: “ Katie, is it true? |
2988 | He had never had a lesson, she said; if he could only have lessons what might he not accomplish? |
2988 | He probably referred to the Monday Evening Club essay, “ What Is Happiness? ”( February, 1883). |
2988 | He said to himself: “ Why did n''t I go now? |
2988 | He said, very gently: “ How beautiful it all is? |
2988 | He said: “''You thought you were playing a nice joke on me, did n''t you? |
2988 | He says: “ A billion, that is a million millions,[?? |
2988 | He says: “ A billion, that is a million millions,[?? |
2988 | He wished to receive the full value( who does not?) |
2988 | He wrote, asking Howells: Will the proposed treaty protect us( and effectually) against Canadian piracy? |
2988 | Helen Keller wrote: And you are seventy years old? |
2988 | Hereafter if you must write such things wo n''t you please be so kind as to label them? |
2988 | His friend asked: “ Who''s Mark Twain? ” “ God knows; I do n''t! ” The lecturer could not ride any more. |
2988 | How can you ask such a thing of me? |
2988 | How could he, with a fortune so plainly in view? |
2988 | How could that impress Adam? |
2988 | How could you do it? |
2988 | How did you ever think of it? ” It was a fearful ordeal for a boy like Jim Wolfe, but he stuck to his place in spite of what he must have suffered. |
2988 | How do I account for this change of view? |
2988 | How do you explain this? ” Clemens said: “ Oh, that is very simple to answer, your Excellency. |
2988 | How do you reckon I can remember such a mess as that? ” “ My boy, you''ve got to remember it. |
2988 | How do you reckon he accomplished that miracle? |
2988 | How do you run Plum Point? ” He met Bixby at New Orleans. |
2988 | How in the world did you ever come to locate there? ” Then they began to notice what they had not at first seen. |
2988 | How much money does the devil give you for arraigning Christianity and missionary causes? ” But there were more of the better sort. |
2988 | Howells in his letter said: She hallowed what she touched far beyond priests.... What are you going to do, you poor soul? |
2988 | Howells, did you write me day- before- day- before yesterday or did I dream it? |
2988 | I asked him if he was well, and he said,''What the hell do you want?'' |
2988 | I gave her a conundrum, thus: “ My dear madam, why ought your hand to retain its present grace and beauty always? |
2988 | I said to the Duke: “ Your Grace, they''re just about finger- milers! ” “ How do you mean, m''lord? ” “ This. |
2988 | I said, “ I did n''t belong to any. ” Then he asked me what order of knighthood I belonged to? |
2988 | I said, “ None. ” Then he asked me what the red ribbon in my buttonhole stood for? |
2988 | I said,''Jean, is this you trying to let me know you have found the others?'' |
2988 | I sha''n''t say a word against it, but she will find it a difficult& disheartening job,& meanwhile what is to become of that miraculous girl? |
2988 | I suppose I ought to defend my character, but how can I defend it? |
2988 | I want somebody to light my pipe. ” “ Why do n''t you get up and light it yourself? ” Brownell asked. |
2988 | I was greatly pleased and asked: “ Who gets the extra one? ” “ Widows and orphans. ” “ A good idea, too. |
2988 | I was naturally astonished, and immediately wrote: I did fall and skin my shin at five o''clock yesterday afternoon, but how did you find it out? |
2988 | I wonder if it is? |
2988 | If I had my new lecture completed I would n''t hesitate a moment, but really is n''t “ Cussed Be Canaan ” too old? |
2988 | If a life be offered up on the gallows to atone for the murder Ruloff did, will that suffice? |
2988 | If base music gives me wings, why should I want any other? |
2988 | If he ca n''t get renewals of his bric- a- brac in the next world what will he look like? |
2988 | If so is she extinct and can never attend a third? |
2988 | If they want letters from here-- who''ll run from morning till night collecting material cheaper? |
2988 | If we are going to be gay in spirit, why be clad in funeral garments? |
2988 | If we made this colonel a grand fellow, and gave him a wife to suit-- hey? |
2988 | If you can play that way left- handed what could you do right- handed?'' |
2988 | If you should be passing this way to- morrow will you look in and change hats? |
2988 | In a dictation following his return, Mark Twain said: Who began it? |
2988 | In later years Mark Twain once said: “ How much of the nursing did I do? |
2988 | In one of her letters she says: The house has been full of company, and I have been “ whirled around. ” How can a body help it? |
2988 | In the accompanying note he said: Say, Boss, do you want this to lighten up your old freight- train with? |
2988 | Interest? |
2988 | Introducing him, President Frank Lawrence said: “ What name is there in literature that can be likened to his? |
2988 | Is it a regular army? |
2988 | Is it an army of volunteers who have enlisted for the war, and may righteously be shot if they leave before the war is finished? |
2988 | Is it less humiliating to dance to the lash of one master than another? |
2988 | Is it one prayer? |
2988 | Is it possible for human wickedness to invent a doctrine more infernal and poisonous than this? |
2988 | Is n''t it curious? |
2988 | Is n''t it interesting? |
2988 | Is n''t that a brewery? ” “ It is, Mark. |
2988 | Is n''t that a brewery? ” “ It is, Mark. |
2988 | Is n''t that valuable? |
2988 | Is that it? ” “ Yes, that is correct. ” “ By George, it beats the band! ” He liked the expression, and set it down in his tablets. |
2988 | Is the Rebellion ended and forgotten? |
2988 | Is there imaginable a baser servitude than it imposes? |
2988 | Is there some way, honest or otherwise, by which you can get a copy of Mayo''s play, “ Pudd''nhead Wilson, ” for me? |
2988 | It has always seemed natural and right to me, and wise and most kindly and merciful. ” “ Who first thought of it like that, mama? |
2988 | It is n''t Holcomb, it''s Blackmer. ” I was ashamed again, and confessed it; then: “ How old are you, dear? ” “ Twelve; New- Year''s. |
2988 | It may have materialized out of the unseen-- who knows? |
2988 | It only costs the people$ 1 apiece, and if they ca n''t stand it what do they stay here for?... |
2988 | It only costs the public a dollar apiece, and if they ca n''t stand it what do they stay here for? |
2988 | It was not wrong? |
2988 | It was you. ” “ But do you realize, ma''am, how tired and hungry we are? |
2988 | Italy? |
2988 | Klinefelter turned to Sam: “ Did n''t you hear him? ” “ Yes, sir. ” Brown said: “ Shut your mouth! |
2988 | L. Am I not, to a man, as is a billion solar systems to a grain of sand? |
2988 | L. And the air? |
2988 | L. C.''Which was? |
2988 | L. Do you know what a microbe is? |
2988 | L. Does he forget him? |
2988 | L. Employs himself with more important matters? |
2988 | L. Has she been out to- day? |
2988 | L. He commits depredations upon your blood? |
2988 | L. How many men are there? |
2988 | L. In ten days the aggregate reaches what? |
2988 | L. In that costume? |
2988 | L. Is it true the human race thinks the universe was created for its convenience? |
2988 | L. Now then, according to man''s own reasoning, what is man for? |
2988 | L. Then what? |
2988 | L. Then why punish him? |
2988 | L. To what intent are these uncountable microbes introduced into the human race? |
2988 | L. What am I to man? |
2988 | L. What is he for? |
2988 | L. What is the sea for? |
2988 | L. When was this? |
2988 | L. Who is it? |
2988 | L. Why? |
2988 | L. Why? |
2988 | L. You took a cab both ways? |
2988 | Land sakes, Livy, what can I do? ” “ Which way did he go, Youth? ” “ Why, I sent him to Charlie Warner''s. |
2988 | Land sakes, Livy, what can I do? ” “ Which way did he go, Youth? ” “ Why, I sent him to Charlie Warner''s. |
2988 | Later he wrote: “ Put''Is He Dead?'' |
2988 | Livy screamed, then said, “ Who is it? |
2988 | MR. MARK TWAIN-- DEAR SIR,--Will you start now, without any unnecessary delay? |
2988 | Maguire, why Will you thus skyugle? |
2988 | Mama said, “ Why do n''t you try''mind cure''? ” “ I am, ” Jean answered. |
2988 | Man kills the microbes when he can? |
2988 | Mark Twain''s own book on the subject--''Is Shakespeare Dead?'' |
2988 | May I send you the constitution& laws of the club? |
2988 | Must he prove that he is sound in any way, mind or body? |
2988 | Must he prove that he knows anything-- is capable of anything-- whatever? |
2988 | My friend said, “ I always admired it, even before I saw it in The Innocents Abroad. ” I naturally said, “ What do you mean? |
2988 | Next day he asked, “ Katie, did you see my pipe- cleaner? |
2988 | Not much of it all is left to me, but I remember Howells saying, “ Did it ever occur to you that the newspapers abolished hell? |
2988 | Now is n''t she the devil? |
2988 | Now then, with this common- sense light to aid your perceptions, what are the air, the land, and the ocean for? |
2988 | Now what is it? |
2988 | Now you all know all these things yourself, do n''t you? |
2988 | Now, do n''t you see what a world of confidence that must necessarily breed? |
2988 | Now, therefore, why should I withhold it? |
2988 | Now, therefore, why should I withhold it? |
2988 | Now, will that do you? ” Clemens said it would. |
2988 | Now, young men, if any of you were in command of such a fortress, how would you proceed?'' |
2988 | OR HELL? |
2988 | OR HELL? ” The Christmas number of Harper''s Magazine for 1902 contained the story, “ Was it Heaven? |
2988 | OR HELL? ” The Christmas number of Harper''s Magazine for 1902 contained the story, “ Was it Heaven? |
2988 | Of course. ” “ What for? ” “ Oh, to discipline us! |
2988 | Oh, Katie, is it true? ” He realized then that she was gone. |
2988 | On another: Have you seen any portion of the second volume? |
2988 | Once, half roused, he looked at me searchingly and asked: “ Is n''t there something I can resign and be out of all this? |
2988 | Once, writing to Jean, he asked: What is your favorite piece of music, dear? |
2988 | One day Clemens sand to him: “ Cable, why do you sit in here? |
2988 | One day she said: “ Mama, why is there so much pain and sorrow and suffering? |
2988 | One day, soon after, he said to me: “''Steve, do you know that I think that that bogus pipe smokes about as well as the good one? |
2988 | One paper celebrated him in verse: Who killed Croker? |
2988 | Or a gullet? |
2988 | Or at least why was n''t something creditable created in place of it?... |
2988 | Or is it a gull? |
2988 | Or is the report exaggerated, like that of your death? |
2988 | Ought we to allow this war to begin? |
2988 | Out of this grew the story, “ Was it Heaven? |
2988 | Presently, he asked me what order of nobility I belonged to? |
2988 | Put a trap like that into the midst of a tragical story? |
2988 | Redpath had besought him as usual, and even in midsummer had written: “ Will you? |
2988 | Reverence for what-- for whom? |
2988 | Rose Terry Cooke wrote: Horrid man, how did you know the way I behave in a thunderstorm? |
2988 | Sam said: “ What''s that, Steve? ” “ Why, ” I said, “ that''s Laud. |
2988 | Sam; ” he said, “ what do they mean by that? ” Clemens stepped to the wheel and brought the boat around. |
2988 | Says I,''Hold on there, Evangeline, what are you going to do with them?'' |
2988 | See? |
2988 | Shall I ever be cheerful again, happy again? |
2988 | Shall we ever laugh again? |
2988 | Shall we think this over, or drop it as being nonsense? |
2988 | Shall you also say that it demands that a man kick his truth and his conscience into the gutter and become a mouthing lunatic besides? |
2988 | Shall you say the best good of the country demands allegiance to party? |
2988 | She ran breathlessly to her aunt: “ Can I have it? |
2988 | She said, “ Why, Jean, what''s the matter? |
2988 | She was determined to go out again, but---- L. How did you know she was out? |
2988 | Shrunk how? |
2988 | Since I wrote my Bible--[The “ Gospel, ” What is Man?] |
2988 | So he sat down and stayed there until an executioner came. ” I said, “ How do you account for the changed attitude toward these things? |
2988 | Speaking as a member of it, what do you think the other animals are for? |
2988 | Suppose, after all, the school- teachers had declined to come? |
2988 | Take a man like Sir Oliver Lodge, and what secret of Nature can be hidden from him? |
2988 | Take it with you. ” “ Why? ” “ Because of that sketch of yours entitled''Luck.'' |
2988 | Telegram to Redpath: How in the name of God does a man find his way from here to Amherst, and when must he start? |
2988 | That is to say, is n''t she a right smart little woman? |
2988 | That they are in London, the metropolis of the world, Post- office District, N. W.? |
2988 | That''s closed in, is n''t it, for the winter? |
2988 | That''s his house. ” “ The placard that says''Furnished rooms to let''? |
2988 | The autumn splendors passed you by? |
2988 | The coachman sent in for him at 9, but he said, “ Oh, nonsense!--leave glories& grandeurs like these? |
2988 | The curtain hid her.... Do you comprehend? |
2988 | The humblest of us is cared for-- oh, believe it!--and this fleeting stay is not the end! ” You notice that? |
2988 | The inspector asks: “ Now what does this elephant eat, and how much? ” “ Well, as to what he eats-- he will eat anything. |
2988 | The letter itself consisted merely of a line, which said: Wo n''t you give your friends, the missionaries, a good mark for this? |
2988 | The property has got to fall to some heir, and why not the United States? |
2988 | The question is, if she attends two doe luncheons in succession is she a doe- doe? |
2988 | The two sums aggregate- what? |
2988 | Then he asked solemnly: “ And is he never serious? ” And Dr. Parker as solemnly answered: “ Mr. |
2988 | Then he broke out: “ Why ca n''t a man die when he''s had his tragedy? |
2988 | Then he says: Why do I offer him the play at all? |
2988 | Then he was likely to say: “ Why did n''t you stop me? |
2988 | Then if Satan should come, he would slap him on the shoulder and say,''Why, Satan, how do you do? |
2988 | Then who is it, what is it, that they worship? |
2988 | Then: “ What does he call it? ” he asked. |
2988 | There''s nothing “ to strike out ”; nothing “ to replace. ” What more could be said of any one? |
2988 | They cost ten dollars apiece. ” Clemens sand: “ Is that so? |
2988 | They give us pain, they make our lives miserable, they murder us-- and where is the use of it all, where the wisdom? |
2988 | This is my work, and I know that I do very wrong when I feel chafed by it, but how can I be right about it? |
2988 | Thomas Hardy said to Howells one night at dinner: “ Why do n''t people understand that Mark Twain is not merely a great humorist? |
2988 | To Howells, on the same day, he wrote: Wo n''t you& Mrs. Howells& Mildred come& give us as many days as you can spare& examine John''s triumph? |
2988 | To Twichell Clemens wrote: Joe, do you know the Irish gentleman& the Irish lady, the Scotch gentleman& the Scotch lady? |
2988 | To Twichell he wrote, playfully but sincerely: Am I honest? |
2988 | To a woman who wrote, asking for his opinion on dogs, he said, in part: By what right has the dog come to be regarded as a “ noble ” animal? |
2988 | To her sister she wrote: Do you think we can live through the first going into the house in Hartford? |
2988 | Twain expect the public to credit this narrative to his clever brain? |
2988 | U. E. WAS IT HEAVEN? |
2988 | U. E. WHY NOT ABOLISH IT? |
2988 | Upon my face She must not look until the day was done; For she was doing penance... She? |
2988 | Venice? |
2988 | Very well, then, what is the use of your stringing out your miserable lives to a clean and withered old age? |
2988 | Very well, then- what ought we to do? |
2988 | W- h- a- r- r''s my golden arm? |
2988 | WHAT IS MAN? |
2988 | WHICH WAS WHICH? |
2988 | Was hast du gesagt? ” But she said the same words over again, and in the same decided way. |
2988 | Was it Grady who killed himself trying to do all the dining and speeching? |
2988 | Was it R. U. Johnson? |
2988 | Was it an illusion? |
2988 | Was it both together? |
2988 | Was it not our duty to administer a rebuke to this selfish and heartless Family? |
2988 | Was it not our duty to stop it, in the name of right and righteousness? |
2988 | Was it the Authors''League? |
2988 | Was it to discipline the church? ”( Wearily.) |
2988 | Was it to discipline the hog, mama? ” “ Dear child, do n''t you want to run out and play a while? |
2988 | Was it to discipline the hog, mama? ” “ Dear child, do n''t you want to run out and play a while? |
2988 | Was it you? ” “ Oh no, child, I was taught it. ” “ Who taught you so, mama? ” “ Why, really, I do n''t know-- I ca n''t remember. |
2988 | Was it you? ” “ Oh no, child, I was taught it. ” “ Who taught you so, mama? ” “ Why, really, I do n''t know-- I ca n''t remember. |
2988 | Was n''t it a rattling good comedy situation? |
2988 | Was that right? ” “ Certainly, certainly. |
2988 | We know it was a good reason, whatever it was. ” “ What do you think it was, mama? ” “ Oh, you ask so many questions! |
2988 | Well, is it? |
2988 | Well, then, what is he to do? |
2988 | Well, they have invented a heaven, out of their own heads, all by themselves; guess what it is like? |
2988 | What a child he always was-- always, to the very end? |
2988 | What are deciduous flowers, and do they always “ bloom in the fall, tra la ”? |
2988 | What are his tonsils for? |
2988 | What are you going to do? ” “ I''m going to shoot those burglars, ” he said. |
2988 | What are your plans for getting left, or shall you trust to inspiration? |
2988 | What did it matter to him? |
2988 | What do you take me for? |
2988 | What do you think the General wanted to require of me?'' |
2988 | What does it mean, Susy? |
2988 | What is Jean doing? |
2988 | What is biography? |
2988 | What is his beard for? |
2988 | What is it all for? ” It was an easy question, and mama had no difficulty in answering it: “ It is for our good, my child. |
2988 | What is it that we want in a novel? |
2988 | What is it you want? ” But you and I are in the business ourselves. |
2988 | What is it? |
2988 | What is romance? |
2988 | What is the essential difference between a lifelong democrat and any other kind of lifelong slave? |
2988 | What is the matter? ” I said, “ There ai n''t anything the matter. |
2988 | What is the process when a voter joins a party? |
2988 | What is the use of your saving money that is so utterly worthless to you? |
2988 | What is there to say? |
2988 | What kind of a disease is that? |
2988 | What mother knows not that? |
2988 | What name do you want to use''Josh''? ” “ No, I want to sign them''Mark Twain.'' |
2988 | What nationalities would he prefer? ” “ He is indifferent about nationalities. |
2988 | What night will you come down& smoke? |
2988 | What noise? |
2988 | What other humorist could have refrained from hinting, at least, the inference suggested by the obvious “ Gas Works ”? |
2988 | What ship is that? |
2988 | What should we do and how should we feel if we had no bright prospects before us, and yet how many people are situated in that way? |
2988 | What slave is so degraded as the slave that is proud that he is a slave? |
2988 | What the devil does a man want with any more feet when he owns in the invincible bomb- proof “ Monitor ”? |
2988 | What they want---- ” “ The nobility? |
2988 | What use can you put it to? |
2988 | What was the greatest feature in Napoleon''s character? |
2988 | What would become of me if he should disintegrate? |
2988 | What would it be for the whole human population? |
2988 | What''s happened? ” “ Do n''t wait to talk. |
2988 | What, sir, would the people of this earth be without woman? |
2988 | When did larches begin to flame, and who set out the pomegranates in that canyon? |
2988 | When shall I come? |
2988 | When the Duke first moved in here he---- ” “ Does he live in this street? ” “ Him! |
2988 | When the children came for eggs he would say: “ Your hens wo n''t lay, eh? |
2988 | When the dictation ended he said: “ Have you any special place to lunch to- day? ” I replied that I had not. |
2988 | When we entered, and Mrs. Clemens read on Shakespeare''s grave,''Good friend, for Jesus''sake, forbear,''she started back, exclaiming,''where am I?'' |
2988 | When you get an exasperating letter what happens? |
2988 | Where are we going? ” “ Do n''t worry. |
2988 | Where is it Orion''s going to? |
2988 | Where was ever a sermon preached that could make filial ingratitude so hateful to men as the sinful play of “ King Lear ”? |
2988 | Where was your remedy? |
2988 | Who is his nearest friend? ” MacAlister knew a man on terms of social intimacy with the official. |
2988 | Who is it? ” His informant hesitated a moment, then named a name of world- wide military significance. |
2988 | Who is it? ” The courier said, “ Napoleon. ” Clemens assented. |
2988 | Who is to decide what ought to command my reverence-- my neighbor or I? |
2988 | Who knows? |
2988 | Who lit the lilacs, and which end up do they hang? |
2988 | Who might this late comer be? |
2988 | Who so poor in his ambitions as to consent to be God on those terms? |
2988 | Whose heart is broken by this murder? |
2988 | Why curse and swear, And rip and tear The innocent McDougal? |
2988 | Why did n''t I go with her now? ” She went from Clemens''s over to Warner''s. |
2988 | Why do I respect my own? |
2988 | Why do we respect the opinions of any man or any microbe that ever lived? |
2988 | Why does He give Himself the trouble? ” I suggested that it was a sentiment that probably gave comfort to the writer of it. |
2988 | Why does he affront me with the fancy that I interest Myself in trivialities-- like men and microbes? |
2988 | Why howl about his wrongs after said wrongs have been redressed? |
2988 | Why should Darwin have gone to them for rest and refreshment at midnight, when spent with scientific research? |
2988 | Why should his life be taken away for their sake, when he was n''t doing anything? ” “ Oh, I do n''t know! |
2988 | Why should not China be free from the foreigners, who are only making trouble on her soil? |
2988 | Why should they have declined? |
2988 | Why was the human race created? |
2988 | Why, Clara, are n''t you going to your lesson? |
2988 | Why, Tufts, do n''t you know that the soldiers in the theater are the same old soldiers marching around and around? |
2988 | Will Kanawha be sailing after that& can I go as Sunday- school superintendent at half rate? |
2988 | Will anybody contend that a man can say to such masterful anger as that, Go, and be obeyed? |
2988 | Will healing ever come, or life have value again? |
2988 | Will one of you boys buy that house? |
2988 | Will ye no come back again? |
2988 | Will you remember that? |
2988 | Will you return those proofs or revises to me, so that I can use the same on some future occasion? |
2988 | With a rent- roll of twelve hundred thousand marks a year? |
2988 | Wo n''t you please stop it? |
2988 | Wo n''t you talk awhile? |
2988 | Wo n''t you? |
2988 | Would you encourage in literature a man who the older he grows the worse he writes? |
2988 | Would you like a series of papers to run through three months or six or nine-- or about four months, say? |
2988 | Would you like me to come out there and cry? |
2988 | Writing to MacAlister, Clemens said: Florentine sunshine? |
2988 | Yes, he is here; and the question is not-- as it has been heretofore during a thousand ages-- What shall we do with him? |
2988 | Yes, you know that, and confess it-- but what were you to do? |
2988 | You can do your work just as well here as in Cambridge, ca n''t you? |
2988 | You could n''t possibly teach music with a company of raw recruits drilling overhead-- now, could you? |
2988 | You do not think me wrong? |
2988 | You hold her, will you, till I come back?'' |
2988 | You note that position? |
2988 | You notice the stately General standing there with his hand resting upon the muzzle of a cannon? |
2988 | You say, “ Is this it?--this? |
2988 | You think that picture looks old? |
2988 | You will continue upon the water for some time yet; you will not retire finally until ten years from now.... What is your brother''s age? |
2988 | after all this talk and fuss of a thousand generations of travelers who have crossed this frontier& looked about them& told what they saw& felt? |
2988 | and ai n''t that a big enough majority in any town? ” he asks in a critical moment-- a remark which stamps him as a philosopher of classic rank. |
2988 | and in pursuit of an office? |
2988 | can a body do it to- day? |
2988 | do you realize, Mark, what a symposium it is to be? |
2988 | have you noticed that? |
2988 | he telegraphed his tormentor: “ Why do n''t you congratulate me? |
2988 | how have you written this miracle? |
2988 | how''s that? ” A curious character was Cutter-- a Long Island farmer with the obsession of rhyme. |
2988 | impostors, were they? |
2988 | or Hell? ” a heartbreaking history which probes the very depths of the human soul. |
2988 | or Hell? ” and it immediately brought a flood of letters to its author from grateful readers on both sides of the ocean. |
2988 | or shall I send it to the hotel? |
2988 | the tropics? |
2988 | where is he? |
2988 | “ And how is Mrs. Clemens? ” asked the uninvited guest. |
2988 | “ But what in hell is an oesophagus? |
2988 | “ Could a man live on a world so small as that? ” I asked. |
2988 | “ Did you do that? ” he asked, ominously. |
2988 | “ Did you ever hear of Mark Twain? ” asked Twichell. |
2988 | “ Do n''t I deserve one yet? ” Unhappy day! |
2988 | “ Do n''t you understand? |
2988 | “ Do you expect to pay extra fare? ” asked Sherman. |
2988 | “ Do you know the Bowen boys? ” he asked--“pilots in the St. Louis and New Orleans trade? ” “ I know them well-- all three of them. |
2988 | “ Do you know the Bowen boys? ” he asked--“pilots in the St. Louis and New Orleans trade? ” “ I know them well-- all three of them. |
2988 | “ Do you mean to say that you''re not going to vote for him? ” “ Yes, that is what I mean to say. |
2988 | “ Do you see it? ” Clemens looked carefully now and identified one of the books as a still- born novel which Keeler had published. |
2988 | “ Do you use terbacker? ” the big girl had asked, meaning did he chew it. |
2988 | “ Does it? ” he said, very deliberately. |
2988 | “ George, ” he said, “ what pictures are those that gentleman left? ” “ Why, Mr. Clemens, those are our own pictures. |
2988 | “ Great guns, what is the matter with it? ” wrote Clemens in November when he received a detailed account of its misconduct. |
2988 | “ Hain''t we all the fools in town on our side? |
2988 | “ Have n''t you any other friend that you could suggest? ” Langdon said. |
2988 | “ Here, where are you heading for now? ” he yelled. |
2988 | “ Here, why did n''t you tell me we had got to land at that plantation? ” he demanded. |
2988 | “ Here, ” he would shout, “ where are you going now? |
2988 | “ How are you, Mr. Clemens? ” he said. |
2988 | “ How far off was it? ” “ Oh, about thirty yards. ” “ Can he do it again? ” “ Of course, ” I said; “ every time. |
2988 | “ How far off was it? ” “ Oh, about thirty yards. ” “ Can he do it again? ” “ Of course, ” I said; “ every time. |
2988 | “ How many more are there? ” he asked. |
2988 | “ How many? ” he demanded. |
2988 | “ How much do you think it ought to be, Mark? ” James Anthony asked. |
2988 | “ How would you like a young man to learn the river? ” he said. |
2988 | “ I said,''Who the h-- l are you? |
2988 | “ IS SHAKESPEARE DEAD? ” I set out on my long journey with much reluctance. |
2988 | “ Is n''t that a guitar over there? ” he asked. |
2988 | “ Is there any evidence that he did n''t? ” I asked. |
2988 | “ Livy, ” he said, “ did it sound like that? ” “ Of course it did, ” she said, “ only worse. |
2988 | “ M.--What does it mean? |
2988 | “ MAMA-- What did you say? |
2988 | “ Man adapted to the earth? ” he said. |
2988 | “ Nobody could have done it better; and did you see how those cats got out of there? |
2988 | “ Promise what? ” I said. |
2988 | “ Quick! ” “ What is it? |
2988 | “ Reporters? ” The butler feigned uncertainty. |
2988 | “ Sam said,''Dan, did you know, when you invited me to make that speech, that those fellows were going to give me a bogus pipe?'' |
2988 | “ Some one you know? ” “ No, ” he said. |
2988 | “ Steve, what is that d-- d noise? ” he would say. |
2988 | “ Still you-- are going to publish it, are you not? ” Clemens, pacing up and down the room in his dressing- gown and slippers, shook his head. |
2988 | “ Tell us, Mark, why are you like the Pacific Ocean? ” “ I do n''t know, ” he drawled. |
2988 | “ That-- rascal? ” he said, “ He has done me more injury than any other man in America. ”] LVI. |
2988 | “ WAS IT HEAVEN? |
2988 | “ Was he always really tranquil within, ” he says, “ or was he only externally so-- for effect? |
2988 | “ Was this rebuke studied and intentional? |
2988 | “ Well, he''s been here. ” “ Oh, Youth, have you done anything? ” “ Yes, of course I have. |
2988 | “ Well, ” he said, “ who told you you could go in this car? ” “ Nobody, ” said Clemens. |
2988 | “ Well, ” he sand, “ why am I like the Pacific Ocean? ” Several guesses were made, but none satisfied him. |
2988 | “ Well-- Mrs. Clemens is about as usual-- I believe. ” “ And the children-- Miss Susie and little Clara? ” This was a bit startling. |
2988 | “ What are you doing here? ” he asked. |
2988 | “ What are you reading, Sam? ” he asked. |
2988 | “ What in nation are you steerin''at, anyway? |
2988 | “ What is your name? ” The applicant told him, and the two stood looking at the sunlit water. |
2988 | “ What kind of a trip did you boys have? ” a friend asked of them. |
2988 | “ What makes you pull your words that way? ”( “ pulling ” being the river term for drawling), he asked. |
2988 | “ What will you have, Sam? ” he asked. |
2988 | “ What would you do? ” he asked me. |
2988 | “ What would you give for a copy? ” asked. |
2988 | “ What''s the matter, Sam? |
2988 | “ Where is it? |
2988 | “ Where is the elephant? ” he asked, as they drove along. |
2988 | “ Who did that? ” asked Laird''s second. |
2988 | “ Who is he, George? ” Clemens asked, without looking at the card. |
2988 | “ Who was it? ” asked his companion. |
2988 | “ Why did n''t you mention it before? |
2988 | “ Why do you think so? ” he asked. |
2988 | “ Why in nation did you offer him your cue? ” “ Was n''t that the courteous thing to do? ” I asked. |
2988 | “ Why in nation did you offer him your cue? ” “ Was n''t that the courteous thing to do? ” I asked. |
2988 | “ Why not leave them all to me? ” My business brothers? |
2988 | “ Why not leave them all to me? ” My business brothers? |
2988 | “ Why, ” he said, “ have we met before? ” The Prince smiled happily. |
2988 | “ Yes, sir, it is; what of it? ” The culprit walked over, and taking it up, tuned the strings a little and struck the chords. |
2988 | “''What is it?'' |
53460 | A kidnapping, eh? 53460 A mistake?" |
53460 | A mistake? |
53460 | A newsboy? |
53460 | A typewriter? 53460 About how large a yacht do you think I ought to get, dad?" |
53460 | About? 53460 Ah-- er-- is it you, Nephew Richard?" |
53460 | Ai n''t I told you this is n''t a regular kidnapping? 53460 Ai n''t the street big enough for you? |
53460 | Am I going to have a yacht made to order? |
53460 | An''would you-- that is, do you think you could find room for such a worn- out old sea dog as me on board? 53460 And how''s that?" |
53460 | And there''s another thing-- what shall I make the signal of? |
53460 | And they made you prisoners, did they? |
53460 | And tie''em together with a fishline, I s''pose? |
53460 | And what after that? |
53460 | And what are your plans, Captain Hamilton? |
53460 | And what sort of a voice was it? |
53460 | And what''ll it be? |
53460 | And when will that be? |
53460 | And will we have to lie- to all that while? |
53460 | And you say there is no news? |
53460 | And you want me to locate them, and get their signatures? |
53460 | And you''ve nothing to do on the entire trip but have fun, eh? |
53460 | Any bad news? |
53460 | Are n''t you going to look for your mother''s relatives? |
53460 | Are we going to build a boat, like Robinson Crusoe did, out of a hollow tree? |
53460 | Are you all right? |
53460 | Are you searching for_ them_, Senor Hamilton? |
53460 | Are you sure he went below? |
53460 | As much as that? |
53460 | Being marooned is n''t so bad, after all; eh Dick? |
53460 | Boys-- were there boys aboard the_ Princess_? |
53460 | But ca n''t we signal for a motorboat to take us off, and bring us back? 53460 But could n''t you erect the building on this land yourself, and finance it alone?" |
53460 | But do you know you laid yourself liable to a severe penalty of the law, Ezra? 53460 But how about the_ Albatross_? |
53460 | But how can we build a raft? |
53460 | But how did my uncle happen to get in with them-- how did he get away down to Cuba? |
53460 | But how did they know of my plans to buy a yacht? |
53460 | But how did you ever get on our track, Dick? 53460 But if you do n''t find them in Santiago, what will you do?" |
53460 | But there''s nothing to hinder us from going to hear the band; is there? |
53460 | But we do n''t mind the walk, do we, Grit? |
53460 | But what about the search you came here to make? |
53460 | But what can we do about it? |
53460 | But what do you want with me? |
53460 | But what was their object? |
53460 | But what''s it about, Ezra? |
53460 | But where are they now? |
53460 | But who does this yacht belong to? |
53460 | But who were they, Dick? |
53460 | But why did they kidnap him? |
53460 | But why should they want to get me here? |
53460 | But, hold on, where''s Tim? |
53460 | Ca n''t one of you fellows brush it off with your bayonet? |
53460 | Ca n''t we rescue the people? |
53460 | Ca n''t you come along, dad? |
53460 | Ca n''t you do anything to- day? |
53460 | Ca n''t you hurry, sir? |
53460 | Ca n''t you make it a little less? |
53460 | Ca n''t you sleep? 53460 Can we go a little faster?" |
53460 | Carried away by the tide? |
53460 | Could you see their faces? |
53460 | Cuba? 53460 Did it cost much?" |
53460 | Did those pirates capture you, too, as well as my yacht, Uncle Ezra? |
53460 | Did you get him? |
53460 | Did you get him? |
53460 | Did you hear some one calling for help? |
53460 | Did you look in the pilot house? |
53460 | Did you think those men might have stolen your yacht, Dick? |
53460 | Did you try the forecastle? |
53460 | Do n''t you s''pose we want to put on some style when we have visitors? 53460 Do n''t you use a typewriter?" |
53460 | Do ship''s timbers groan like a man dyin'', sir, an''call for help, sir? |
53460 | Do you expect us to cut down trees with our pocket- knives? 53460 Do you know him?" |
53460 | Do you mean to camp out there again? |
53460 | Do you mean to say you''re not Dick Hamilton, the millionaire? |
53460 | Do you see it anywhere? |
53460 | Do you think another plate of cakes will be enough? |
53460 | Do you think there is any chance of catching the villains? |
53460 | Do you think they meant to rob you, Dick? |
53460 | Do you think you can catch up to her? |
53460 | Do you think you''ll spend much time in Cuba? |
53460 | Do you think your friend, Mr. Beeby, will meet you there, Captain Hamilton? |
53460 | Do you want three plates? |
53460 | Do you want us all to die of indigestion? |
53460 | Do you want us to wait_ outside_? |
53460 | Eh, captain? |
53460 | Everything go off well at school? |
53460 | Ezra,called his wife again,"are you thinkin''of the dollar an''nineteen cents you once lost? |
53460 | For what port? |
53460 | Friends? 53460 Gone?" |
53460 | Got what? |
53460 | Guy and Simon? 53460 Has Perk disgraced us by putting his belt on wrong side out?" |
53460 | Has any one seen Grit? |
53460 | Have n''t I told you it was because his dog attacked us? |
53460 | Have n''t you anything for Grit and the puppy, Hans? |
53460 | Have you any special orders, Captain Hamilton? |
53460 | Have you got that miserable dog yet? |
53460 | He could n''t be hiding on deck-- that is, maybe hurt, and have fallen under something; could he? |
53460 | He vunt; hey? |
53460 | Heard what? |
53460 | Help who out? |
53460 | How about it, Widdy? |
53460 | How are you, Tim Muldoon? |
53460 | How are you, Uncle Ezra? |
53460 | How did it all happen, anyhow-- this fine yacht, the way you take it off, and all that? |
53460 | How did it happen? |
53460 | How did you come to go in there? |
53460 | How do you make that out? |
53460 | How does it smell? |
53460 | How is that? |
53460 | How soon can we sail? |
53460 | I am concerned in it? |
53460 | I know that,assented Dick,"but-- my uncle here-- trying to kidnap me? |
53460 | I say, will you fellows come around to- night? |
53460 | I suppose you got my letter, telling you about some distant relatives I need to locate? |
53460 | I wonder if I can risk it? |
53460 | I wonder if that could have been Uncle Ezra? |
53460 | I wonder what sort of investigating it can be? 53460 I wonder what''s wrong at Dankville? |
53460 | I wonder where dad''s quest will lead me? |
53460 | I wonder where he came from, and how the dinghy got adrift? |
53460 | I wonder why highwaymen wanted a rig? 53460 I''ll tell you all about it,"promised the young millionaire,"but first let me know whom you have locked up as prisoners? |
53460 | I''m still here-- am I? |
53460 | I-- said-- I''d-- come-- and-- I''m-- here--(puff) I''m--(puff) here--(puff) all right--(puff) am--(puff) I-- not--(puff), Dick? |
53460 | In order to give them aid? |
53460 | Is Senor Alantrez on board? |
53460 | Is Widdy here? |
53460 | Is it her? |
53460 | Is it possibly you? |
53460 | Is it serious? |
53460 | Is it sinking? |
53460 | Is it that the steamer has gone, but will return presently? |
53460 | Is my father at home, Gibbs? |
53460 | Is that all there is to it? |
53460 | Is that savage dog gone? |
53460 | Is the yacht really gone, Dick? |
53460 | Is there any fresh water? |
53460 | Is there-- if I might be so bold as to ask, sir,began Widdy, as he shall be called,"is there a chance of the yacht being put into commission, sir?" |
53460 | Is this plum duff, such as you used to get, or not? |
53460 | Is this the launch of the_ Princess_? |
53460 | Is-- is she-- has she sung again? |
53460 | It beats turning out at reveille, forcing yourself into a tight uniform, and getting ready for drill and chapel; does n''t it? |
53460 | Jest as soon as----"As soon as the kidnappin''is done? |
53460 | Just tell the steward to serve mine in my stateroom this morning, will you, old chap? |
53460 | Kill? 53460 Let me see?" |
53460 | Like chickens, eh? 53460 Like it? |
53460 | Maybe your railroad trip upsot ye? |
53460 | Miguel and Raphael Valdez? |
53460 | Miss anything, Tim? |
53460 | Mistake? |
53460 | My Uncle Ezra here? 53460 My fault?" |
53460 | My uncle? 53460 No? |
53460 | Now about taking some fresh water along; what would you advise, Widdy? |
53460 | Now, what''s the program, Mr. Larabee? 53460 Oh, why did I ever try this plan?" |
53460 | Oh, why did n''t you get my nephew hid away when you had him in Hamilton Corners that night? |
53460 | Pardon me, senor, but did I hear you aright-- the_ whole_ afternoon, did you say? |
53460 | Pardon, but you are taking me to a yacht; yes? |
53460 | Pleased? 53460 Pretty good cakes they have here; eh, Guy?" |
53460 | Raw? 53460 Say, but this is going some; eh, fellows?" |
53460 | See that man standing near the rail? 53460 See your best girl aboard her, Dicky, my lad?" |
53460 | So you wo n''t agree to my plan, to save your son from being a spendthrift, eh? |
53460 | Stone Island? |
53460 | Take a picture of''em? 53460 Then she is an old boat?" |
53460 | Then why did you want to stop here? |
53460 | Then, ca n''t you advance us a little more money? |
53460 | Then, if you ca n''t get any trace, how are you going to know in which direction to search? |
53460 | Then, what is it? |
53460 | Then, you could n''t tell whether or not they were the same men you met before in New York, and who got you on board their yacht? |
53460 | Thought they''d fool us, did n''t they, Sam? |
53460 | To- day, my dear Senor Hamilton? 53460 Was n''t it some one on deck, or did n''t you imagine it?" |
53460 | Was that Dick Hamilton who just passed? |
53460 | Was that you singin''? |
53460 | Was this before or after we all had them on, and were on deck? |
53460 | We also ate early,spoke Guy, with a grin at his companion;"did n''t we, Simon?" |
53460 | We have n''t any tools to make a boat, but we can build a raft, and float away on that, and perhaps get in the track of some steamer; eh, Widdy? |
53460 | Well, Dick, how are you? |
53460 | Well, are you and Guy ready to go ashore? |
53460 | Well, how did you make out with the lawyer? |
53460 | Well, what do you think of that? |
53460 | Well, what is it, Toots? |
53460 | Well, what''s to be done? |
53460 | Well, why did n''t you look further, see who it was, and help''em? |
53460 | Well,remarked Dick, drawing a long breath, as though he had just taken part in a desperate race,"what''s this all about, Widdy?" |
53460 | What about that, Dick? 53460 What are you going to christen her?" |
53460 | What are you going to do this summer? |
53460 | What are you going to do with your Uncle Ezra? |
53460 | What did I tell you, senors? |
53460 | What did I tell you? |
53460 | What do you say to another helping before we tackle the ham and eggs? |
53460 | What does he want? |
53460 | What does it all mean? |
53460 | What else would they have attacked me for? 53460 What have you been doing with yourself since last we met? |
53460 | What is it? |
53460 | What is it? |
53460 | What of it? 53460 What will you call the new one?" |
53460 | What''ll you do? |
53460 | What''s he got? |
53460 | What''s it all about? 53460 What''s plum duff?" |
53460 | What''s the game? |
53460 | What''s the matter, Ezra? |
53460 | What''s the matter, Henry? |
53460 | What''s the matter, Henry? |
53460 | What''s the matter; too much salt in something? |
53460 | What''s the matter? 53460 What''s the matter?" |
53460 | What''s the matter? |
53460 | What''s the matter? |
53460 | What''s the matter? |
53460 | What''s the matter? |
53460 | What''s the matter? |
53460 | What''s the matter? |
53460 | What''s the use? 53460 What''s up?" |
53460 | What''s wrong, Widdy? |
53460 | What''s your hurry? |
53460 | What? 53460 Whatever possessed you to do such a thing, Ezra?" |
53460 | When? |
53460 | Where are you going now, Tim? |
53460 | Where away? |
53460 | Where away? |
53460 | Where is Mr. Blake? 53460 Where will you look for her?" |
53460 | Where''s the rig? |
53460 | Where? |
53460 | Which way shall we go? |
53460 | Which, the table or the coat? |
53460 | Who are going? |
53460 | Who are you, and where are you going? |
53460 | Who are you? |
53460 | Who are you? |
53460 | Who has? |
53460 | Who saw him last-- and where? |
53460 | Who was taken? |
53460 | Who''d ever think to see you here? 53460 Who''s Widdy?" |
53460 | Who, me? 53460 Who, me?" |
53460 | Why and wherefore was you a- doin''of it? |
53460 | Why are you taking me away? |
53460 | Why did I come to sea? 53460 Why did n''t you say something about that before, Pedro?" |
53460 | Why did n''t you shoot it? 53460 Why do you think they turned about and ran?" |
53460 | Why not? |
53460 | Why not? |
53460 | Why, Dick, is n''t that the vessel on which they attacked you? |
53460 | Why, Ezra, what do you mean? |
53460 | Why-- why, did n''t you want me to take a picture of''em? |
53460 | Will Jimmie let you have the grub- fest? |
53460 | Will you show us down, Mr.--er-- Mr.--? |
53460 | Would n''t it be better to anchor, or run in to shore? |
53460 | Would we? 53460 Would you like to get a boat, and take a cruise after those men who have your son?" |
53460 | Yes-- but-- how-- am-- I-- going-- to-- get-- on-- board? |
53460 | Yes-- why not? |
53460 | Yes; why not? 53460 You do n''t mean to say that it''s a he- one, do you?" |
53460 | You do n''t think they tried to kidnap you, do you? |
53460 | You know_ me_, do n''t you, Dick? |
53460 | You''re not going to attempt anything to- night, are you? |
53460 | You''re rather free with the old man''s money, ai n''t you, Sam? |
53460 | You-- captured-- my-- yacht? |
53460 | You-- you wo n''t get arrested for it; will you, Ezra? |
53460 | Your Uncle Ezra? |
53460 | _ Ach himmel!_ Vy you do it dot way? |
53460 | A steam yacht all for myself?" |
53460 | Am I likely to get her?" |
53460 | And where was his dog, I wonder, Sam?" |
53460 | And you want us to help get Dick----""Will you be quiet?" |
53460 | Anyhow, it wo n''t be much out of our way to call there; will it, Captain Barton?" |
53460 | Are they a regular band of pirates?" |
53460 | Are you crazy, Mortimer? |
53460 | Are you sick?" |
53460 | Are you the one?" |
53460 | But if you''ve got a camera, why did n''t you say so before? |
53460 | But is the yacht damaged?" |
53460 | But what can be his object? |
53460 | But whatever in the world possessed you to do it, Tim? |
53460 | But why ask me? |
53460 | But will the senors be pleased to ride farther with me?" |
53460 | But will you do as I ask-- not let Richard waste this money for a yacht?" |
53460 | CHAPTER XV TIM MULDOON DISAPPEARS"Well, Beeby, and how are you?" |
53460 | Came pretty near not making it, though; did n''t I? |
53460 | Come to- morrow----""Ca n''t you give me the letter now?" |
53460 | Could you meet me on her? |
53460 | Did those scoundrels treat you badly?" |
53460 | Did you get any clew to who the men were?" |
53460 | Did you notice any signs of pirates, or other desperate characters, on the island since you have been here?" |
53460 | Do the machinery cry for help? |
53460 | Do you really mean it? |
53460 | Do you think that savage dog is out of the way?" |
53460 | Do you think the crew would like some?" |
53460 | Does it bother you?" |
53460 | For the love of Davy Jones, have you any aboard? |
53460 | Get a doctor, ca n''t you?" |
53460 | Got much of a party aboard?" |
53460 | Grit, you old sinner, do n''t you know any better?" |
53460 | Hamilton?" |
53460 | Has any one a chaw of tobacco?" |
53460 | Has any one got a chaw of tobacco?" |
53460 | Have n''t you any cheap cups-- any at half price?" |
53460 | Have we any, Captain Barton?" |
53460 | Have you arranged for your friends to accompany you?" |
53460 | He made a jump for me, and----""Did he bite you?" |
53460 | He wanted to kidnap me? |
53460 | How about you? |
53460 | How do you like the idea?" |
53460 | How would you like to sail for Cuba?" |
53460 | How''s everybody? |
53460 | How''s the old iron business? |
53460 | I fancy you have had enough of this place, Pedro?" |
53460 | I knew you did n''t like him, and----""Like him? |
53460 | I wonder if we can buy her?" |
53460 | I wonder where I shall go?" |
53460 | If Senor Hamilton is pleased to go there next week, or the week after----""Next week?" |
53460 | Is he crazy?" |
53460 | Is it a fly- cop; or has your license expired?" |
53460 | Is it news from the scoundrels who carried him away?" |
53460 | Is it to scuttle the ship, or shanghai somebody? |
53460 | Is my boy found? |
53460 | Is my yacht safe?" |
53460 | Is n''t he Dick Hamilton?" |
53460 | Is that coffee never coming?" |
53460 | Is the paper business good?" |
53460 | Is there a fire?" |
53460 | Is there a secluded room here?" |
53460 | It did sound like one crying; did n''t it?" |
53460 | It''s you, my fine swab, is it?" |
53460 | No Uncle Ezra, eh? |
53460 | Oh, Uncle Ezra,"spoke Dick quickly, as he thought of something,"how''s Aunt Samanthy?" |
53460 | Oh, why did n''t you hold on to him, when you had him that night in the rainstorm at Hamilton Corners?" |
53460 | Or do you want to chase folks up on the sidewalk?" |
53460 | Pedro Alantrez,"he went on, turning quickly to the young Cuban,"did those kidnappers, who landed you here, go away?" |
53460 | Perhaps to- morrow-- or the next day----""Why not to- day?" |
53460 | Rattling away, I suppose?" |
53460 | Say, sport,"and Tim leaned forward to the chauffeur,"are you wise to de-- I mean_ the_ fact that we''re being chased?" |
53460 | Shall I come?" |
53460 | Shall we follow that yacht up the bay or stay back? |
53460 | So you''re back from the military school, Dick?" |
53460 | Some careless of you, wa''n''t it?" |
53460 | Some ocean liner, which might cut them in two, and send them swirling to the bottom? |
53460 | Suppose you run up there? |
53460 | The man with the little bunch of white whiskers on his chin?" |
53460 | They took you for me?" |
53460 | To- day?" |
53460 | Were you in there all the while?" |
53460 | What are you goin''to do?" |
53460 | What do I care about clothes? |
53460 | What do you think I''m paying you for-- to pose as a living picture?" |
53460 | What does he want, Hans?" |
53460 | What does this mean? |
53460 | What for?" |
53460 | What is it? |
53460 | What thieving trick are you up to now? |
53460 | What vessel did he have?" |
53460 | What would he be doing away off here?" |
53460 | What would loom up in front of them? |
53460 | What''s up?" |
53460 | When can I have it, and where can I go?" |
53460 | Where am I to berth; in the engine room?" |
53460 | Where are they, and how many did you kill?" |
53460 | Where shall we spend the night?" |
53460 | Where''s Captain Barton? |
53460 | Where''s Grit?" |
53460 | Where''s the rig?" |
53460 | Why can not a boat be had to follow the scoundrels?" |
53460 | Why did n''t you get him into my hands secretly, as I thought you would?" |
53460 | Why did n''t you look further?" |
53460 | Why did n''t you?" |
53460 | Why do you ask?" |
53460 | Why should those fellows disappear so suddenly? |
53460 | Why, in the name of the sacred cat, did n''t you shoot some for dinner?" |
53460 | Why?" |
53460 | Widdy, have the launch gotten ready; will you?" |
53460 | Will you do the work, or not? |
53460 | Would you?" |
53460 | Yes-- no?" |
53460 | You ai n''t goin''to keep a secret from me; be ye?" |
53460 | You ai n''t in trouble; be ye? |
53460 | You do n''t mean to say that it''s the one you used to have-- the same one that could n''t draw the load of iron when I once met you?" |
53460 | You had your breakfast; ai n''t you?" |
53460 | You mean----?" |
53460 | You remember Uncle Ezra, do n''t you?" |
53460 | You''ll get it all back, wo n''t you?" |
53460 | You''re not going until morning, are you?" |
53460 | You''ve given us trouble enough, and we wo n''t stand for any more nonsense; will we, Sam?" |
53460 | asked Dick,"and what did it say?" |
53460 | exclaimed Beeby, as he just avoided being tossed out of his berth,"rather rough, is n''t it, Dick?" |
53460 | exclaimed Dick,"is there anything on board that you have n''t snapshotted? |
53460 | exclaimed his wife at length, for she was being kept awake,"ca n''t you doze off, Ezra?" |
53460 | inquired Dick of the old sailor;"are any vessels likely to pass this way?" |
53460 | what''s this? |
30480 | ''For a sh- e- ow?'' 30480 ''Has, eh? |
30480 | ''Marm Smith,''sez I,''yeou hain''t got no ole stuff yeou deon''t want tew sell nor nuthin'', dew ye?'' 30480 ''Tain''t''Squire Smith, of Maoun- Peelier?" |
30480 | ''The an- shants?'' 30480 ''Wall, what on airth hev yeou got,_ any heow_?'' |
30480 | ''Well, then what?'' 30480 ''What a''yeou got to sh- e- o- w?'' |
30480 | ''What''s''t fur?'' 30480 ''Yeou deon''t_ say_ so?'' |
30480 | ''Yeou deu?'' 30480 ''Yes,''says my friend, who was a resident in the country;''perhaps you would like to try a few?'' |
30480 | A case? 30480 A fireman? |
30480 | A gentleman by the name of Collins stopping with you? |
30480 | A gold service? |
30480 | A letter for_ me_, sir? |
30480 | A man dead behind your counter, sir? |
30480 | A nuisance? 30480 A small wagon?" |
30480 | A what? |
30480 | A widow''s daughter, eh? |
30480 | A''_nand_? |
30480 | A_ writ_? 30480 Ah, Vanilla, girl, have you got your gloves on?" |
30480 | Ah, gone to see a poor human being put out of the world, eh? |
30480 | Ah, indeed? |
30480 | Ah, umph, what business have you, ma''am, with three children? |
30480 | Ah, you are here? |
30480 | Ai n''t he, tho''? |
30480 | Ai n''t they rather fierce? |
30480 | Ai n''t you a- going to stir round there, and save the vessel? |
30480 | Ai n''t you got a_ light_? 30480 Aiding Nat''ral History-- what do yer mean by that?" |
30480 | All your folks are lively, eh? |
30480 | All your folks are well, I believe you said? |
30480 | And Bill Allen, of Ohio? |
30480 | And did you see that-- Lot''s wife? |
30480 | And how did Fanny_ do_ Juliet? |
30480 | And how much may remain on bond and mortgage? |
30480 | And she a--? |
30480 | Angry, dear mother? 30480 Any business with me, sir?" |
30480 | Any of the folks in with you? |
30480 | Are you de man advertised for de dogs, sa- a- ay? 30480 Are you really willing to allow it?" |
30480 | Are your appurtenances-- your household appointments-- from kitchen to parlor, from coal cellar to top scuttle, all they are cracked up to be? |
30480 | Aye, and what their_ heft_ was? |
30480 | Bad coast, I believe, at this time o''year? |
30480 | Be hang''d to ye, what''r ye at now? |
30480 | Been asleep, eh? |
30480 | Believe, sir, you advertised for a dog? |
30480 | Bill Allen? 30480 Blast yer hies, what want yer?" |
30480 | Bob, what yer doing now? |
30480 | Both missed? |
30480 | Brandy? |
30480 | Breed? 30480 But all I want to know, is-- am I to be robbed, killed off, or only initiated into the mysteries of your craft?" |
30480 | But cook, and worry, and slave, and keep shut up for a----"For what? |
30480 | But how about the dog, daddy? 30480 But to have the-- a-- the-- small- pox"----"What?" |
30480 | But what will I do with them? |
30480 | But what would it cost? |
30480 | But, as I was saying, Mr. Mullony said-- says he-- who the divil you push''n, you black nager? |
30480 | But, friend,said the drover,"as you have not yet informed me by what name I may call you--""_ Call_ me, stranger? |
30480 | But, governor, will you please delay this--"Delay? 30480 Buy hinges? |
30480 | By the way, Barclay says you have some of their_ paper_ on hand; is it true? |
30480 | Ca n''t? 30480 Certainly I do,"says Smith;"here it''s invoiced on the catalogue, ai n''t it?" |
30480 | Coffee or tea, sir? |
30480 | Collins? |
30480 | Come here last night? |
30480 | Cool? |
30480 | Crew? 30480 D''yeou ever see wooden hinges, mister?" |
30480 | Dead? |
30480 | Dear son, was the gentleman very angry? |
30480 | Did I? 30480 Did he? |
30480 | Did you ever hear tell of the_ Pigeon Express_? |
30480 | Did you read my advertisement, ma''am? |
30480 | Did you wish to examine any other sort of hinges, sir? |
30480 | Did you? 30480 Disturb_ me!_ Why, I do n''t know how they would do that?" |
30480 | Do it? 30480 Do it?" |
30480 | Do n''t know where he''s gone to? |
30480 | Do n''t you understand the English language, sir? |
30480 | Do with''em? |
30480 | Do you keep this store? |
30480 | Do you live in these parts? |
30480 | Do you promise to mind your own business and let others alone, Uncle Josh? |
30480 | Do you sleep in this store-- live here? |
30480 | Do you think it''s enough? |
30480 | Do your chimneys draw? 30480 Doctor,"says Cauliflower,"that bill of yours is all- fired steep, is n''t it?" |
30480 | Does it hurt much, Doctor? |
30480 | Does the court understand you to say, Mr. Pipkins, that the plaintiff''s reputation is bad? |
30480 | Does your domestic apparatus work well? |
30480 | Done what? 30480 Done? |
30480 | Dullest time of the year, I reckon, ai n''t it? |
30480 | Eggs? 30480 Eh? |
30480 | Eh? 30480 Eh?" |
30480 | Engaged to any lady? |
30480 | Et up? |
30480 | Except when you fix them with the traps, eh? |
30480 | Fierce? 30480 Fierce? |
30480 | Fine boy, that; come here, sir-- eleven years of age, eh? 30480 Fine day, Sheriff?" |
30480 | Fined? 30480 Flambang, who''d you think of puttin''up to- night for the_ Senate_, in our ward?" |
30480 | Flammer, you going to go in for Smithers, to- night? |
30480 | For my arrest? |
30480 | From the country, are you? |
30480 | Full blooded? |
30480 | Gas? 30480 Get them all_ down_ distinct?" |
30480 | Go away, women; what do you know about mineralogy, igniting anthracite? 30480 Go?--where?" |
30480 | Got a big steore of goods layin''areound here, have n''t yeou? |
30480 | Got your gloves on? |
30480 | Hain''t I seen all yeou hev? |
30480 | Has nothing but a valise and umbrella? |
30480 | Have n''t any card cases, mum,--_got some elegant ivory small- tooth combs!_Have You Got Any Old Boots? |
30480 | Have n''t you a horse, jackass, mule or a wheelbarrow-- any thing, so we can be carted in, right off, too? |
30480 | Have n''t_ you_ said so? |
30480 | Have they? |
30480 | Have you ever tended bar? |
30480 | He did, eh? |
30480 | Here you are? 30480 Herr Shaubert,"said the girl, clasping the hand of the poet, and throwing herself at his feet,"am I unworthy your love?" |
30480 | Hinges,says the Yankee, after a pause,"ai n''t considered, I guess, a very neuw invenshun?" |
30480 | Hit, Dick? |
30480 | Home? 30480 How are you?" |
30480 | How do you do? |
30480 | How do you do? |
30480 | How far is it? |
30480 | How is every thing, old boy-- paradise regained? |
30480 | How many pieces were there? |
30480 | How much do you ask for that dog? |
30480 | How much does the feller owe you? |
30480 | How old is she? |
30480 | How old? 30480 How on airth,"groaned the horror- stricken mariner,"how on airth am I to help it?" |
30480 | How soon? |
30480 | How''d do? |
30480 | How''s sleighing out your way-- good? |
30480 | How''s them brass''uns work? |
30480 | How''s trade? |
30480 | Hurt, Wash.? |
30480 | I did n''t say he was ever accused of being an honest man, did I? |
30480 | I do n''t know-- is she? |
30480 | I imagine,said I, interrupting his soliloquy,"that you are an old settler, and have noted vast, wonderful changes here in the Ohio Valley?" |
30480 | I mean, friend, how shall I get them home? |
30480 | I mean-- how do they_ go_? |
30480 | I ordered hot steak, poached eggs-- hain''t you got''em? |
30480 | I say, ai n''t the niggers got to be thick-- infernal thick, in your town lately? |
30480 | I say, mister, where''s them made? |
30480 | I thought so,said the Senator,"but what do you think it was?" |
30480 | I wish to know if anybody is permitted to touch or handle any of my wardrobe, my linen, handkerchiefs, hose, gloves, laces, etc., in your house? |
30480 | I''m canvassing this State,--_wouldn''t you like to subscribe for a first- rate map of Missouri_, OR A NEW EDITION OF JOSEPHUS? |
30480 | I''spect there''s a good deal of humbug about the Californy goold mines, do n''t you? |
30480 | Illinois must be a healthy place? |
30480 | Is John in? |
30480 | Is it possible? |
30480 | Is n''t there some others beside yourself going out, sir? |
30480 | Is your fadder in, ah? |
30480 | Is your name Thomas Johns? |
30480 | Is, eh? 30480 It ai n''t worth while, gentlemen, to toss up for positions, is it?" |
30480 | It ai n''t, eh? |
30480 | It is, eh? 30480 It''s ma, zur?" |
30480 | It''s_ going!_"_ What?_says my friend. |
30480 | Jenkins? |
30480 | Jessamine, your gloves on, dear? |
30480 | Johnson? 30480 Know about_ dogs?_""A''yes- s,"says_ Jakey_. |
30480 | Landlord,says the Diddler,"do you know that gentleman with whom I''ve dined in 15?" |
30480 | Lock the doors? |
30480 | Look a here, mister,says one of the"business men,""got eny more uv that wine?" |
30480 | Look here, Mister,says Phipps,"ai n''t all this street big enough for you without a crowdin''me?" |
30480 | Look here, my virtuous friend,said he to his body- guard, who sat on an opposite barrel, with a heavy pistol in his hand,"what''s all this about?" |
30480 | ME? |
30480 | Married_ two_? 30480 Me rade it? |
30480 | Me willing? 30480 Me? |
30480 | Me? 30480 Me? |
30480 | Me? 30480 Me?" |
30480 | Mister_ Thomas_ did yez mane, zur? |
30480 | Mornin'', stranger,said he;"rayther a wet day for game?" |
30480 | Mr. Ferguson, did you know that your friend Benton was in town? |
30480 | Mr. Jenks-- John Jenks, I believe, sir? |
30480 | Mrs. Hall''s, I believe? |
30480 | Mrs. Hall, I presume? |
30480 | Never in a Pork- haouse? |
30480 | Never was? 30480 Never, unless you may call this a Pork- house?" |
30480 | No, I do n''t; but you''re to draw a grand panorama of Boston, ai n''t you? |
30480 | No- o- o? |
30480 | No; drive off-- where are you going to drive me? |
30480 | Not? 30480 Nothing in the cellar?" |
30480 | Nothing? 30480 Now Mrs. a-- what is your name?" |
30480 | Now what''s up, I''d like to know? |
30480 | Now, sir,said I,"you will please inform me, who the devil do you take me for?" |
30480 | Now,said Mrs. Pompaliner,"now, Brown, look at those articles; do n''t you see that they have been touched?" |
30480 | O, that all? 30480 O, you do n''t? |
30480 | Of course you''ve been there before? |
30480 | Oh, yes, yes-- I understand-- you''ve found me out, but keep dark-- mum''s the word-- you understand? |
30480 | Olivia, Vanilla, where are you? 30480 Owe? |
30480 | Oyster sauce and lobster salad? |
30480 | Pass it? 30480 Pay myself?" |
30480 | Perfectly; I understand; now, where can these birds be had? |
30480 | Persimmons? 30480 Persimmons?" |
30480 | Persimmons? |
30480 | Pills? 30480 Pills?" |
30480 | Pistils? 30480 Plug and file what?" |
30480 | Plugged and_ fined_? 30480 Pooh? |
30480 | Pooty stiff? 30480 Poppy, I expect you know what a good dog is?" |
30480 | Pretty well; how is it with you? |
30480 | Put''em on desks, and cubber- doors, and so on? |
30480 | Quick work? 30480 Raise a great deal of wool-- fine sheep country?" |
30480 | Rale wrought? |
30480 | Roast ducks; what do you say, Buck? |
30480 | Ruined''em? |
30480 | Run of the till? |
30480 | Scalded? |
30480 | Shall I take the clothes back again, mother, and tell the gentleman you ca n''t dry them in time for him? |
30480 | Smithers? 30480 Snappin''turtles, Mister?" |
30480 | So you lost the$ 100--got whipped, eh? |
30480 | So you wish to try your hand tending bar? |
30480 | Solid gold? |
30480 | Something kind of cool began to trickle down my legs into my boots--"Blood, eh? 30480 That caused you to leave, I suppose?" |
30480 | That plate? 30480 That your dog, dad?" |
30480 | The Pigeon Express? |
30480 | The gong-- what''s that? 30480 The landlord, sur?" |
30480 | The- is? 30480 Then what in faith do you imagine I have in embryo to upset or disturb the even tenor of my way, old boy? |
30480 | Then you skelp''d( scalped) him immediately? |
30480 | There, do you see that bundle of laths and stuff? |
30480 | They be, eh? |
30480 | Think not, eh? |
30480 | Think so? |
30480 | This? |
30480 | Those fellows are plaguy awkward to handle, are they not, my son? |
30480 | Three children? |
30480 | Three, only three? 30480 Trade''s dull, eh?" |
30480 | Turkey? 30480 Two and six? |
30480 | Two bottles, sir? |
30480 | Two girls and a boy? |
30480 | Umph, eh? |
30480 | Umph? |
30480 | Use''em? |
30480 | Vat sal I vant? 30480 Vel, vot you vont, ah?" |
30480 | Vell, bine de great Jehosaphat, what for you''n make me deat? |
30480 | Wall, yeou''ve hearn tell-- of Ohio, I reckon? |
30480 | Waluable? |
30480 | Was n''t it my family name, you brute? |
30480 | Well, Charles, did you present that gentleman''s bill? |
30480 | Well, I swan, I do n''t know; what do you think of Jenkins? |
30480 | Well, ai n''t I square with the world? 30480 Well, and hain''t I stood by it, hung by it, fastened to it?" |
30480 | Well, brother Temple, how is it-- what does Mr. Bulkley say? |
30480 | Well, call me when you''ve got supper ready, do you hear? |
30480 | Well, come up, poppy; what''ll you take? |
30480 | Well, sir,said he,"what do you think of it, sir? |
30480 | Well, so, so; how''s all the folks? |
30480 | Well, then,says Flambang,"there''s Dr. Rhubarb; what do you think of him? |
30480 | Well, there''s another of''em,inquiringly asked a fat, farmer- looking old codger:"Dr. Duncan, how''s he stand down there about Washington?" |
30480 | Well, there''s old Bullion,continued one of the interrogators, a fine portly old gent,"you know him, of course?" |
30480 | Well, well, Major,said an elderly person of the group;"go on; how about Saratoga?" |
30480 | Well, what did he say? |
30480 | Well, what do you ask for him? |
30480 | Well, what is it? |
30480 | Well, what the deuce of Tompkins-- hic-- what does he-- hic-- does he want? 30480 Well, what''s new in New York-- got hold of any thing rich?" |
30480 | Well, who would have thought it? |
30480 | Well, you may go-- but stop-- how soon''ll my supper be ready? |
30480 | Well, you''re a pooty looking country jake, you are, to advertise for a_ dog_, and do n''t know Chiney terrier from a singed possum? |
30480 | Well, you''ve moved, eh? |
30480 | Well,continued the fat farmer- looking man,"I did n''t know Duncan_ gambled_?" |
30480 | Well,said an old woodsman sitting at the table,"you took a tree of course?" |
30480 | Well? |
30480 | What are you going to drink, Sheriff? |
30480 | What are you-- at? |
30480 | What breed, daddy, do you call that dog of yours? |
30480 | What can I_ do_ for you, sir? |
30480 | What carriage is that? |
30480 | What dat? 30480 What dat? |
30480 | What do I want? 30480 What do you know about_ dogs?_"says a full- blown_ Jakey_, looking sharply at the old fellow. |
30480 | What do you think of Mr. Jigger''s speech on the Clam trade? 30480 What do you want to leave it here for? |
30480 | What for,_ solgers_? |
30480 | What for? |
30480 | What kind of a dog do you call that? |
30480 | What on airth''s loose? |
30480 | What on airth''s the matter, thar? 30480 What salary did you think of allowing?" |
30480 | What sort of a fellow is Bill? |
30480 | What the deuce,says one of Bunker''s friends,"does Joe want with persimmons?" |
30480 | What things? |
30480 | What time do the_ cars_ come along? |
30480 | What was it, Ab? |
30480 | What''ll it cost, Doctor? |
30480 | What''ll you bet of that? |
30480 | What''ll you drink, daddy? |
30480 | What''r yer at now? |
30480 | What''s eggs, this morning? |
30480 | What''s that? |
30480 | What''s the reason? |
30480 | What''s to be done? |
30480 | What, Bill Allen, too? |
30480 | What, Doctor Duncan? |
30480 | What, Tom Benton here? |
30480 | What, Tom Benton? 30480 What,"says Jakey,"do n''t want''em? |
30480 | What-- ah-- are you at? 30480 What-- is-- the-- price-- per-- dozen-- for-- your-- eggs?" |
30480 | What? 30480 What? |
30480 | What? 30480 What? |
30480 | What? 30480 What?" |
30480 | When did you come in town? |
30480 | Where are the birds? |
30480 | Where are you going to take me to-- up into the garret? |
30480 | Where do you lodge and get your eating? |
30480 | Where do you stop, sir? |
30480 | Where shall we go? |
30480 | Where the deuce is your land, eh? |
30480 | Where the( hic) deuce are-- are you going down this( hic) cellar, eh? |
30480 | Where the-- a-- where is our worthy host? |
30480 | Where''s Flash? |
30480 | Where''s your crew, you villain? |
30480 | Who are you going in for to- night? |
30480 | Who does? |
30480 | Who pays this bill for the carriage, if your name ai n''t Johns? |
30480 | Who said you wanted any? 30480 Who said_ I_ wanted any hinges?" |
30480 | Who started this? |
30480 | Who the deuce, old What''s- your- name, do you call gentlemen? |
30480 | Who''ll be the parson? |
30480 | Who? 30480 Why ca n''t we?" |
30480 | Why do n''t you get them alive, deacon? |
30480 | Why do n''t you run? |
30480 | Why not? |
30480 | Why who will, Major? |
30480 | Why, Uncle Josh, you do n''t pretend to say that Miller''s wife has run off with Bob Tape, Yardstick''s clark, do you? |
30480 | Why, William,says Ethan Rakestraw, as Bill went into the store,"what in grace ails thy face? |
30480 | Why, confound it, you do n''t pretend to say you ca n''t send us into town to- night, do you? |
30480 | Why, hain''t Miller''s wife gone? |
30480 | Why, sir, when Mr. Smith-- you know Mr. Smith, sir, I suppose? |
30480 | Why, that''s a queer dog, mister, ai n''t it? 30480 Why, we see''d you goin''in dar, dat pistol shop; want to lay in a stock of dirks and pistils, eh?" |
30480 | Why, yes; the name strikes me as_ somewhat_ familiar; do you refer to_ John Smith_? |
30480 | Why, you ai n''t going to dive right into it, in that way, are you? |
30480 | Why, you''ve said it,said Pipkins,"what''s the use of my repeating it?" |
30480 | Will the moderator please proceed? |
30480 | Will you promise never to take or carry a story again? |
30480 | Will, eh? |
30480 | Ya- a- s."Fine country, I''m told? |
30480 | Ye would n''t? |
30480 | Ye- e- s; wall, as I was saying,''beout tradin'', none o''yeou ever been in the tradin''way? 30480 Yeou do n''t say so?" |
30480 | Yeou do n''t say so? |
30480 | Yes, sir; what do you wish to use them for? |
30480 | Yes, sir; why should n''t I? 30480 Yes, that''s what I''d like to know-- why ca n''t_ we_?" |
30480 | Yes; well? |
30480 | Yes; what_ priced_ hinges did you require? |
30480 | Yes? 30480 You are, eh? |
30480 | You are, eh? |
30480 | You begin to think so, eh? |
30480 | You ca n''t? |
30480 | You did n''t say that to him, did you? |
30480 | You do n''t say I did, do you? |
30480 | You do n''t say so? |
30480 | You do n''t tell me all them fellows are here? |
30480 | You do n''t tell me so? |
30480 | You do n''t? 30480 You do n''t?" |
30480 | You do? |
30480 | You got a hoss, eh? |
30480 | You have, eh? |
30480 | You hev? |
30480 | You laughed at his impudence, and kicked him out into the street? |
30480 | You off? |
30480 | You see yon pint thar, up the river? |
30480 | You talked of going, I believe? |
30480 | You understand training them? |
30480 | You were never previously married, were you? |
30480 | You wern''t never in Cincinnatty,_ I_ guess? |
30480 | You-- you got any hand- cuffs in you''pocket? |
30480 | Your folks are all stirring, eh? |
30480 | Your name is Cynthia, eh? 30480 _ Agh!_"says he, putting down the demijohn in haste,"it''s rale bhrandy--_agh- h!_""Branthy? |
30480 | _ Ah_, very well; go ahead; where''s the room? |
30480 | _ Down the cellar?_gasped B----, quite tragically. |
30480 | _ Just half a ton in heft!_"You do n''t tell us_ that_? |
30480 | _ Me?_ Caucus? 30480 _ Me?_ Caucus? |
30480 | _ Me?_ me on good terms with Matty? 30480 _ Me?_ me on good terms with Matty? |
30480 | _ Run?_ I would as soon think of jumping over the moon, as running for office! |
30480 | _ Vaw''s!_ you goin''thrun away and sheet me,_ ah_? |
30480 | _ What?_ Me been in Washington before? 30480 _ What?_ Me been in Washington before? |
30480 | _ What_ were they? |
30480 | ''Ab Slamm,''sez she,''what on airth possesses yeou to talk o''tradin''on the Sabbath?'' |
30480 | ''Pears to me, I knew yeou somewhere?" |
30480 | ''Tain''t got no hair on it; why, where in blazes did you raise such a dog as that; been scalded, hain''t it?" |
30480 | ***** HUMORS OF FALCONBRIDGE*****[ Illustration:"Are you de man advertised for de dogs, sa- a- ay? |
30480 | ----a-- a--?" |
30480 | A- a- a- in''t they Thick? |
30480 | A.?" |
30480 | Afraid of what?" |
30480 | Ah, here you are, old feller; well, what''s the damages?" |
30480 | Ai n''t you got no bells?" |
30480 | An Irish woman came up to a turkey merchant, and says she--"What wud yees be after axin''for nor a chicken like that?" |
30480 | Are you committing murder on one another?" |
30480 | Are you satisfied, Doctor?" |
30480 | Banvard?" |
30480 | Bill Allen? |
30480 | Brace?" |
30480 | Brown?" |
30480 | But he started again--"Ai n''t goin''to Californy, then, are you?" |
30480 | But look down thar-- thar''s what makes this spot dear to me-- thar, do you see yon little hillock-- yon little mound? |
30480 | But what did Phipps know or care about the Fugitive Slave bill? |
30480 | But what will I do with my money? |
30480 | But where was this fearful manuscript-- this dreaded scribbling of the God- forsaken, poor, forlorn author? |
30480 | But you do n''t know me, I reckon, stranger?" |
30480 | But, Carrie, did n''t I earnestly beg of you to keep those doors-- cellar doors-- shut? |
30480 | But, how many heed such"notices?" |
30480 | Ca n''t you ta- take me( hic) home with you, eh? |
30480 | Charley got behind the counter to stow away some articles he had brought down, and began one of his usual harangues:"Theatre, last night, Jack?" |
30480 | Could I leave this place? |
30480 | Could you get the outline?" |
30480 | Did n''t he skin me out of my watch last winter, playing poker, at Willard''s?" |
30480 | Did you read Mr. Porkapog''s speech on the widening of Jenkins''s ditch?" |
30480 | Do I look like a woman as would marry two? |
30480 | Do n''t you believe in''em? |
30480 | Do you comprehend, Olivia?" |
30480 | Do you hark?" |
30480 | Do you understand?" |
30480 | Do you_ smell_, Mrs. a-- Brown, that horrid lavender or rose, or, or,--do you smell it, Brown?" |
30480 | Does he-- ah----""Yes, what-- ah-- does old Jip say?" |
30480 | Does your range or cooking stove do things up brown? |
30480 | Eldest thirteen, eh?--boy eleven, and the youngest seven, eh?" |
30480 | Enough laid up for a wet day-- don''t care twopence ha''penny for politics, or soldier fol- de- rols-- who wins or who loses in such hums?" |
30480 | F.), and now what say you? |
30480 | Flash in?" |
30480 | Flash in?" |
30480 | Flash in?" |
30480 | Flash? |
30480 | Flash? |
30480 | Fussy,"take_ me_ up into the third story?" |
30480 | Gamble? |
30480 | Go tell the carriage----""To go to the divil, zur?" |
30480 | Good gravy, but do n''t they? |
30480 | Got home?" |
30480 | Got the tooth- ache? |
30480 | Great improvement on the old method, ai n''t it? |
30480 | Had n''t I better go and take a look around, before I conclude to move? |
30480 | Had you ever any means of satisfying yourself that there is, or was, a real service of gold in the President''s house?" |
30480 | Hain''t I stood by the party?" |
30480 | Haow many hogs deu yeou cal''late them fellers killed and scraped a day?" |
30480 | Have n''t I married one of the best women in the world? |
30480 | Have visitors? |
30480 | Have you ever had the tooth- ache? |
30480 | Have you got your Bettys?" |
30480 | Have you read it? |
30480 | He closed his door, opened his cask--"What in the name of everlasting sin and misery is this?" |
30480 | He still breathed faintly--"''Benjamin, my son,''said she,''do you know me?'' |
30480 | He''s no breed, boys; look at him-- see his tushes; growl, Barney, growl!--Ain''t them tushes, boys? |
30480 | Hez Perkins, is that yeou?" |
30480 | How about the_ dog?_""Ah- h- h- h! |
30480 | How are ye, Sheriff?" |
30480 | How learned you this? |
30480 | How many servants do I keep? |
30480 | How will I invest it? |
30480 | How''s all your folks?" |
30480 | How''s your mother got?" |
30480 | Humph, I ordered chocolate-- hain''t you got chocolate?" |
30480 | I charge you, upon your sworn oath, do you or do you not say-- Blinkins stole things?" |
30480 | I do n''t know about that; I do n''t think he''s the right kind of a man for mayor, any how; do you?" |
30480 | I pulled trigger, and--""And killed_ him_?" |
30480 | I put up, and sez I tew the landlord:"''Squire, what sort o''place is this for a sheow?'' |
30480 | I said_ that_ to_ myself_, but I met_ him_ with a smile, and with a''how d''ye do, Cutaway?'' |
30480 | I say you, Mister there, just hand along that saas; give us a chance, will ye, at that; notion on''t, what d''ye call that stuff?" |
30480 | I went on and told her heow in course o''travel--"''In furrin pearts?'' |
30480 | I''m down on doctors, then, Twist; but what do you say to Blowpipes? |
30480 | I''spect them cost somethin''?" |
30480 | I''ve just moved in here, my name''s Flannigan, you never saw me before, and of course I never dealt with you!--don''t you see?" |
30480 | If he has the money, we''ll make''a spec,''you understand?" |
30480 | Is he in the house?" |
30480 | Is thare robbers in yer house? |
30480 | Is the divil_ mad_?" |
30480 | Is there a reward out, sir, for this person?" |
30480 | It was a momentous question, and to his wife''s proposal of a fresh detail of domestic expense, Triangle responded--"Why ca n''t we?" |
30480 | Jipson, will you hear me?" |
30480 | Jones did not; Mrs. Jones smiled and chatted, and did the honors of the table with rare good grace, but where was Jones? |
30480 | Keep the cellar shut? |
30480 | Landlord?" |
30480 | Large, my dear fellow"--says the Don--"bless your soul, you do n''t call_ that_ large? |
30480 | Make you dead?" |
30480 | McConachy owned this dog; set up, Barney-- look at his ears, boys-- great, ai n''t they? |
30480 | McConachy, one winter; he was a pizen mean man, but his wife-- wasn''t she mean? |
30480 | McConachy, out here at the Risin''Sun Tavern?" |
30480 | Me move her, sir?" |
30480 | Mock heroically says we--"Afraid? |
30480 | Mother tried to have him drink a cup of water from the river, but he war past nourishment-- and she asked him if he knew he war dyin''? |
30480 | Mother, what''s the matter?" |
30480 | Mr. Buck proposed--"What say you, Sheriff, to a dinner and a bottle of old Sherry, at----? |
30480 | Mr. Buck,"says the Sheriff,"glad(?) |
30480 | Mr. Mullony, our landlord, was saying till us--""Are you married, too?" |
30480 | Mr. Whackstack, are you sick? |
30480 | Mr.----,_ do n''t you want to buy some good fresh eggs_?" |
30480 | Must they perish-- die with me alone-- struggling against our woes, poverty, wretchedness? |
30480 | Never been_ in_ a Pork- haouse?" |
30480 | Next day fifteen miles, and so forth; yeou see?" |
30480 | Not so soon?" |
30480 | Now what do you suppose my bill was, for one week, board, lodging, servants''_ bribes_ and sundries? |
30480 | Now who''s got any thing against_ me_?" |
30480 | Now, Mr. Hart, I am out of employment-- got my family to support; I always trusted I treated you like a man, did n''t I?" |
30480 | Now, sir, your tooth is safe-- your life is safe--_you''re a sound man!_""Sound?" |
30480 | Now, what do you suppose, boys, that feller''s first offer was?" |
30480 | Now, what will you ask for the job?" |
30480 | Now, who will become purchaser? |
30480 | Of course the audience are not expected to be so unmannerly as to ask"What?" |
30480 | Oh, in the tin business?" |
30480 | One of them wire pullers we read about, eh?" |
30480 | Owe you?" |
30480 | Pigeons?" |
30480 | Pork- haouse?" |
30480 | Sa- a- a- y, yeou heold on--_yeou the guv''ner_?" |
30480 | Say!--''Squire, gone?" |
30480 | Says the clerk, whispering to Smith, whom he slightly knew:"Smith, do you know the price of this wine?" |
30480 | Seventy- five dollars for that dog frame?" |
30480 | She had a father-- could she leave him in bondage? |
30480 | Sheriff, what is it, pray?" |
30480 | Supposing, of course, that somebody was pegging away with a bunch of his_ wares_ at the door, Lapstone rushes out and cries--"Where?" |
30480 | Tell me, Fred, are you hurt?" |
30480 | That''s it, eh?" |
30480 | The Doctor waits upon the visitor--"Dr. Pendleton St. Clair Smith, I presume?" |
30480 | The Joneses and Pigwigginses and Macwackinses, and-- and-- everybody has gone out into the country, and we must go, too; why ca n''t we?" |
30480 | The Yankee approached the hinges, two steps-- picks up a bundle of the article, looks knowingly at them two minutes--"Yeou do n''t say so?" |
30480 | The deacon looked anxiously and innocently at the speaker, as much as to say--"you do n''t say so?" |
30480 | The last exclamation the Nightingale heard from the screech owl, was--"Miss Jane Lind-- who was that poor wom- a- n?" |
30480 | The quiet manner of his reply rather won upon the_ Court_, and says the_ judge_--"Who are you, and where are you from?" |
30480 | The young man finally called out--"Dad, which bag shall I take it out of,_ the gold or silver_?" |
30480 | The"pedlers"and--"_ Have you got any ole boots?_"Drove my respected-- middle- aged friend Mansfield-- clear out of town! |
30480 | Thee hain''t been fighting, William?" |
30480 | Then leaning cautiously forward towards that person, says A.--"Is this man here yet? |
30480 | There''s the baste can do it!--d''ye see that?" |
30480 | This was satisfactory, and the party went on finishing their wine, smoking,& c."S''pose we have some rale sham- paigne, boys?" |
30480 | To me, sir? |
30480 | Twist? |
30480 | Understand?" |
30480 | WHO SHALL BE HEIR? |
30480 | Waiter, bring us a bottle of Sherry; you take Sherry, Buck?" |
30480 | Walker cried out--"Who was that? |
30480 | Walker? |
30480 | Walker? |
30480 | Wall; neow, yeou all sot? |
30480 | Was it secreted? |
30480 | Was it written? |
30480 | We all grinned, which the"member"noticing, observed--"I hope, gentlemen, no man here will presume to think I''m exaggerating?" |
30480 | We do n''t often meet(? |
30480 | We listened one long hour by the clock of Rumford Hall, one night, to an outpouring of_ argumentum ad hominem_ of Mr. Emerson''s-- at what? |
30480 | Well, now what do you suppose was the result of that interview with Cutaway?" |
30480 | Well, what''s he done?'' |
30480 | What and where are_ my rooms_? |
30480 | What are you doing along here, alone in a canoe?" |
30480 | What church do I worship in? |
30480 | What do I care for the number? |
30480 | What do I want with_ firemen_? |
30480 | What for?" |
30480 | What for?" |
30480 | What have you done?" |
30480 | What have you got to say for yourself, anyhow?" |
30480 | What have you started in Gotham?" |
30480 | What in thunder does Joe Bunker want with_ persimmons_?" |
30480 | What on airth ails the ole feller?" |
30480 | What on airth is going on?" |
30480 | What say you-- are you willing to remain spliced with the Doctor, or not? |
30480 | What was to be done? |
30480 | What you stir around?" |
30480 | What''d yees ax for''un?" |
30480 | What''s the matter?" |
30480 | What''s the use of such a humbug expression as that? |
30480 | What''s your name?" |
30480 | What-- what''s out?" |
30480 | Where is the Bridegroom? |
30480 | Where was that man? |
30480 | Where was the pirate? |
30480 | Where? |
30480 | Where?" |
30480 | Who bought the concern? |
30480 | Who could doubt the heart that beats beneath a cambric front? |
30480 | Who does it belong to? |
30480 | Who has not, that ever travelled over this remarkable country, had occasion to be down on dogs? |
30480 | Who was that Poor Woman? |
30480 | Who? |
30480 | Why, I thought you were in raptures with it?" |
30480 | Why, do n''t you want to buy hinges?" |
30480 | Why, he looks like a singed possum?" |
30480 | Why, look a''here, you do n''t go for to say dat you''spect I''m agoin''for to fetch d- dogs clean down here, for nuthin'', do you, sa- a- ay? |
30480 | Wo n''t you look at''em?" |
30480 | Yes, I do; been looking all around for some fresh eggs; how many have you?" |
30480 | You black sarpint, come here; go to Jackplane, the carpenter, and tell him to come here and make my sashes tight, d''ye hear?" |
30480 | You do n''t think I''m going to fly, jump or deliver orations from the cupola, do you?" |
30480 | You do n''t think that, Hall, do you?" |
30480 | You got him?" |
30480 | You hain''t never been in Cincinnatty?" |
30480 | You have some breakest? |
30480 | You intend taking a full view, do n''t you, sir?" |
30480 | You want to see der teeth?" |
30480 | You want to see der teeth?" |
30480 | You''ve seen those wretches, male and female, have n''t you, reader? |
30480 | Your name''s Martin-- Martin Glenn, eh? |
30480 | [ Illustration:"Three children?" |
30480 | _ Me, sir?_"bullyingly echoed Blackstone. |
30480 | _ Me_ on good terms with Matty? |
30480 | _ dead_?" |
30480 | _ wo n''t_ we have a time? |
30480 | about laying around here, alone, in the dark, too?" |
30480 | are you going to have that over again?" |
30480 | but hain''t they got a lot of pork here?" |
30480 | by Jove, what''s that?" |
30480 | coming that are dodge, eh? |
30480 | cries the old gentleman;"have n''t you common decency to see when a man''s engaged in a_ calculation_ he ought n''t to be disturbed, eh?" |
30480 | did you ever see his panorama?" |
30480 | do n''t call that a_ collar_, do you?" |
30480 | do you say, upon your oath, that Blinkins is a dishonest_ man_?" |
30480 | echoed the dog man, looking no ways amiable at the speaker,"why did n''t you never see a Chinese terrier, afore?" |
30480 | echoes poor Bill,"sound? |
30480 | echoes the rotund laundress;"why of course we''ve got to tetch''em, or how''d we get''em ironed and put in your baskets, ma''am?" |
30480 | eh? |
30480 | endanger my life, and the lives of all my family-- me? |
30480 | exclaimed Jenks;"my arrest? |
30480 | exclaimed Triangle--"me? |
30480 | fastened?" |
30480 | got de hand- cuffs in he pocket?" |
30480 | got pistils in your pocket, eh?" |
30480 | got pistils in your pocket, eh?" |
30480 | gruffly responded the old gentleman;"ah, umph, what business have you, ma''am, with three children?" |
30480 | harbor, eh? |
30480 | he responds;"well, suppose we try it?" |
30480 | here, what''s all this? |
30480 | hi!--do you hear- r- r?" |
30480 | hos- e- lair? |
30480 | how? |
30480 | is n''t he a coon? |
30480 | is this Peter Houp, come from his grave?" |
30480 | laughed his patient,"fun?--you call getting married_ fun_?" |
30480 | lord- a- massy, ma''am, how''d you get''em ironed, folded and brought home, ma''am, without tetching''em?" |
30480 | manuscripts? |
30480 | my dog?" |
30480 | or the ninepence hose_ all merino_?'' |
30480 | or who imagine that hand accustomed to dirty work which is enveloped in white kid? |
30480 | s''pose he does?" |
30480 | says B., squirming about in the grasp of the officers, and reaching over for the landlord and his wallet--"what the thunder are you about? |
30480 | says old Firelock, the gunsmith, as Bill was going by his shop;"got a bag in your calabash, or got the tooth- ache?" |
30480 | says one of the merry country gents,"do n''t snake your handsome countenance off so quick; do yer want us to fork rite up fur these drinks?" |
30480 | says one of the party, a sly, winking, fat and rosy gentleman, whom we shall designate hereafter,"you''re bound to the capital, eh?" |
30480 | says the customer, getting up his_ fury_,"what for eggs?" |
30480 | says the gentleman, taking hold of the plate very gingerly;"pass it_ up_?" |
30480 | says the interrogator,"you''re one of the caucus folks, eh? |
30480 | says the lobster merchant;"well, I tell you, Saul can carry''em to the cars for you in this''ere bag, if you''re goin''out?" |
30480 | says the man with the cane--"wasn''t that a_ snap_? |
30480 | says the somewhat alarmed Diddler;"nothing serious, of course?" |
30480 | sez he, lookin''alfired peart and smeart, as tho''he''d seen a flock o''l''fants;''quack doctor, I s''pose, eh?'' |
30480 | thee''s been to the dentist, eh? |
30480 | thunder and saw mills, what''s all that racket about-- house a- fire?" |
30480 | what are you going to do?" |
30480 | what have you got there?" |
30480 | what mean you?" |
30480 | what''s that-- haven''t got_ incumbrances_, have you, ma''am?" |
30480 | what''s that?" |
30480 | what''s the trouble?" |
30480 | what''s to be done for a feller?" |
30480 | where are you? |
30480 | where?" |
30480 | where?" |
30480 | where?" |
30480 | which o''yeou be the guv''ner?" |
30480 | who''s talkin''about pistils, mister?" |
30480 | who? |
30480 | why were you a state prisoner-- a_ secret_ prisoner in the----?" |
30480 | why, do you want to rob me? |
30480 | yes; you stir around, eh? |
30480 | you rise up early, eh?--Well, it is goot for ze hels, eh?" |
9932 | Ah, Jonathan, come out to see the sunset? 9932 Am I a man, or only a coward?" |
9932 | Ambush? |
9932 | An hour ahead; can we come up with them before they join Brandt an''Legget? |
9932 | An''leave you all alone to fight Legget an''the rest of''em? |
9932 | An''let Wetzel go always alone? |
9932 | And that is? |
9932 | And your companion? |
9932 | Any Injun sign? |
9932 | Any glimpse of Jack or Lew? |
9932 | Any sign of Jack? |
9932 | Are n''t you tired, lass? |
9932 | Are you alone? |
9932 | Bill, who''s doing this horse- stealing? |
9932 | Brandt an''Metzar, with Legget backin''them, an''the horses go overland to Detroit? |
9932 | Brandt''s here, then? |
9932 | But ca n''t you see? 9932 But can not you spare him?" |
9932 | Ca n''t you find nothin''more? |
9932 | Ca n''t you stay home now? |
9932 | Care? |
9932 | Child, why did n''t you go to my brother? |
9932 | Close by? |
9932 | Colonel Zane, is not a borderman such as Jonathan worthy a woman''s regard? |
9932 | Come from Blue Pond? |
9932 | Come to see me when you are in the settlement? |
9932 | Cousin, what is the matter? |
9932 | Did Will come over this way? |
9932 | Did he, Betty? |
9932 | Did the reddys do any mischief? |
9932 | Did they find Brandt? |
9932 | Did ye notice anythin''queer about thet guide? |
9932 | Did ye see how oneasy he was last night? 9932 Did you care so very much?" |
9932 | Did you come here to see me? |
9932 | Did you hear all? |
9932 | Did you notice how Jack''s face darkened when his comrade came? 9932 Did you see Wetzel again?" |
9932 | Did you see her? |
9932 | Did you spy on me? |
9932 | Do you know which one? |
9932 | Do you like Helen? |
9932 | Do you make a distinction between pioneers and bordermen? |
9932 | Do you think Jonathan and Wetzel will catch Brandt? |
9932 | Done? 9932 Eb, who is this Brandt?" |
9932 | Ebenezer, what''s this I hear about Indians? |
9932 | Everything quiet? |
9932 | Find out what men are there? |
9932 | For you, then, is there no such thing as friendship? |
9932 | Gather any hickory- nuts from birch or any other kind of trees? |
9932 | Git away on hoss- back? |
9932 | Gone? |
9932 | Hain''t I got eyes? |
9932 | Has Jack really come in? |
9932 | Has no one else been here? |
9932 | Have I ever left you alone? |
9932 | Have n''t I seen bullet holes like this? |
9932 | Have n''t they wives and children, too? |
9932 | Have you any idea what you''ve done? |
9932 | Have you no other reason? |
9932 | Have you seen Brandt since? |
9932 | Hello, Alex, did you have a good trip? |
9932 | Hello, Jack, where are you bound? |
9932 | Hev you any meat? |
9932 | Hev you lost yer senses? 9932 How about the Indians?" |
9932 | How about you, Will? |
9932 | How are you? |
9932 | How can I? 9932 How d''ye know we''re near the fort?" |
9932 | How did you get here? |
9932 | How did you lose your way? |
9932 | How far are we from Fort Henry? |
9932 | How far from here? |
9932 | How is he? |
9932 | How is it different? 9932 How long has Betty''s husband, Mr. Clarke, been dead?" |
9932 | How many redskins did they meet back here a spell? |
9932 | How many will he take? |
9932 | How''d Legget and Brandt get away? |
9932 | How''d he ever fight so? |
9932 | How''s that? |
9932 | How, most wonderful brother? |
9932 | How? |
9932 | Hullo, what''s this? |
9932 | I believe that, Colonel Zane; but where is the girl who would interest him? |
9932 | I came over to ask if I can be of any service? |
9932 | I get what you frontier men call the double- cross''? |
9932 | I say, Betts,Colonel Zane cried,"has Helen''s cousin cast any more such sheep eyes at you?" |
9932 | I think Wetzel was hurt in the fight with Legget,said Jonathan deliberately,"an''ask if you know?" |
9932 | I''m not too late? 9932 I-- I help you and Wetzel?" |
9932 | If I persuade them to release you, will you go away, leave this country, and never come back? |
9932 | Is Brandt dead? |
9932 | Is he dead? 9932 Is n''t Eb a terror? |
9932 | Is this Fort Henry? |
9932 | It was fortunate for me; but why-- why were you there? |
9932 | It was then Betty Zane ran with the powder? 9932 Jack''s going out again? |
9932 | Jack, what''d you hear? |
9932 | Lass, how is''t I find you here? |
9932 | Let me see the boy? |
9932 | Lew, any bad Indian sign? |
9932 | Madcap? |
9932 | Marry her? |
9932 | May I have her? |
9932 | May I thank you-- so? |
9932 | Maybe you mean that against old England? |
9932 | Might they not hide in the bushes and shoot us? |
9932 | Miss Sheppard, will you come out? |
9932 | Mordaunt, had you anything to do with this? |
9932 | Mordaunt? 9932 No? |
9932 | Now, Betty, just a little innocent deceit like that-- what harm? |
9932 | Now, Will, what do you think of that? 9932 Of the Indians, then?" |
9932 | Oh, indeed? 9932 Oh, you do n''t? |
9932 | Our game''s up? |
9932 | Peace? 9932 Roger Brandt? |
9932 | Safe you say? 9932 Safe?" |
9932 | Say, Betts, you do n''t mean it? |
9932 | Say, Jack,Colonel Zane said suddenly,"do you connect Brandt in any way with this horse- stealing?" |
9932 | Say, what''d we do here without Wetzel? |
9932 | See that point of rock thar? 9932 See? |
9932 | Shall we play alone? |
9932 | Since when? |
9932 | Snipe? 9932 So Brandt planned to make off with you to- morrow?" |
9932 | So I''m to be in this border crew? |
9932 | Stand? |
9932 | Suppose he had n''t come? |
9932 | Suppose he has-- who cares? 9932 Suppose we run into some of these Injuns?" |
9932 | Tell you? 9932 Thank me? |
9932 | Then Jack was captured? |
9932 | Then he did n''t take the''little cuss,''as Eb calls his man Case? |
9932 | Then he''ll tell papa you came after me? 9932 Then why did you say-- that-- what you did?" |
9932 | Then you meant marriage by me, if I could be made to consent? |
9932 | Then you''d hev little chanst of gittin''the lass, eh? |
9932 | Tired? 9932 Try? |
9932 | Up? 9932 Wal?" |
9932 | We? 9932 Well, Jack, what''ll I do?" |
9932 | Well, Jonathan, what''s up? |
9932 | Well, dear? |
9932 | Well, what then? 9932 Well?" |
9932 | Well? |
9932 | Well? |
9932 | Well? |
9932 | Were n''t you told to stay in the settlement, inside the clearing? |
9932 | Were you alone? |
9932 | Were you in the fort then? |
9932 | Were you there? |
9932 | Wetzel? |
9932 | What are they up to? |
9932 | What are you going to do now? |
9932 | What do you intend to do with me now that I am tied? |
9932 | What do you make of such strange behavior? |
9932 | What do you mean? |
9932 | What do you think? |
9932 | What do you want? 9932 What does it mean?" |
9932 | What for, then? |
9932 | What have Jonathan and Wetzel that other men do not possess? |
9932 | What have you got? 9932 What is your opinion?" |
9932 | What kind of a man is he? |
9932 | What leaves? |
9932 | What made that hole? |
9932 | What now? |
9932 | What shall I do? |
9932 | What will be done? |
9932 | What will the colonel, or anyone, think has become of me? |
9932 | What will you do with the girl? |
9932 | What''ll we do? |
9932 | What''ll you do? 9932 What''s buzzards?" |
9932 | What''s that I hear? |
9932 | What''s that to me? |
9932 | What''s that you say? |
9932 | What''s the border fever? |
9932 | What''s thet? |
9932 | What''s this I hear? |
9932 | What''s yer plan about gittin''the gal? |
9932 | What, bold sir frontiersman? |
9932 | What? |
9932 | What? |
9932 | Where are my Zane babies? |
9932 | Where are my leaves? |
9932 | Where did it end? |
9932 | Where did they go? |
9932 | Where did you come from? |
9932 | Where did you leave him? |
9932 | Where is Jonathan? |
9932 | Where''s Brandt from? |
9932 | Where''s Brandt? |
9932 | Where''s Wetzel? |
9932 | Where''s Will? |
9932 | Where''s my gun? 9932 Where''s the dog?" |
9932 | Where''s the inn? 9932 Where? |
9932 | Where? |
9932 | Who killed Case? |
9932 | Who was your guide? |
9932 | Who''s a drunken ruffian? |
9932 | Who''s in Legget''s gang now beside Old Horse, the Chippewa, an''his Shawnee pard, Wildfire? 9932 Who''s playin''? |
9932 | Who? 9932 Whose prisoner is Brandt?" |
9932 | Why are you so still? |
9932 | Why did he come here? |
9932 | Why did n''t you? |
9932 | Why did you bring me here? |
9932 | Why did you come? 9932 Why do n''t you?" |
9932 | Why do you think so? |
9932 | Why do you want him to go free? |
9932 | Why does the redskin want to take him away to his village? |
9932 | Why not? 9932 Why-- why do you look at me so?" |
9932 | Why? 9932 Why?" |
9932 | Why? |
9932 | Why? |
9932 | Why? |
9932 | Why? |
9932 | Will Ashbow take five horses for his prisoner? |
9932 | Will you be happy here? |
9932 | Will you drink, redskin- hunter? |
9932 | Will you gentlemen have a glass with me? |
9932 | Will you take the chance now? |
9932 | Wo n''t you care for me? |
9932 | Wo n''t you come for a walk with me? |
9932 | Would n''t I though? 9932 You ai n''t insinuatin''nothin'', cap''n?" |
9932 | You ai n''t much hurt, I reckon? |
9932 | You did? 9932 You do n''t believe they''ll rush us here?" |
9932 | You do n''t love him? |
9932 | You intended to let me shift for myself out here in this wilderness? |
9932 | You love the big- eyed lass, do n''t you? |
9932 | You loved a lass? |
9932 | You meant nothing of your promise to help me across the border? |
9932 | You played me from the first? |
9932 | You think Legget''s across the river? |
9932 | You will pursue them? |
9932 | You wo n''t come? |
9932 | You would? 9932 You?" |
9932 | A few words whispered to me not many days ago will suffice for remembrance-- or-- or did I dream them?" |
9932 | Ai n''t there no other way?" |
9932 | Am I frightened? |
9932 | And who may Bing Legget be?" |
9932 | And your daughter, George, is she fitted for this hard border life?" |
9932 | Are n''t the boys at the fort runnin''arter her?" |
9932 | Are n''t you afraid of him?" |
9932 | Are you surprised because after he insulted me I''d see him?" |
9932 | Brandt?" |
9932 | Burned out, do you get that? |
9932 | But what about the savage who warned Brandt? |
9932 | Did anybody ever see anything to beat that? |
9932 | Did it come from knowledge of her beauty, matchless as that of the mountain- laurel? |
9932 | Did it strike ye he left us in a hurry, kind of excited like, in spite of his offhand manner?" |
9932 | Did n''t I beg you to kill Zane when we had a chance? |
9932 | Did you get out all right with the lass?" |
9932 | Did you lose him?" |
9932 | Do all the young men call often and stay late?" |
9932 | Do we mess here? |
9932 | Do you expect them to wait on you?" |
9932 | Do you mean he''s hiding there?" |
9932 | Do you remember what an ordeal that was for me? |
9932 | Do you think this white thief had anything to do with carrying her away?" |
9932 | Does he realize what he''ll get if we ever find out, or is he underrating us?" |
9932 | For what?" |
9932 | Go with me after her?" |
9932 | Had she been dreaming? |
9932 | Had the savages an inkling of his pursuit? |
9932 | How about Wetzel?" |
9932 | How can I?" |
9932 | How can these two men, alone, cope with savages, as I''ve heard they do, and break up such an outlaw band as Legget''s?" |
9932 | How close was Wetzel? |
9932 | How did you learn?" |
9932 | How had Mordaunt associated himself with these savages? |
9932 | How on earth did you know I was on the border? |
9932 | How''er we trapped?" |
9932 | I take it you are from Fort Henry, and will guide us there? |
9932 | I wonder if Wetzel pursued them? |
9932 | If you are a gentleman, tell me why you came here?" |
9932 | Is it true?" |
9932 | Is n''t it real sisterly regard? |
9932 | Is n''t this a lonesome, lovely spot?" |
9932 | Is there no other way?" |
9932 | Is this young nephew of yours strong and willing?" |
9932 | Jack, see them little footprints? |
9932 | Jack, you do not regret the new life?" |
9932 | Kin ye trust ther other party?" |
9932 | Knowing all this, how can I meet any of these men again? |
9932 | Left Lew fighting?" |
9932 | Must I go through it again?" |
9932 | Now we have two secrets, have n''t we?" |
9932 | Of course you know him?" |
9932 | Or was he now working out one of his cunning tricks of woodcraft? |
9932 | Our time''d have to come, sooner or later, so why not now? |
9932 | Out here in this wilderness?" |
9932 | See thet dead white oak standin''high over thar?" |
9932 | Shall we be long? |
9932 | Shall we stay here until daylight?" |
9932 | Shall we try?" |
9932 | Sweetly and pityingly she turned to Brandt:"Will not you help me?" |
9932 | The sun shone; the golden forest surrounded her; the brook babbled merrily; but where were the struggling, panting men? |
9932 | Then advancing to the porch, he looked at Mabel with a more serious gaze as he asked,"How are you to- day?" |
9932 | Then the Englishman said:''It is, eh? |
9932 | Then with big, bright eyes bent gravely on him she continued,"May I ask, Colonel Zane, who you have picked out for me?" |
9932 | Trailing an Indian who was then five miles east of that rock? |
9932 | Understand? |
9932 | Was he still in flight? |
9932 | Was it not because she was a woman? |
9932 | Was it you?" |
9932 | Was n''t he strange?" |
9932 | Was not her answer enough? |
9932 | Was the man drunk when he said he came west after a woman?" |
9932 | Well, Jack, what do you think about Lew?" |
9932 | Well, did you see thet little cuss whip his knife? |
9932 | What are those poor savages to you? |
9932 | What can you do?" |
9932 | What can you learn from these silent redskins? |
9932 | What d''you reckon?" |
9932 | What did I say?" |
9932 | What did I tell you?" |
9932 | What did you come in for?" |
9932 | What for? |
9932 | What have the past sixteen years been? |
9932 | What hill hid the settlement from view? |
9932 | What the deuce-- Say-- Betts, eh?" |
9932 | What was he, to win the love of any girl? |
9932 | What were his intentions? |
9932 | What worse could have happened? |
9932 | What would she not have given for the faint smile that shone in his eyes for Betty? |
9932 | What''s law here? |
9932 | What''s that?" |
9932 | What''s thet mean?" |
9932 | What''s this mean?" |
9932 | What''s this?" |
9932 | What''s to be done?" |
9932 | What''s to be done?" |
9932 | What''s up? |
9932 | When the Injuns are all gone where''ll be our work?" |
9932 | Where are the redskins?" |
9932 | Where are you going with it? |
9932 | Where are your sons? |
9932 | Where do them hosses go? |
9932 | Where do these stolen animals go? |
9932 | Where was he taking her? |
9932 | Where''s Brandt?" |
9932 | Where''s my wife? |
9932 | Which is which?" |
9932 | Who could tell when his strong life might be ended by an Indian''s hatchet? |
9932 | Who did it?" |
9932 | Who said so? |
9932 | Who was with you?" |
9932 | Who''d have thought he was going to give her that blamed, bloody arrow?" |
9932 | Who''s disposin''of''em for this fellar?" |
9932 | Why did he want to pull a knife on the borderman? |
9932 | Why do n''t he keep Zane here until you can spare more than three Indians to go with him? |
9932 | Why do you ask?" |
9932 | Why do you shadow my friends? |
9932 | Why not with me?" |
9932 | Why not? |
9932 | Why this sudden interest in Roger Brandt?" |
9932 | Why? |
9932 | Why?" |
9932 | Why?" |
9932 | Will you break a borderman''s custom, for my sake?" |
9932 | With eyes like those? |
9932 | Wo n''t you please tell me?" |
9932 | Would n''t Mr. Jonathan Zane, borderman, Indian fighter, hero of a hundred battles and never a sweetheart, be flattered? |
9932 | You do n''t suppose Wetzel will be afraid of four savages? |
9932 | You remember Jake Deering? |
9932 | You would n''t think they practiced anything of the kind, would you? |
9932 | ai n''t she sassy?" |
9932 | exclaimed the colonel''s buxom wife, from the window,"do n''t you ever get tired hearing Eb talk of Wetzel, and Jack, and Indians? |
9932 | how can I thank you?" |
9932 | interrupted the teamster,"or safe, either, fer thet matter? |
9932 | well, I do n''t believe I have left a wish, unless----""Unless?" |
9932 | what am I thinking, and he a stranger?" |
21816 | ''How can you speak so, friend Orchis, of those who were my father''s friends?'' |
21816 | A bottle of wine? |
21816 | A free dog, eh? 21816 A philanthropist is necessarily an enthusiast; for without enthusiasm what was ever achieved but commonplace? |
21816 | A saint a sad dog? |
21816 | A sound boy? 21816 A very strange one,"answered the auditor, who had been such not with perfect ease,"but is it true?" |
21816 | A white masquerading as a black? |
21816 | Accommodate? 21816 Acquittal?" |
21816 | Ah!--But am I again mistaken,( his eye falling on the swamp- oak stick,) or do n''t you go a little lame, sir? |
21816 | Ah, my way now,cried the old man, peering before him,"where lies my way to my state- room?" |
21816 | Ah, who is this? 21816 Ah, who would be a stranger? |
21816 | Alms, if the sum borrowed is returned? |
21816 | An operator, ah? 21816 An_ unfriendly_ accommodation? |
21816 | And are all these buildings now standing? |
21816 | And ca n''t you do that without sinning against your conscience, as you believe? 21816 And do you know whence this sort of fellow gets his sulk? |
21816 | And how is that, friend? |
21816 | And is not my friend politic? 21816 And is the age of wonders passed? |
21816 | And of what? 21816 And what did it say? |
21816 | And what race may_ you_ belong to? 21816 And what says the word? |
21816 | And what was that? |
21816 | And what was that? |
21816 | And who is your master, Guinea? |
21816 | And who of my fine- fellow species may you be? 21816 And who of my sublime species may you be?" |
21816 | And why did n''t you? |
21816 | And why did you not tell me your object before? |
21816 | And why do n''t you add, much good may the philosophy of Mark Winsome do me? 21816 And with submission, sir, what is the greatest judge, bishop or prophet, but a talking man? |
21816 | Apocrypha? |
21816 | Are you a centaur? |
21816 | Are you competent to a good shave, barber? |
21816 | Are you in earnest? 21816 Are you in earnest?" |
21816 | At what? |
21816 | Awake in his sleep, sure enough, ai n''t he? |
21816 | Aye, and where your fine knavery now? 21816 Aye, but are you? |
21816 | Been eaves- dropping, eh? |
21816 | Brightening? 21816 Broker? |
21816 | But Charlie, dear Charlie, what new notions are these? 21816 But do you think it the fair thing to unmask an operator that way?" |
21816 | But have you tried the Omni- Balsamic Reinvigorator, sir? |
21816 | But how about the window? |
21816 | But how am I to get my profits-- ugh, ugh!--and my money back? 21816 But how are we to find all these people in this great crowd?" |
21816 | But if to the audacity of the design there be brought a commensurate circumspectness of execution, how then? |
21816 | But is analogy argument? 21816 But is not an honest man to be trusted?" |
21816 | But is not this doctrine of triangles someway inconsistent with your doctrine of labels? |
21816 | But is there not some one who can speak a good word for you? |
21816 | But may you not be over- confident? |
21816 | But now that the idea is suggested,said the stranger, with infantile intellectuality,"does it not raise the desire?" |
21816 | But pray, now, by your account, what precisely may be this mysterious knowledge gained in your trade? 21816 But suppose I did want a boy-- what they jocosely call a good boy-- how could your absurd office help me?--Philosophical Intelligence Office?" |
21816 | But supposing I did,with cool self- collectedness,"could you do up the thing for me, and here?" |
21816 | But what had you done? |
21816 | But what is its object? 21816 But where do you live?" |
21816 | But who was it you laughed at? 21816 But why not, friend, put as charitable a construction as one can upon the poor fellow?" |
21816 | But wo n''t you loan me the money? |
21816 | But yarbs, yarbs; yarbs are good? |
21816 | But you are connected with one in particular.--The''Black Rapids,''are you not? |
21816 | But you have money in your trunk, though? |
21816 | But, but,in a kind of vertigo,"what do-- do you do-- do with people''s money? |
21816 | But, respected sir, if you will not have boys, might we not, in our small way, accommodate you with a man? |
21816 | But_ why_ did you never hear of convivial bats, nor anybody else? 21816 Ca n''t see the goose? |
21816 | Ca n''t you remember the number? 21816 Can I any way befriend you?" |
21816 | Can I assist you? |
21816 | Can I be so changed? 21816 Charlemont? |
21816 | Cigars? |
21816 | Come, now,said the cosmopolitan, a little reproachfully,"you ought to have sympathized with that man; tell me, did you feel no fellow- feeling? |
21816 | Confess yourself an eaves- dropper? |
21816 | Confidence in you? |
21816 | Confidence? |
21816 | Could you, indeed? |
21816 | Dear? 21816 Did I hear something about herbs and herb- doctors?" |
21816 | Did he? 21816 Did he? |
21816 | Did n''t I say he had friends? |
21816 | Did n''t I say that before? |
21816 | Did n''t believe it? 21816 Disparage the press?" |
21816 | Do n''t you know me? |
21816 | Do you hear that about the wise man? |
21816 | Do you know anything about him? |
21816 | Do you think it was the true light? |
21816 | Do you think, then, barber, that, in a certain point, all the trades and callings of men are much on a par? 21816 Does diffidence prevail over duty? |
21816 | Does it produce insensibility? |
21816 | Dr. Johnson was a good Christian, was n''t he? |
21816 | Eh? |
21816 | Excuse me,said he,"but, if I err not, I was speaking to you the other day;--on a Kentucky boat, was n''t it?" |
21816 | Fair? 21816 Favor? |
21816 | First, let me----"Nay, but first tell me what took you to the Fair? |
21816 | For me? |
21816 | Free, eh? 21816 Freely drink? |
21816 | Go back to nurse again, eh? 21816 Good, trustworthy boy, I hope?" |
21816 | Handkerchief?--gloves? 21816 Hands off? |
21816 | Happy? 21816 Have you no charity, friend?" |
21816 | Have you seen him, sir? |
21816 | Have you tried anything for it? |
21816 | He''s seeing visions now, ai n''t he? |
21816 | Help? 21816 Herb- doctor? |
21816 | His benefactor? 21816 His name is Truman, is it?" |
21816 | Honest man? 21816 Honest?" |
21816 | How about that last? |
21816 | How can I go find''em myself? 21816 How can you ask me, my dear Frank? |
21816 | How did you come to dream that I wanted anything in your line, eh? |
21816 | How did you find that out? |
21816 | How do other hypocritical beggars twist theirs? 21816 How does that make him incurable?" |
21816 | How now? |
21816 | How old? |
21816 | How was that? |
21816 | How, again? |
21816 | How, how? |
21816 | How, hypocritical? |
21816 | How? 21816 How?" |
21816 | How? |
21816 | How? |
21816 | How? |
21816 | How?--the price of this medicine? |
21816 | I retain,with a clinch,"and now how much?" |
21816 | I said,''Thank you, sir, but I do n''t see the connection,''"How could you so unsweetly answer one with a sweet voice? |
21816 | I wonder who''s his mother; and whether she knows what late hours he keeps? |
21816 | I? |
21816 | In an oven? 21816 In philosophy? |
21816 | In some points he was; yet, how comes it that under his own hand, St. Augustine confesses that, until his thirtieth year, he was a very sad dog? |
21816 | Inconsistency? 21816 Indeed, and what did you say to him?" |
21816 | Indeed? 21816 Industrious?" |
21816 | Is a rattle- snake accountable? |
21816 | Is it not charity to ease human suffering? 21816 Is it possible, my dear sir,"resumed he with the weed,"that you do not recall my countenance? |
21816 | Is it to be believed that, in this Christian company, there is no one charitable person? 21816 Is the sight of humanity so very disagreeable to you then? |
21816 | Is there within here any agent or any member of any charitable institution whatever? |
21816 | It''s best, ai n''t it? |
21816 | Jeremy Diddler? 21816 Large loaf? |
21816 | Let the unfortunate man go his ways.--What is that large book you have with you? |
21816 | Little as you drank of this elixir of logwood? 21816 Loose bait ai n''t bad,"said the boy,"look a lie and find the truth; do n''t care about a Counterfeit Detector, do ye? |
21816 | May he not be knave, fool, and genius altogether? |
21816 | Mexico? 21816 Money- belt? |
21816 | Murder? 21816 My dear,_ dear_ sir, how could you impute to me such preposterous self- seeking? |
21816 | Natur is good Queen Bess; but who''s responsible for the cholera? |
21816 | Never mind_ him_, sir,said the old man anxiously,"but tell me truly, did you, indeed, read from the book just now?" |
21816 | Never saw the negro- minstrels, I suppose? |
21816 | New Jerusalem? |
21816 | No confidence in dis poor ole darkie, den? |
21816 | No humor in it? |
21816 | No;--good performer? |
21816 | Not_ his_, barber? 21816 Now what is it you suspect of this fellow?" |
21816 | Now what sort of a beginning is this? 21816 Obstacles? |
21816 | Oh, no need of that.--You could sell me some of that stock, then? |
21816 | Oh, now, now, ca n''t you be convivial without being censorious? 21816 Oh, oh, good ge''mmen, have you no confidence in dis poor ole darkie?" |
21816 | Oh, oh,taking a moderate sip,"but you, why do n''t you drink?" |
21816 | Oh, that a Christian man should speak agin natur and yarbs-- ugh, ugh, ugh!--ain''t sick men sent out into the country; sent out to natur and grass? |
21816 | Oh, you have trusted somebody? 21816 Open their eyes?" |
21816 | Out of his mind, ai n''t he? |
21816 | Practicable? |
21816 | Pray, now,with a sort of sociable sorrowfulness, slowly sliding along the rail,"Pray, now, my young friend, what volume have you there? |
21816 | Pray, sir,said the herb- doctor to the Missourian,"for what were you giving thanks just now?" |
21816 | Pray, what have you there? |
21816 | Pray, what society of vintners and old topers are you hired to lecture for? |
21816 | Pray, will you put your money in your belt to- night? |
21816 | Pray,in conclusion,"do you think that upon a pinch anything could be transacted on board here with the transfer- agent? |
21816 | Pun away; but even accepting your analogical pun, what does it amount to? 21816 Punster, respected sir?" |
21816 | Really, sir-- why, sir-- really-- I--"Could you put confidence in_ me_ for instance? |
21816 | Really? |
21816 | Recant? |
21816 | Remorse drives man away from man? 21816 Saddish?" |
21816 | Same voice as before, ai n''t it? 21816 Scoundrels?" |
21816 | See what? |
21816 | Shall I give you the judge''s philosophy, and all? |
21816 | Since we are thus joined in mind,said the stranger,"why not be joined in hand?" |
21816 | Sir,said the collegian without the least embarrassment,"do I understand that you are officially connected with the Black Rapids Coal Company?" |
21816 | Slaves? |
21816 | So I was.--Let me see,unmindful of his purchases for the moment,"what, now, was it? |
21816 | Solitary? |
21816 | Some might be bought, perhaps; but why do you ask? 21816 St. Augustine? |
21816 | St. Louis, ah? 21816 Stay,"pausing in his swing, not untouched by so unexpected an act;"stay-- thank''ee-- but will this really do me good? |
21816 | Steady, hard- working cooper like you; what was the reason you could n''t get bail? |
21816 | Still you do n''t recall my countenance? |
21816 | Still, Charlie, was not the loan in the first place a friend''s act? |
21816 | Stock? |
21816 | Suppose he had been also a misanthrope? |
21816 | Suppose they did? |
21816 | Sure it''s_ quite_ perfect, though? |
21816 | Sure, you do n''t think that natur, Dame Natur, will hurt a body, do you? |
21816 | Talk away,disdainfully;"but pray tell me what has that last analogy of yours to do with your intelligence office business?" |
21816 | Tall? 21816 Tell me, how put the requisite assortment of good qualities into a boy, as the assorted mince into the pie?" |
21816 | Tell stories? |
21816 | That''s your Confession of Faith, is it? 21816 The Wall street spirit?" |
21816 | The divils are laughing now, are they? |
21816 | The sham is evident, then? |
21816 | The sun is the baker, eh? |
21816 | The water- cure? 21816 Then lucky the fate of the first- born of Egypt, cold in the grave ere maturity struck them with a sharper frost.--Charlie?" |
21816 | Then throw that Detector away, I say again; it only makes you purblind; do n''t you see what a wild- goose chase it has led you? 21816 Then why that sign?" |
21816 | Then you do n''t believe in these''ere yarb- doctors? |
21816 | Then you do really know him, and he is quite worthy? 21816 Then you do really think,"hectically,"that if I take this medicine,"mechanically reaching out for it,"I shall regain my health?" |
21816 | Then you give me hope? |
21816 | Then you have been his benefactor? |
21816 | Then you have not always been in the charity business? |
21816 | Then you have passed a veto upon boys? |
21816 | Then you have studied the thing? 21816 There, barber; will that do?" |
21816 | These marginal squares here, are they the water- lots? |
21816 | Think it will cure me? |
21816 | Tombs? 21816 Two dollars? |
21816 | Ugh!--how much? |
21816 | Was n''t an angel, was it? 21816 Water- lots in the city of New Jerusalem? |
21816 | Wellsaid he, now familiarly seating himself in the vacated chair,"what do you think of Mark? |
21816 | Well, suppose we talk about Charlemont? |
21816 | Well, then? |
21816 | Well, then? |
21816 | Well, what do you think of the story of Charlemont? |
21816 | Well, where is Guinea? |
21816 | Well,acquiesced the cosmopolitan, seating himself, and quietly brimming his glass,"what shall we talk about?" |
21816 | What are you talking about? 21816 What are you? |
21816 | What do the divils find to laugh about in wisdom, begorrah? 21816 What do you remark? |
21816 | What do you talk your hog- latin to me for? |
21816 | What does all that mean, now? |
21816 | What does it show? |
21816 | What herbs? 21816 What is your name, old boy?" |
21816 | What need to, if already I believe that it is what it is lettered to be? |
21816 | What sort of a sensation is misanthropy? |
21816 | What''s deadly- nightshade? 21816 What''s that about the Apocalypse?" |
21816 | What''s that? 21816 What, barber, do you say that such cynical sort of things are in the True Book, by which, of course, you mean the Bible?" |
21816 | What, distrust cards? 21816 What, in wonder''s name-- ugh, ugh!--is he talking about?" |
21816 | What, then, my_ dear_ Frank? 21816 What, what?" |
21816 | When all is said then, what good have I of your friendship, regarded in what light you will? |
21816 | Where are we to find them? |
21816 | Where does he live? |
21816 | Where is he? 21816 Where shall I begin? |
21816 | Where''s his office? |
21816 | Where? 21816 Where? |
21816 | Who can he be? |
21816 | Who do you mean? |
21816 | Who in the name of the great chimpanzee, in whose likeness, you, Marzetti, and the other chatterers are made, who in thunder are you? |
21816 | Who is abused? 21816 Who''s that describing the confidence- man?" |
21816 | Who, pray? |
21816 | Why do knowing employers shun youths from asylums, though offered them at the smallest wages? 21816 Why do n''t you go find''em yourself?" |
21816 | Why do you start? |
21816 | Why do you think so? |
21816 | Why, barber, are you reaching up to catch birds there with salt? |
21816 | Why, did n''t he tell you? |
21816 | Why, do you really believe that your world''s charity will ever go into operation? |
21816 | Why, do you sell the stock? |
21816 | Why, in this paper here, you engage, sir, to insure me against a certain loss, and----"Certain? 21816 Why, why, why?" |
21816 | Why, you know that you gave him your confidence, do n''t you? |
21816 | Why, you stand self- contradicted, barber; do n''t you? |
21816 | Why,moved,"you do n''t mean to say, that what you repeated is really down there? |
21816 | Why? |
21816 | Why? |
21816 | Why? |
21816 | Wisdom? |
21816 | With what heart,cried Frank, still in character,"have you told me this story? |
21816 | With your traveler''s lock on your door to- night, you will think yourself all safe, wo n''t you? |
21816 | Wo n''t truth do, Frank? 21816 World''s Fair? |
21816 | Would n''t think it was I who laughed would you? |
21816 | Would you favor me by explaining? |
21816 | Yarb- doctors? 21816 Yes, but what is it to you? |
21816 | Yes, do n''t you both perform acts? 21816 Yes, for you; do you know anything about the negro, apparently a cripple, aboard here? |
21816 | Yes, it''s a little irregular, perhaps, but----"Dear me, you do n''t think of doing any business with me, do you? 21816 Yes, sir:--boys? |
21816 | Yes,leaning over the table on his elbow and genially gesturing at him with his forefinger:"yes, and, as I said, you do n''t remark the sting of it?" |
21816 | Yes; but what of that? 21816 You Praise- God- Barebones you, what are you groaning about? |
21816 | You are an abolitionist, ai n''t you? |
21816 | You are his confidential clerk, ai n''t you? |
21816 | You are warm against these bears? |
21816 | You are? |
21816 | You have not descended to the dead, have you? 21816 You have? |
21816 | You mean the eight hundred million power? |
21816 | You seem pretty wise, my lad,said the cosmopolitan;"why do n''t you sell your wisdom, and buy a coat?" |
21816 | You speak of cash, barber; pray in what connection? |
21816 | You tell him it''s all stuff, do n''t you? |
21816 | You think I have done you good, then? 21816 You trifle.--I ask again, if a white, how could he look the negro so?" |
21816 | You would n''t like to be concerned in the New Jerusalem, would you? |
21816 | Your art? 21816 _ How_ exactly is that?" |
21816 | _ I_ ask? 21816 _ I_ have confidence in nature? |
21816 | _ My_ master? |
21816 | _ Only_ a man? 21816 _ Whose_, pray? |
21816 | ''But how much?'' |
21816 | ''But where are your friends?'' |
21816 | ''But, he do n''t look very clean, does he?'' |
21816 | ''Has he, we respectfully ask, as yet, evinced any noble quality?'' |
21816 | ''Nature in Disease?'' |
21816 | ''Santa Cruz? |
21816 | ----"Pray, sir, have you seen a gentleman with a weed hereabouts, rather a saddish gentleman? |
21816 | 3?" |
21816 | A good boy?" |
21816 | A sick philosopher is incurable?" |
21816 | After watching him a while, the cosmopolitan said in a formal voice,"Well, what say you, Mr. Foreman; guilty, or not guilty?--Not guilty, ai n''t it?" |
21816 | Ah!----""Where? |
21816 | Ah, is that he?" |
21816 | Ai n''t they rather long and narrow for pocket- books?" |
21816 | Ai n''t you,"to the Missourian,"going to buy some of that medicine?" |
21816 | All terra firma-- you do n''t seem to care about investing, though?" |
21816 | Am_ I_, for instance, an actor? |
21816 | And I, being personally a stranger to you, how can you have confidence in me?" |
21816 | And conviviality, what is it? |
21816 | And creditor and friend, can they ever be one? |
21816 | And did it not bring about what in effect was the enmity of Orchis? |
21816 | And how? |
21816 | And in either case, is any reproach involved? |
21816 | And is this-- I put it to you, sir-- is this the view of an arrogant rival and pretender?" |
21816 | And the nature of them? |
21816 | And the reason for giving them?" |
21816 | And were there nothing else, who shall answer for his digestion, upon which so much depends?" |
21816 | And what is that?" |
21816 | And what more meddlesome between friends than a loan? |
21816 | And what would be your fee?" |
21816 | And when it does spring, do you cut down the young thistles, and wo n''t they spring the more? |
21816 | And who be Puritans, that I, an Alabamaian, must do them reverence? |
21816 | And who made an idiot of Peter the Wild Boy?" |
21816 | And who will refuse, what Turk or Dyak even, his own little dollar for sweet charity''s sake? |
21816 | And who, it might be returned, did ever dress or act like harlequin? |
21816 | And why is it that the modern Cain dreads nothing so much as solitary confinement? |
21816 | And why? |
21816 | And yours?" |
21816 | And, I say now, I happen to have a superfluity in my pocket, and I''ll just----""----Act the part of a brother to that unfortunate man?" |
21816 | And, by its being such, is not something meant-- divinely meant? |
21816 | And, by- the- way, since you are of this truly charitable nature, you will not turn away an appeal in behalf of the Seminole Widow and Orphan Asylum?" |
21816 | And, on the other side, would delicate friendship, so long as it retained its delicacy, do that? |
21816 | And, sir, if I am not mistaken, you also are a stranger here( but, indeed, where in this strange universe is not one a stranger?) |
21816 | Anything like''sell all thou hast and give to the poor?'' |
21816 | Are there really those who so decry the press? |
21816 | Are we pauper Arabs, without a house of our own, that, with the mummies, we must turn squatters among the dust of the Catacombs?" |
21816 | Are we right there, sir? |
21816 | Are you acquainted with him?" |
21816 | Are you agreed?" |
21816 | At first principles?" |
21816 | At first the man- child has no teeth, but about the sixth month-- am I right, sir?" |
21816 | At last, in desperation, she hurried out,"Tell me, sir, for what you want the twenty dollars?" |
21816 | Augustine?" |
21816 | Bacon a courtier? |
21816 | Bar her out? |
21816 | Barber,"turning upon him excitedly,"what fell suspiciousness prompts this scandalous confession? |
21816 | Because he loves it? |
21816 | Being in a signal sense a stranger, would you, for that, signally set him down for a knave?" |
21816 | Believe me, I-- yes, yes-- I may say-- that-- that----""That you have confidence? |
21816 | Besides, a rich man lose by a poor man? |
21816 | Bolt her out? |
21816 | But bats live together, and did you ever hear of convivial bats?" |
21816 | But did I not before hint of the tendency of science, that forbidden tree? |
21816 | But do n''t you see I am a poor, old rat here, dying in the wainscot? |
21816 | But do you think the sentiment just?" |
21816 | But for that, do I turn cynic? |
21816 | But for this, is the author to be blamed? |
21816 | But his limbs, if not a cripple, how could he twist his limbs so?" |
21816 | But how came it? |
21816 | But how did you come to dream that I wanted anything in your absurd line, eh?" |
21816 | But if wine be false, while men are true, whither shall fly convivial geniality? |
21816 | But look, look-- what''s this?" |
21816 | But our bottle; is it glued fast? |
21816 | But should untruth be furthered? |
21816 | But tell me,"with renewed earnestness,"what do you take him for? |
21816 | But what was told me not a half- hour since? |
21816 | But where are they? |
21816 | But where is he? |
21816 | But where was slipped in the entering wedge? |
21816 | But where''s your tail? |
21816 | But who froze to death my teamster on the prairie? |
21816 | But who gave you that cough? |
21816 | But who snowed the odes about here?" |
21816 | But wo n''t you trade? |
21816 | But you see, sar, dese here legs? |
21816 | But you, I ask again, where do you find time or inclination for these out- of- the- way speculations? |
21816 | But your scheme; how did you come to hit upon that?" |
21816 | But, as a supposition-- you would have confidence in me, would n''t you?" |
21816 | But, if original, whence came they? |
21816 | But, insensible to their coldness, or charitably overlooking it, he more wooingly than ever resumed:"May I venture upon a small supposition? |
21816 | But, once more, and for the last time, to return to the point: why sir, did you warn me against my friend? |
21816 | But, what then, respected sir, when, by natural laws, they finally outgrow such things, and wholly?" |
21816 | But,"turning upon them all,"if that man''s wrathful blow provokes me to no wrath, should his evil distrust arouse you to distrust? |
21816 | Butchering?" |
21816 | By the way, madam, may I ask if you have confidence?" |
21816 | By the way, talking of geniality, it is much on the increase in these days, ai n''t it?" |
21816 | By your own definition, is not my friend a Great Medicine?" |
21816 | Ca n''t remember the number?" |
21816 | Can Rochefoucault equal that? |
21816 | Can a misanthrope feel warm, I ask myself; take ease? |
21816 | Can a misanthrope smoke a cigar and muse? |
21816 | Can delicate friendship stand that? |
21816 | Can his influence be salutary? |
21816 | Can you deny-- I dare you to deny-- that the man leading a solitary life is peculiarly exposed to the sorriest misconceptions touching strangers?" |
21816 | Can you, the fox, catch him?" |
21816 | Candidly, now?" |
21816 | Clashed with any little prejudice of his?" |
21816 | Cold- blooded? |
21816 | Come, come, Mr. Palaverer, for all your palavering, did you yourself never shut out nature of a cold, wet night? |
21816 | Come, own, are you not pitiless?" |
21816 | Come, why did you warn me? |
21816 | Confidence in man, eh? |
21816 | Confidence restored?" |
21816 | Confidence? |
21816 | Conspicuous in the door- way he stood, saying, in a clear voice,"Is the agent of the Seminole Widow and Orphan Asylum within here?" |
21816 | Could not China Aster mortgage the candlery? |
21816 | Could not the market be forced a little in that particular? |
21816 | Could you favor me with a little history of the extraordinary man you mentioned?" |
21816 | D''ye hear? |
21816 | Dare say some seed has been shaken out; and wo n''t it spring though? |
21816 | Did I say anything of that sort? |
21816 | Did ever beggar have such heaps of fine friends? |
21816 | Did he despond or have confidence? |
21816 | Did n''t he tell you that it was a secret, a mystery?" |
21816 | Did the wounded man die?" |
21816 | Did you not remark how he flinched under my eye?'' |
21816 | Did you not see our quack friend apply to himself his own quackery? |
21816 | Did you see him? |
21816 | Do n''t knaves munch up fools just as horses do oats?" |
21816 | Do n''t know much, hey?" |
21816 | Do n''t you now, barber, by your stubbornness on this occasion, give color to such a calumny?" |
21816 | Do n''t you recall me, now? |
21816 | Do n''t you see? |
21816 | Do n''t you see? |
21816 | Do n''t you see? |
21816 | Do n''t you see? |
21816 | Do n''t you see? |
21816 | Do n''t you think so?" |
21816 | Do n''t you think, barber, that you ought to elect? |
21816 | Do those words go together handsomely?" |
21816 | Do you know him, respected sir?" |
21816 | Do you not know that all men are rascals, and all boys, too?" |
21816 | Do you suppose a boy will?" |
21816 | Do_ you_ remember?" |
21816 | Does all the world act? |
21816 | Does he not, as I explained to you, hide under a surly air a philanthropic heart? |
21816 | Enough to make it an object? |
21816 | Flinched? |
21816 | For how can that be trustworthy that teaches distrust?" |
21816 | For how can you help that the helper must turn out a creditor? |
21816 | For how, indeed, may respectful conceptions of him coexist with the perpetual habit of taking him by the nose? |
21816 | For the gulling, tell me, is it humane to talk so to this poor old man? |
21816 | For was not that loan of Orchis to China Aster the first step towards their estrangement? |
21816 | For what? |
21816 | For who that heard that laugh, but would as naturally argue from it a sound heart as sound lungs? |
21816 | For, after all these weary lockings- up and lockings- down, upon how much of a higher plain do you finally stand? |
21816 | For, comparatively inexperienced as you are, my dear young friend, did you never observe how little, very little, confidence, there is? |
21816 | For, what creature but a madman would not rather do good than ill, when it is plain that, good or ill, it must return upon himself?" |
21816 | Free? |
21816 | Friends? |
21816 | From bad boys spring good men? |
21816 | From the Brazils, ai n''t you? |
21816 | Fry?" |
21816 | Fry?" |
21816 | Genial cards? |
21816 | Genius? |
21816 | God bless me; hate Indians? |
21816 | Half spent, he lay mute awhile, then feebly raising himself, in a voice for the moment made strong by the sarcasm, said,"A hundred dollars? |
21816 | Has the misanthrope such a thing as an appetite? |
21816 | Hate Indians? |
21816 | Have I your kind leave, ladies and gentlemen?" |
21816 | Have you a copy with you?" |
21816 | Have you any objections to begin now?" |
21816 | He diddled you with that hocus- pocus, did he? |
21816 | He drules out some stale stuff about''loan losing both itself and friend,''do n''t he? |
21816 | He opened his eyes, feebly stared, and still more feebly said--"It''s a little dim here, ai n''t it? |
21816 | He tried to maintain his rights, did n''t he?" |
21816 | He was honest, and must have moneyed friends; and could he not press his sales of candles? |
21816 | He_ was_ a little suspicious- minded, was n''t he?" |
21816 | Hence that significant passage in Scripture,''Who will pity the charmer that is bitten with a serpent?''" |
21816 | Honor bright, now; will it? |
21816 | How about winter, old boy?" |
21816 | How about winter, when the cold Cossacks come clattering and jingling? |
21816 | How came your fellow- creature, Cain, after the first murder, to go and build the first city? |
21816 | How could you tell me that absurd story of your being in need? |
21816 | How fares he in solitude? |
21816 | How feels he, and what does he, when suddenly awakened, alone, at dead of night, by fusilades of thunder?" |
21816 | How has it proved in our interview? |
21816 | How is one to take Autolycus? |
21816 | How is that?" |
21816 | How is the gain made?" |
21816 | How much are they?" |
21816 | How much money did the devil make by gulling Eve?" |
21816 | How soon, friend?" |
21816 | How weak you are; and weakness, is it not the time for confidence? |
21816 | How, how? |
21816 | I confess I am not familiar with such gentry any further than reading about them in the papers-- but those two are-- are sharpers, ai nt they?" |
21816 | I could not think it; and, coming here to look for myself, what do I read? |
21816 | I do n''t deny but your clover is sweet, and your dandelions do n''t roar; but whose hailstones smashed my windows?" |
21816 | I he who, going a step beyond misanthropy, was less a man- hater than a man- hooter? |
21816 | I mean in the sort of invidious sense you cite?" |
21816 | I mean, no one connected with any charity? |
21816 | I say are we not human? |
21816 | I should like to know who you call foes? |
21816 | I think I am not rash in saying that; am I, sir?" |
21816 | I, Diogenes? |
21816 | If so, what gift more appropriate to that sufferer than this tasteful little bottle of Pain Dissuader?" |
21816 | If the man of hate, how could John Moredock be also the man of love? |
21816 | Imprisoned now, was n''t he?" |
21816 | In short, once again to return to the point: for what reason did you warn me against my friend?" |
21816 | In the natural advance of all creatures, do they not bury themselves over and over again in the endless resurrection of better and better? |
21816 | Invited you to tea? |
21816 | Invoke God''s blessing upon him? |
21816 | Is he, or is he not, what he seems to be?" |
21816 | Is it a real goose?" |
21816 | Is it barren? |
21816 | Is it because I publicly take under my protection a figure like this? |
21816 | Is it not so?" |
21816 | Is it not to nature that you are indebted for that robustness of mind which you so unhandsomely use to her scandal? |
21816 | Is it not writ, that on a moonlight night,"Medea gathered the enchanted herbs That did renew old Æson?" |
21816 | Is it so_ certain_ you are going to lose?" |
21816 | Is it that he feels that whatever man may be, man is not the universe? |
21816 | Is it worth my while to go on, respected sir?" |
21816 | Is my reverend friend here, too, a performer?" |
21816 | Is not my friend sagacious? |
21816 | Is not that air of yours, so spiritlessly enduring and yielding, the very air of a slave? |
21816 | Is summer good to him? |
21816 | Is that compatible with maxims of Italy?" |
21816 | Is the world too old? |
21816 | Is this a snuff- colored surtout of yours, or ai n''t it? |
21816 | It is agreed we shall be brothers, then?" |
21816 | It is terrible; but is it surprising? |
21816 | It says as much as''not warranted;''for what do college men say of anything of that sort? |
21816 | Just cast up in your private mind who is your master, will you?" |
21816 | Knavery to devote the half of one''s receipts to charity? |
21816 | Life- preserver?" |
21816 | Lint her out?" |
21816 | Look, now; take it this way: A modest man thrust out naked into the street, would he not be abashed? |
21816 | Love affair?" |
21816 | Madam, or sir, would you visit upon the butterfly the caterpillar? |
21816 | Man or woman, is there none such here?" |
21816 | May I ask, are you a sister of the Church?" |
21816 | May I proceed? |
21816 | Meantime, to himself he incoherently mumbled:--"Confidence? |
21816 | Molino del Rey? |
21816 | My cider- mill-- does that ever steal my cider? |
21816 | My conscience upbraids me.--The poor negro: You see him occasionally, perhaps?" |
21816 | My corn- husker-- does that ever give me insolence? |
21816 | My dear fellow,"beaming his eyes full upon him,"what injury have I done you, that you should receive my greeting with a curtailed civility?" |
21816 | My friend, then, is something like what the Indians call a Great Medicine, is he? |
21816 | My mowing- machine-- does that ever lay a- bed mornings? |
21816 | Nothing but yarbs? |
21816 | Now I put it to you, Frank; is there anything in it hortatory to high, heroic, disinterested effort? |
21816 | Now eight hundred millions-- what is that, to average it, but one little dollar a head for the population of the planet? |
21816 | Now quick, which way did he go?" |
21816 | Now the bridge that has carried me so well over, shall I not praise it?" |
21816 | Now, have you no confidence in my art?" |
21816 | Now, is all safe?" |
21816 | Now, sir, take a young boy, a young male infant rather, a man- child in short-- what sir, I respectfully ask, do you in the first place remark?" |
21816 | Now, then"( winningly),"this book-- will you let me drown it for you?" |
21816 | Now, those who have faithless memories, should they not have some little confidence in the less faithless memories of others?" |
21816 | Now, what I would ask is, do you think it sensible standing for a sensible man, one foot on confidence and the other on suspicion? |
21816 | Now, what does that amount to but this, that you dreamed an angel appeared to you? |
21816 | Now, what is it, Frank? |
21816 | Of being in need? |
21816 | Of course you have papers?" |
21816 | Of long winters how much can he sleep? |
21816 | Of what school or system was the judge, pray?" |
21816 | Oh, whar, whar is dat good friend of dis darkie''s, dat good man wid de weed?" |
21816 | Oh, who can wonder at that old reproach against science, that it is atheistical? |
21816 | On board this boat?" |
21816 | On what paper? |
21816 | Or a friend be the worse by a friend? |
21816 | Or is it I who am mistaken?--Are you not, sir, Henry Roberts, forwarding merchant, of Wheeling, Pennsylvania? |
21816 | Or where did the novelist pick them up? |
21816 | Or, as Hamlet says, were it''to consider the thing too curiously?''" |
21816 | Our office----""Came aboard at that last landing, eh? |
21816 | Philanthropic scruples, doubtless, forbid your going as far as New Orleans for slaves?" |
21816 | Philosophy, knowledge, experience-- were those trusty knights of the castle recreant? |
21816 | Pray how was that?" |
21816 | Pray, barber,"innocently looking up,"which think you is the superior creature?" |
21816 | Pray, do you know a herb- doctor there? |
21816 | Pray, is it not to nature that you owe the very eyes by which you criticise her?" |
21816 | Pray, my dear sir, do you feel quite yourself again? |
21816 | Pray, no doubt you could accommodate me with a bosom- friend too, could n''t you? |
21816 | Pray, sir, who or what may you have confidence in?" |
21816 | Pray, sir,"with a sudden illumination,"about six years back, did it happen to you to receive any injury on the head? |
21816 | Pray, which do you think are most, knaves or fools?" |
21816 | Pray, will you call him back, and let me ask him if he were really in earnest?" |
21816 | Pray,"with enlivened air,"was he anyway connected with the Moredocks of Moredock Hall, Northamptonshire, England?" |
21816 | Put the blessed Bible in his trunk? |
21816 | Relenting in his air, the sick man cast upon him a long glance of beseeching, as if saying,"With confidence must come hope; and how can hope be?" |
21816 | Resaca de la Palma?" |
21816 | Ring? |
21816 | Ring?" |
21816 | Ringman? |
21816 | Ringman? |
21816 | Roberts?" |
21816 | Roberts?" |
21816 | Security? |
21816 | Seems that conclusion too confident?" |
21816 | Sell you a money- belt, sir?" |
21816 | Shall I recite it?" |
21816 | Shall a peach refresh him? |
21816 | Should we not now, sir? |
21816 | Smooth scamp in a snuff- colored surtout?" |
21816 | So the constables helped me, asking_ where_ would I go? |
21816 | So we say to our patrons when they would fain return a boy upon us as unworthy:''Madam, or sir,( as the case may be) has this boy a beard?'' |
21816 | So,"with an indifferent air,"you have seen the unfortunate man I spoke of?" |
21816 | Sort of low spirits among holders on the subject of that stock?" |
21816 | Stout?" |
21816 | Sublime fellow, ai n''t he?" |
21816 | Sure it''s all nat''ral? |
21816 | Surely, you do n''t mean to say, in so many words, that you have no confidence? |
21816 | Surprising, that one should hate a race which he believes to be red from a cause akin to that which makes some tribes of garden insects green? |
21816 | Swift as a sister- of- charity, the stranger hovers over him:--"My poor, poor sir, what can I do for you?" |
21816 | Take him in and clothe him; would not his confidence be restored? |
21816 | Take my rifle from me, give him motive, and what will come? |
21816 | Tell me, if----""If? |
21816 | Tell me, was it your misfortune to receive any concussion upon the brain about the period I speak of? |
21816 | Tell me, were they not human who engendered us, as before heaven I believe they shall be whom we shall engender? |
21816 | That is, will what is fat on the board prove fat on the bones? |
21816 | That''s the very stool I was sitting on, ai n''t it?" |
21816 | The best wisdom in this world, and the last spoken by its teacher, did it not literally and truly come in the form of table- talk?" |
21816 | The bowing and cringing, time- serving old sinner-- is such an one to give manly precepts to youth? |
21816 | The effervescence of champagne, with what eye does he behold it? |
21816 | The old man stared at him a moment; then, whispering to the cosmopolitan:"Strange boy, this; sort of simple, ai n''t he? |
21816 | The word, I mean; what expresses it? |
21816 | Then clattering round the brush in the cup,"Will you be shaved, or wo n''t you?" |
21816 | Then you do n''t want the money for yourself?" |
21816 | Then, anxiously putting on his spectacles, he scrutinized it pretty closely--"well soldered? |
21816 | Then, gayly poking at him with his gold- headed cane,''Why do n''t you, then? |
21816 | Then, you rather like St. Augustine, sir?" |
21816 | There, you can get along now, ca n''t you? |
21816 | They called me Happy Tom, d''ye see? |
21816 | This transfer- book, now,"holding it up so as to bring the lettering in sight,"how do you know that it may not be a bogus one? |
21816 | Thrown out of employment, what could Jack Ketch turn his hand to? |
21816 | To resume: taking the thing as I did, can you be surprised at my uneasiness in reading passages so charged with the spirit of distrust?" |
21816 | To sell a thing on credit may be an accommodation, but where is the friendliness? |
21816 | To solicit out of hand, for my private behoof, an hundred dollars from a perfect stranger? |
21816 | To that mob of misery, what is a joint here and a loaf there? |
21816 | Two or three dirty dollars the motive to so many nice wiles? |
21816 | Was it, or was it not, nature?" |
21816 | Was not Seneca a usurer? |
21816 | Was the caterpillar one creature, and is the butterfly another? |
21816 | Was there ever one who so made it his particular mission to hate Indians that, to designate him, a special word has been coined-- Indian- hater?" |
21816 | Well, my young friend, what is it? |
21816 | Well, souse I went into a wet cell, like a canal- boat splashing into the lock; locked up in pickle, d''ye see? |
21816 | Well, suppose he ca n''t, have you any objection to telling him your story? |
21816 | Well, the Detector says----""But why, in this case, care what it says? |
21816 | Well, then, is there no object of charity here?" |
21816 | Well, then, what, in the first place, in a general view, do you remark, respected sir, in that male baby or man- child?" |
21816 | What am I? |
21816 | What are a score or two of missionaries to such a people? |
21816 | What are his dreams? |
21816 | What are they like?" |
21816 | What are you dragging him in for all the time? |
21816 | What are you ducking and groveling about? |
21816 | What avails, then, that some one Indian, or some two or three, treat a backwoodsman friendly- like? |
21816 | What better proof, now, that we are kind, considerate fellows, with responsive fellow- feelings-- eh, barber? |
21816 | What can you prove against him?" |
21816 | What could it be? |
21816 | What do them sentimental souls know of prisons or any other black fact? |
21816 | What do you mean by asking me to do you a favor?" |
21816 | What do you mean?" |
21816 | What do you say for a walk? |
21816 | What do you say?" |
21816 | What do you think, Charlie?" |
21816 | What do you want of me?" |
21816 | What do_ I_ carry? |
21816 | What does the father? |
21816 | What ge''mman want to own dese here legs?" |
21816 | What has a broker to do with lather? |
21816 | What have I done? |
21816 | What hinders?" |
21816 | What is he?" |
21816 | What is it Frank?" |
21816 | What is it but eight hundred millions for each of fourteen years? |
21816 | What is it?" |
21816 | What is yours, pray?" |
21816 | What more would you have?" |
21816 | What say you?" |
21816 | What should I, or you either, know of him? |
21816 | What to us are their words or their thoughts? |
21816 | What was that I was saying? |
21816 | What''s Charlemont? |
21816 | What''s wisdom itself but table- talk? |
21816 | What''s your name, barber?" |
21816 | Whatever the nation''s growing opulence or power, does it not lackey his heels? |
21816 | Where do you sleep there of nights?" |
21816 | Where does any novelist pick up any character? |
21816 | Where go you? |
21816 | Where is he?" |
21816 | Where is it? |
21816 | Where is your patriotism? |
21816 | Where is your security?" |
21816 | Where your gratitude? |
21816 | Where''s your desk? |
21816 | Where''s your office?" |
21816 | Which is his berth, pray?" |
21816 | Who are you? |
21816 | Who did ever dress or act like your cosmopolitan? |
21816 | Who is he?" |
21816 | Who is he?" |
21816 | Who is that too charitable baker, pray?" |
21816 | Who is your master, pray; or are you owned by a company?" |
21816 | Who knows, my dear sir, but for a time you may have taken yourself for somebody else? |
21816 | Who would go sounding his way into love or friendship, like a strange ship by night, into an enemy''s harbor?" |
21816 | Who would have thought it? |
21816 | Who''s Charlemont?" |
21816 | Who, as steward, takes the money?" |
21816 | Who, without cause, inflicteth wounds? |
21816 | Why did n''t you out with that before?" |
21816 | Why did they let him go in his old age on the town? |
21816 | Why do n''t you be bright and hopeful, like me? |
21816 | Why do n''t you have confidence, China Aster? |
21816 | Why do n''t you say two millions? |
21816 | Why do n''t you, China Aster, take a bright view of life? |
21816 | Why not? |
21816 | Why should he or anybody else hate Indians? |
21816 | Why speak you, sir, of news, and all that, when you must see this is a book I have here-- the Bible, not a newspaper?" |
21816 | Why talk of necessities when nakedness and starvation beget the only real necessities?" |
21816 | Why that cold sign? |
21816 | Why will the captain suffer these begging fellows on board? |
21816 | Why wrinkle the brow, and waste the oil both of life and the lamp, only to turn out a head kept cool by the under ice of the heart? |
21816 | Why, does he not among other things say:--''The friends thou hast, and their adoption tried, Grapple them to thy soul with hooks of steel''? |
21816 | Why, with painful words, hint the vanity of that which the pains of this body have too painfully proved?" |
21816 | Why? |
21816 | Why? |
21816 | Will you be shaved?" |
21816 | Will you pay three per cent a month? |
21816 | With the phlegm of an old banker pouching the change, the boy now turned to the other:"Sell you one, sir?" |
21816 | With those coat- tails and that spinal complaint of servility? |
21816 | Wo n''t you look?" |
21816 | Would you be so kind?" |
21816 | Would you, for one, turn the cold shoulder to a friend-- a convivial one, say, whose pennilessness should be suddenly revealed to you?" |
21816 | Yarb, ai n''t it?" |
21816 | Yarb- medicine; you are that yarb- doctor, too?" |
21816 | Yes, and it would help_ your_ memory, too, would n''t it, barber? |
21816 | You a freeman, you flatter yourself? |
21816 | You are an abolitionist, ai n''t you?" |
21816 | You call yourself a bone- setter-- a natural bone- setter, do ye? |
21816 | You called for port wine, did n''t you?" |
21816 | You did not hear me, my young friend, did you? |
21816 | You do n''t want to invest?" |
21816 | You see him, do n''t you?" |
21816 | You tell me you can not certainly know who or what my friend is; pray, what do you conjecture him to be?" |
21816 | You there? |
21816 | You will do me the favor wo n''t you?" |
21816 | You wo n''t stand by and see the human race abused? |
21816 | You would have confidence?" |
21816 | You''ve seen such leathery old garretteers, have n''t you? |
21816 | You, or the race? |
21816 | Your statement,"he added"tells a very fine story; but pray, was not your stock a little heavy awhile ago? |
21816 | _ I?_ I say again there is nothing I am more suspicious of. |
21816 | _ I_ ask a loan? |
21816 | _ Sure_ it will do me good?" |
21816 | _ that_ a life- preserver? |
21816 | again in the lyric mood,"Say, Frank, are we not men? |
21816 | and Swedenborg, though with one eye on the invisible, did he not keep the other on the main chance? |
21816 | be companionable with himself? |
21816 | coughed the miser in echo;"why should n''t it? |
21816 | cried Charlie, who, on his side, seemed with his whole heart to enter into the spirit of the thing,"what has confidence to do with the matter? |
21816 | cried another voice with a brogue;"arrah and is''t wisdom the two geese are gabbling about all this while? |
21816 | cried the barber, losing patience, and with it respect;"stubbornness?" |
21816 | demanded the young clergyman, flushing,"me?" |
21816 | did he? |
21816 | do n''t you see, now?" |
21816 | downward tendency? |
21816 | eagerly moving round his chair,"what is it?" |
21816 | echoed the cosmopolitan, slowly expanding his;"what is there in this world for one to open his eyes to? |
21816 | expressly studied boys, eh? |
21816 | have you, too, been distrusted? |
21816 | he operates, does he? |
21816 | he sighed,"little pity for it, for who sees it?--have you dropped anything?" |
21816 | how comes on the soft cash?" |
21816 | how ingenious we human beings are; and how kindly we reciprocate each other''s little delicacies, do n''t we? |
21816 | how soon-- ugh, ugh!--would my money be trebled? |
21816 | hum, bubble!--Confidence? |
21816 | is it not the most graceful and bounteous of all growths? |
21816 | mean?" |
21816 | my wife drink Santa Cruz?'' |
21816 | or is the wind East, d''ye think?" |
21816 | or rather, tried to laugh at?" |
21816 | quite tight?" |
21816 | regarding the serene speaker with unaffected curiosity;"are you really in earnest?" |
21816 | said the man in gray;"where is he? |
21816 | still more bewildered,"do you, then, go about the world, gratis, seeking to invest people''s money for them?" |
21816 | that as the presence of man frights birds away, so, many bird- like thoughts? |
21816 | that glory, beauty, kindness, are not all engrossed by him? |
21816 | to feel what it was to be a snake? |
21816 | to glide unsuspected in grass? |
21816 | to sting, to kill at a touch; your whole beautiful body one iridescent scabbard of death? |
21816 | unwilling to be downright harsh with so affectionate a lad;''and he seems a little hollow inside the haunch there, do n''t he? |
21816 | where?" |
21816 | where?" |
21816 | where?" |
21816 | who devised it? |
21816 | who is he?" |
21816 | whose, pray? |
21816 | you do n''t want to invest?" |
21816 | you, upon whom nature has placarded the evidence of your claims?" |
53650 | ''A letter?'' 53650 ''A little what?'' |
53650 | ''Ah, well,_ paid for_ or subscribed for?'' 53650 ''Ai n''t I forbid you?'' |
53650 | ''Ai n''t he?'' 53650 ''Ai n''t it?'' |
53650 | ''Ai n''t we-- ain''t we, Mis''Sykes?'' 53650 ''Ai n''t we--_ain''t we?_''I says, like Mis''Toplady had. |
53650 | ''Ai n''t we?'' 53650 ''Ai n''t you no idees about how well- bred young ladies should conduct themselves?'' |
53650 | ''All light in the window?'' 53650 ''All_ what_?'' |
53650 | ''Always?'' 53650 ''Am I here to- morrow? |
53650 | ''Am I keeping the rain off you two people?'' 53650 ''Amanda,''pipes up Timothy,''air you a fool party to this fool doin''s?'' |
53650 | ''An''lose the country trade in lunches?'' 53650 ''And not watch them come up?'' |
53650 | ''And you think,''he says,''that you would be just as wonderful in public life as you would be in your home-- your very own home?'' 53650 ''Are you in favour of folks or tombstones?'' |
53650 | ''Be they doin''it to the others, too?'' 53650 ''But what''s the idee-- what''s the idee?'' |
53650 | ''But who are you-- where do you live?'' 53650 ''By the way, Silas,''I says,''speaking of dates, it ai n''t more''n a_ year_ past the time you aldermen was going to clear out Black Hollow, is it? |
53650 | ''Chris,''I says,''what you pulling out?'' 53650 ''Christopher,''I says then,''where did you get this piece of paper? |
53650 | ''Civic work?'' 53650 ''Copy o''what?'' |
53650 | ''Cripple?'' 53650 ''Did my daddy_ go out_?'' |
53650 | ''Did n''t he say anything back?'' 53650 ''Did she-- did she?'' |
53650 | ''Did you squeeze me on purpose?'' 53650 ''Do n''t it seem hopeless?'' |
53650 | ''Do n''t you see,''she says,''do n''t you see, Mis''Sykes, that''s what Mis''Lacy meant?'' 53650 ''Do n''t you?'' |
53650 | ''Do you like this house, dear?'' 53650 ''Do you mean pretty good, Silas, or do you mean pretty paying?'' |
53650 | ''Do you mean you are n''t going to marry him?'' 53650 ''Do you want to be a poet when you grow up?'' |
53650 | ''Evenin''paper?'' 53650 ''Feel the same way about some of the Ten Commandments, do n''t you, Silas?'' |
53650 | ''For keeps?'' 53650 ''Good Lord,''says Alex,''but how do you know what-- what he wants?'' |
53650 | ''Have n''t they told you,''he says,''that if he has an operation on his knee, you can have a chance at saving the leg? 53650 ''How big is Friendship Village?'' |
53650 | ''How do you know,''Robin says,''what you are letting go?'' 53650 ''How do you spell_ embarrass_?'' |
53650 | ''How much settin''home evenings did you do when you was young, Silas?'' 53650 ''How so?'' |
53650 | ''How was he?'' 53650 ''How you going to get them to set home, Silas?'' |
53650 | ''How''d you get on?'' 53650 ''How''s the little Cadoza boy?'' |
53650 | ''Huh,''he says, elegant,''did n''t I tell you you was bitin''off more''n you could chew? 53650 ''I?'' |
53650 | ''In what?'' 53650 ''Is Otie sick again?'' |
53650 | ''Is arithmetic good an''morals_ not_, Silas Sykes?'' 53650 ''Is he a cripple?'' |
53650 | ''Is it a game?'' 53650 ''Is it me telling my feet where to go or do they tell me where I go?'' |
53650 | ''Is it yours, Mis''Cadoza?'' 53650 ''Is n''t it a miracle,''she says to us,''the way we can call out-- being liked? |
53650 | ''Is n''t it really meddling to let him be in a bad way when we can put him in a better one?'' 53650 ''Is the town run for the sake of being the town, with money in its treasury, or is the town run for the folks in it?'' |
53650 | ''Is your mouth home?'' 53650 ''Is_ that_,''I ask''him,''what you''re professor of, over to Indian Mound college?'' |
53650 | ''It is n''t_ by_, is it?'' 53650 ''Let''s get inside, shall we?'' |
53650 | ''Mame,''she says,''set over here where you can use the lead- pencil on my watch chain, and put down that crochet pattern I wanted, will you?'' 53650 ''May I see you to- morrow?'' |
53650 | ''Me?'' 53650 ''Mean to say you get a cooked supper in that rig?'' |
53650 | ''Mean to say?'' 53650 ''Miss Marsh,''she says,''what kind of people must they be that can stay alive in a kitchen like that?'' |
53650 | ''Must n''t there be something to do with them, living, if there''s everything to be done for them, dead?'' 53650 ''My land, was her husband a felon or a thief or what that she do n''t use his name?'' |
53650 | ''My,''says Mis''Holcomb to her,''it''s all going off nice so far, ai n''t it?'' 53650 ''Nothing in a book, with long words and italics?'' |
53650 | ''Notice_ what_?'' 53650 ''Oh, ladies,''she says,''wo n''t one of you come down to the house? |
53650 | ''Paid circulation or got- out circulation?'' 53650 ''Robin,''he says,''did-- did my daddy leave me a letter?'' |
53650 | ''Second: That he was in the milk business for a living, and did the town expect him to keep it in milk for its health? 53650 ''Sick like my mama was?'' |
53650 | ''Sketch of my life?'' 53650 ''So you did n''t get a thing?'' |
53650 | ''So you think,''says Elbert,''that you''re just as strong as I am-- to carry things along? 53650 ''That makes me think,''puts in Mis''Toplady, hasty,''speaking of company so, who''s heard anything about the evenin''company up to Proudfits''?'' |
53650 | ''That man,''Robin says,''the father-- is he ill? 53650 ''The village?'' |
53650 | ''Then how''ll I know?'' 53650 ''They ca n''t be a great deal goin''on here, is they?'' |
53650 | ''To come back to?'' 53650 ''To folks?'' |
53650 | ''To tell me what to do?'' 53650 ''Truly,''she said,''have n''t you any place to go to- night?'' |
53650 | ''Well, Miss Marsh,''says he,''and do you live everywhere, like a good fairy?'' 53650 ''Well, little brother,''says Insley,''what''s the trouble?'' |
53650 | ''Well,''says Silas, sour,''what you goin''to_ do_ if the men decides to let you try this?'' 53650 ''Well,''says Silas,''that''s where they ought to be, ai n''t it?'' |
53650 | ''Well- a, make him tell his name, why do n''t you?'' 53650 ''Well- a, settin''out bushes?'' |
53650 | ''Well- a,''says Mis''Sykes,''do what?'' 53650 ''Well- said, how''s the little boy, Mis''Emmons?'' |
53650 | ''What are they for?'' 53650 ''What are we going to do with him?'' |
53650 | ''What can_ you_ make, Chris?'' 53650 ''What d''you know about managin''a Fourth?'' |
53650 | ''What did you say to him?'' 53650 ''What do we get a monument for, anyway?'' |
53650 | ''What do you expect?'' 53650 ''What do you mean?'' |
53650 | ''What does he mean?'' 53650 ''What for?'' |
53650 | ''What good''ll it do us to get the paper_ out_?'' 53650 ''What if it_ is_ so, Miss Marsh?'' |
53650 | ''What is it-- what, dear?'' 53650 ''What is it?'' |
53650 | ''What under the canopy_ is_ a marquee?'' 53650 ''What was the matter with your foot?'' |
53650 | ''What was you doin''in the church?'' 53650 ''What you goin''to_ do_?'' |
53650 | ''What you raisin''money for anyhow?'' 53650 ''What you talkin'', Amanda Toplady?'' |
53650 | ''What you talking?'' 53650 ''What''d you think of the meeting?'' |
53650 | ''What''ll we do?'' 53650 ''What''s its name?'' |
53650 | ''What''s the matter?'' 53650 ''What''s your circulation, same as City papers print to the top of the page?'' |
53650 | ''What?'' 53650 ''What_ is_ it-- what''s the matter, Christopher?'' |
53650 | ''Where''s Chris?'' 53650 ''Where''s Spudge''s Fourth comin''in?'' |
53650 | ''Who says I ai n''t honest?'' 53650 ''Who to?'' |
53650 | ''Who would collect the ten cents?'' 53650 ''Whose little boy are you?'' |
53650 | ''Why do n''t the men do it?'' 53650 ''Why do n''t you come in a minute,''I says,''and ask after Christopher? |
53650 | ''Why not ask them that''s got Dead in their own families, to pay out for''em, an''leave them alone that''s got livin''mouths to feed?'' 53650 ''Why, Chris-- can you?'' |
53650 | ''Why, Mis''Sykes,''says Mis''Toplady, blank,''ai n''t you et nothin''?'' 53650 ''Why,''I says,''it''s just being professor of human beings, then?'' |
53650 | ''Will he be here so soon?'' 53650 ''Will you ladies tell me,''he says,''where you going to_ get_ your news to put in your paper? |
53650 | ''Would n''t they mind it being late?'' 53650 ''Yes,''says Amanda, brave as you please,''ai n''t it pretty? |
53650 | ''You knew what I meant to- night?'' 53650 ''You poor thing,''I thought,''nobody come in time, did they?'' |
53650 | ''You''ll help, I know?'' 53650 ''_ Is_ there any use trying to do anything with anybody like that?'' |
53650 | ''_ Is_ there?'' 53650 ''_ So_,''says he to Letty, bantering,''you''re in favour of women voting, are you?'' |
53650 | ''_ Was_ you?'' 53650 ''_ What?_''says Silas, with horns on the word. |
53650 | ''_ Whose_ Board?'' 53650 Ai n''t it funny how your voice gets away from you sometimes and goes dilly- nipping around, pretty near saying things on its own account? |
53650 | Ai n''t it funny? 53650 Ai n''t it strange how slow the writing muscles and such is, that you do n''t use often? |
53650 | Alex looks over at her, incredulous, and spoke so:''You?'' 53650 And what had they got? |
53650 | And who do you s''pose we he d to read the Declaration of Independence? 53650 Are you going to be my daddy till you die, an''_ then_ who''ll be?" |
53650 | Daddy,he said,"what''s velvet?" |
53650 | Did he say anything back? |
53650 | Did he say anything back? |
53650 | Do you know what it is to want to do over again something that you ai n''t done for years and years? 53650 He looked at me over the child''s head, and I guess we was both thinking the same thing: Trust nature to work this out alone? |
53650 | I did walked all the way, did n''t I? |
53650 | I donno if you''ve ever noticed that look come in a girl''s face when she speaks of her children that are going to be sometime? 53650 I donno whether you''ve ever noticed the difference in the way women bustle around? |
53650 | Is those lights where we''re goin'', daddy? |
53650 | Mis''Sykes stood up in her most society way, an''--''Anybody want to back out?'' |
53650 | What do you guess us ladies had thought up for our procession,--with Insley back of us, letting us think we thought it up alone? 53650 What is the biggest thing everybody knows? |
53650 | What other nice thing you been thinkin''of? |
53650 | When she see it, what do you suppose Letty done? 53650 Where_ is_ my mamma, an''will she rock somebody else?" |
53650 | Will-- will there be any supper till morning? |
53650 | You goin''''way? |
53650 | ''Ai n''t the folks the town really?'' |
53650 | ''Ai n''t they our Board? |
53650 | ''Ai n''t we?'' |
53650 | ''Air you crazy, Calliope Marsh? |
53650 | ''Amanda,''he says,''I hope you ai n''t sunk so low as Calliope?'' |
53650 | ''And if they are, why ca n''t they pave themselves with their own money? |
53650 | ''And what we can give back?'' |
53650 | ''And will he_ go out_, like my mama?'' |
53650 | ''But what is it you want we should do, Silas?'' |
53650 | ''Ca n''t he tend to his type and things with us doing all the work?'' |
53650 | ''Can you cut it in squares?'' |
53650 | ''Can you make candy? |
53650 | ''Come and see if I''ll see you-- will you?'' |
53650 | ''Do n''t you forget about his throat, will you?'' |
53650 | ''Do n''t you know the Fourth of July can be made one of the best days of the year for your own town''s good? |
53650 | ''Do you like it?'' |
53650 | ''Do you mean have him educated? |
53650 | ''Fry meat in it, do you?'' |
53650 | ''Gone crazy- headed, hev ye?'' |
53650 | ''Got a good home?'' |
53650 | ''Had anybody ought to? |
53650 | ''Had n''t we best just leave him at the police station? |
53650 | ''Have you got one?'' |
53650 | ''He d a little party, did you? |
53650 | ''How can it help but be when you''re fast here some of the time? |
53650 | ''How could I help it?'' |
53650 | ''How do you mean, though? |
53650 | ''How ours?'' |
53650 | ''How''s literchoor?'' |
53650 | ''I mean the room-- the house?'' |
53650 | ''Is God outdoors nights?'' |
53650 | ''Is it a letter?'' |
53650 | ''Is it a story? |
53650 | ''Is it an_ r_ an''two_ s_''s or two_ r_''s and an_ s_?'' |
53650 | ''Is n''t it?'' |
53650 | ''Is n''t there some organization that''s doing things here?'' |
53650 | ''Is that Robin?'' |
53650 | ''Is you that Robin Redbreast?'' |
53650 | ''It was about all the nice things there is: You and you and you and hot ice- cream and the house''s party.... Is they any more?'' |
53650 | ''It''s not my affair, but do you think you ought to let Chris get so-- so used to you? |
53650 | ''Land, land,''Mis''Toplady says,''it looks kind of homey and old- fashioned, after all, do n''t it? |
53650 | ''Little outline of my boyhood? |
53650 | ''Look at here,''s''e,''what can I do for you? |
53650 | ''Look here,''he says,''you stay and dine, wo n''t you? |
53650 | ''Lord, is he still going on about everything? |
53650 | ''Mis''Sykes, how much does Silas rent the post- office hall for, a night?'' |
53650 | ''My friends,''Mis''Emmons says when she''d got through,''does n''t it seem to you as if our work had come to us? |
53650 | ''Running away?'' |
53650 | ''Same with food?'' |
53650 | ''Sew for the poor?'' |
53650 | ''They can do what they like, so''s public decency ai n''t injured, I s''pose, Silas?'' |
53650 | ''To what folks?'' |
53650 | ''To- day did n''t stop yet, did it?'' |
53650 | ''To- morrow we''ll play that, shall we?'' |
53650 | ''Want to see something?'' |
53650 | ''Was it Daniel Webster or Daniel Boone?'' |
53650 | ''Well, then, what are you doing to- day?'' |
53650 | ''Well-- is they many young people?'' |
53650 | ''What about them that do n''t get no votes?'' |
53650 | ''What about them that is beat in death like they may of been in life? |
53650 | ''What did you do?'' |
53650 | ''What game is that?'' |
53650 | ''What good is all that to Otie that''s lying over by Black Hollow? |
53650 | ''What in this world shall we do? |
53650 | ''What is there womanly about my bathing and feeding a child inside four clean walls, if dirt and bad food and neglect are outside for him? |
53650 | ''What say, Calliope?'' |
53650 | ''What started you men off on that tack at this time?'' |
53650 | ''What the men had ought to be up to an''ai n''t?'' |
53650 | ''What you going to be when you grow up to be a man?'' |
53650 | ''What''s she stick her own name in front of his last name like that for? |
53650 | ''What''s the good? |
53650 | ''What''s them kind o''folks_ for_ but such work?'' |
53650 | ''What''s your idee? |
53650 | ''What''s yours, dear?'' |
53650 | ''What?'' |
53650 | ''Where did your father go-- don''t you know that, Christopher?'' |
53650 | ''Where''s your delicate feelin''s, Calliope? |
53650 | ''Who you going to sue? |
53650 | ''Why do n''t we stick the money onto the new iron fence for Cemetery, same as we''ve been trying to do for years?'' |
53650 | ''Why_ poor_?'' |
53650 | ''With candy making and pictures and music and mebbe dancin''? |
53650 | ''You live, do n''t you-- in this town?'' |
53650 | ''You mean shuttin''up saloons an''like that?'' |
53650 | ''You want me to pay to be wrote up, is that it?'' |
53650 | ''Your cousin''s makin''the blocks, ai n''t he, Silas?'' |
53650 | ''_ Ai n''t it?_''She set thinking for a minute and then her face smoothed. |
53650 | ''_ Friendship Village Evenin''Daily, Extra?_ All the news for a dime?'' |
53650 | ''_ Friendship Village Evenin''Daily, Extra?_ All the news for a dime?'' |
53650 | Ai n''t it funny about your own first name? |
53650 | Ai n''t it the funniest thing, the way folks can have a way out right under their noses, an''not sense it?'' |
53650 | Ai n''t it?'' |
53650 | Ai n''t men the funniest lot of folks?'' |
53650 | Ai n''t we doin''our best to start''em right?'' |
53650 | Ai n''t you going to get it done_ this_ spring?'' |
53650 | An''can us women ever be big ones even if we want? |
53650 | An''here''s somethin''I''m puttin''in your coat pocket-- see? |
53650 | An''if she votes, what''s to prevent her bein''elected to some such job by main strength?'' |
53650 | An''like you wanted to go down it?'' |
53650 | An''what''s the sin an''the crime of what they''re doin''now? |
53650 | And Eppleby went on before Silas and Timothy could get the breath to reply:--"''The town''s nothin''but_ roots_, is it?'' |
53650 | And ai n''t it for all the world the way Nature works, destroying what comes out_ slickery_ and leaving that alone that resists her? |
53650 | And all of a sudden I says out what I thought:''Ladies,''I says,''and all of you: What to Emerel is hens and hams and credit? |
53650 | And do you appear everywhere, like a god?'' |
53650 | And everybody else''s wife, that''s doing the same thing to every behind- the- times dealer in town?'' |
53650 | And how does it keep the rest of the town safe?'' |
53650 | And last, except for the other two bands sprinkled along, come the leading citizens, and who do you guess_ they_ was? |
53650 | And play it''s molasses candy-- white molasses candy?'' |
53650 | And pull it-- like this?'' |
53650 | And then mebbe after a while, you''ll find that somebody had the same idea and dreamed it out, and died with it? |
53650 | And what could we say to them? |
53650 | And what in the world am I going to put on that child?'' |
53650 | And when we''ve vigilanced''em off the streets, where are we goin''to vigilance''em_ to_?'' |
53650 | And while he waited Insley says to me:"''Have you seen anything of the little boy to- day, Miss Marsh?'' |
53650 | And why do n''t we all reco''nize it and shut up?'' |
53650 | And yet it come from their same longing for fun, for joy-- and where was they to get it? |
53650 | Are n''t we all more interested in folks, than we are in their graves?'' |
53650 | Are n''t you trying to do it all at once?'' |
53650 | Are we runnin''this paper or ai n''t we? |
53650 | Are you ready, Aunt Eleanor?'' |
53650 | Be su''prised, wo n''t you, when you women get a bill for rent an''light for this night''s performance?'' |
53650 | Beans, buckwheat, rice-- what do you want to cream, Robin? |
53650 | But I done well by you, did n''t I? |
53650 | But he''s very, very sick, dear heart-- will you remember that when you see him? |
53650 | But talk about the ultimate good of a town... if a tannery is n''t that, what is it?'' |
53650 | But tell me: Whatever made you close your shops? |
53650 | But what I''d rather be is the sprinkler- cart man, would n''t you?'' |
53650 | But what did you say to the council about filling in the hole?'' |
53650 | But what you going to do for the girls and boys of Friendship Village that ai n''t hoodlums? |
53650 | By Jove, I''ve left Topping''s letter somewhere-- Insley, is it? |
53650 | Ca n''t he, Robin?'' |
53650 | Ca n''t she sell?'' |
53650 | Ca n''t you see daylight, Calliope?'' |
53650 | Ca n''t you see you''re disturbing us?'' |
53650 | Cadoza,''Insley says,''will you do something for me? |
53650 | Calliope,''she says to me,''did I buy what I ought to have bought?'' |
53650 | Can I know it too?"... |
53650 | Can you make po''try?'' |
53650 | Can you make that?'' |
53650 | Could a tent have anything to do with it?'' |
53650 | Could a woman ever chase to fires at three o''clock in the mornin''? |
53650 | Could you learn youngsters the Constitution of the United States in a room where they''d just been cookin''up cough drops an''hearin''dance tunes?'' |
53650 | Did n''t I give''em new clothes an''send''em boxes of oranges an''keep up their life insurance? |
53650 | Did n''t I honour my father an''mother as long as I had''em? |
53650 | Did they ever buy anything of me at more than cost? |
53650 | Did you know,''she adds,''that somebody else is waiting out here? |
53650 | Did you put that on just for us?'' |
53650 | Did you want to buy somethin''or did you want your mail?'' |
53650 | Do I ever come down to the store on the Sabbath Day? |
53650 | Do I ever distribute the mail then, even if I''m expectin''a letter myself? |
53650 | Do n''t I have to walk to- morrow?'' |
53650 | Do n''t equivocate,''she says;''_ can_ you make toast? |
53650 | Do n''t it seem as if that must mean something? |
53650 | Do n''t it seem like we''d ought to keep him around here somewheres and help him decide? |
53650 | Do n''t it seem like what he''s going to be is resting with us?'' |
53650 | Do n''t that make sense?'' |
53650 | Do n''t you think of that?...'' |
53650 | Do n''t you? |
53650 | Do you remember how we done it? |
53650 | Do you remember singin''school? |
53650 | Do you remember spellin''school? |
53650 | Do you sp''ose we''re any more scant of idees about our own nation?'' |
53650 | Do you want that?'' |
53650 | Do-- do you?'' |
53650 | Does he feel differently and do differently when folks do n''t know?'' |
53650 | Does he put all that on? |
53650 | Emmons, why do n''t we ask Miss Sidney for some plans for our plan?'' |
53650 | Has anybody got anything else to offer? |
53650 | Have you ever travelled anywheres?'' |
53650 | Have you ever tried to open a door in a solid wall? |
53650 | Have you only got one name?'' |
53650 | He must find a place to leave him: why not leave him here on the church steps,"outside the meetin''?" |
53650 | He''d want you to eat it-- wouldn''t he?'' |
53650 | Heard any sound out of his folks?'' |
53650 | Her hating windows, and him hating eaves- troughs, and what else did either of them have? |
53650 | Here? |
53650 | Hire the opery- house, air ye?'' |
53650 | How badly is he off?'' |
53650 | How do you know what you are saving?'' |
53650 | How do, Mr. Myers? |
53650 | How is it possible, I see he was asking himself the old, wore- out question, to drive out of the world something that is the world? |
53650 | How the devil do you stop here all the time-- or do you stop here all the time?...'' |
53650 | How''s business, Silas?'' |
53650 | Hunger and cold, darkness and wet and ill- luck-- why should he not keep the boy from these? |
53650 | I always say they must be either living or dead, or else where''s Threat come in? |
53650 | I always wanted to say: Have you been looking like that all the time since I last saw you, and how_ do_ you keep it up? |
53650 | I ask''him, wonderin'',''or is it''count of offending some?'' |
53650 | I s''pose you wonder what I''m sayin''all this to you for?'' |
53650 | I says, before I knew it,''do n''t you get awful sick of takin''pictures of humbly houses you do n''t care nothin''about?'' |
53650 | I suppose you would n''t want to do it this week?'' |
53650 | I wonder if I can bring Letty, too?'' |
53650 | I''ve wanted so much to ask you: Ca n''t we have him for ours?'' |
53650 | I-- I done pretty good for you, did n''t I, Chris?'' |
53650 | If you do n''t mind-- what is it that keeps you here at all? |
53650 | Is he hurt? |
53650 | Is it his mask? |
53650 | Is it the real typhoid, do you s''pose?'' |
53650 | It do n''t be anywhere near to- night, is it?'' |
53650 | It needs somebody to stay, do n''t you think?'' |
53650 | It''s a funny way to put it, ai n''t it? |
53650 | It''s dear to me, but it_ is_ a hole... eh? |
53650 | It''s nicer than bein''with me-- ain''t it? |
53650 | Java-- had Insley ever been in Java? |
53650 | Looks like it was goin''to be another nice day, do n''t it?'' |
53650 | Main points in my career?'' |
53650 | May I come in and get some lilac roots from you some day?'' |
53650 | Meanwhile, what of the boy? |
53650 | Minnie had died awhile before, and Minerva, her daughter, was on her way West to look for a position, and should she spend a few days with me? |
53650 | Mis''Sykes had opened her house to a suffrage meeting that evening, and Mis''Martin Lacy from the City was a- going to talk, and would I go over? |
53650 | Mr. Insley, can you make toast? |
53650 | Must n''t there be some place where we do n''t build walls around our names?'' |
53650 | Must you have a formal title for me? |
53650 | No? |
53650 | No?'' |
53650 | Nor they ca n''t put us in prison for debt, because who''d get their three meals? |
53650 | Not to settle down, you know, but for the Eternal Place To Come Back To?'' |
53650 | Now what can I get you, Mr. Insley? |
53650 | Oh, do n''t it to you?'' |
53650 | One was Daphne Street, by the turn, and he says:''It looks like a deep tunnel, do n''t it? |
53650 | Or somebody else tried to make it go a little? |
53650 | Plump, stark, starin''ravin''--why, woman alive, who''s goin''to donate the light an''the coal? |
53650 | Ready, Timothy? |
53650 | Remember Robin told you that?'' |
53650 | Robin,''he went on,''where do you think you would like to live? |
53650 | Seriously, have you ever tried to talk about the way things are going to be and to talk about it to a perfectly satisfied man?'' |
53650 | Sick will, tainted blood, ruined body-- to what were we all saving Chris? |
53650 | Silas''ll take you in the delivery wagon, wo n''t you, Silas? |
53650 | Somebody''s little bit of a beau? |
53650 | Something big? |
53650 | Suppose I had n''t tied it up?'' |
53650 | Surely you do n''t mean renouncing-- and that sort of thing?'' |
53650 | That''s where you do dream, ai n''t it, Silas?'' |
53650 | The Sabbath I locked the cat in, did n''t I send the boy down to let it out, for fear I''d be misjudged if I done it? |
53650 | The feeling young and free and springy, and the wanting somehow to express it? |
53650 | The sheriff or the coroner or whoever it is they have, is comin''with injunctions--_is_ that like handcuffs, do you know? |
53650 | There''d be no objection to that, would there?'' |
53650 | They ai n''t no real garbage pail--''"''Who said,"Give me Liberty or give me Death?"'' |
53650 | They''ll spoil if you do n''t,"and,"Jimmy, ca n''t you make''way with them cold pancakes?" |
53650 | Thought you''d get up a little party an''charge it to the Board, did you? |
53650 | To find them a place to stay? |
53650 | Want some assistance from me, do you, in editin''this paper o''yours? |
53650 | Was it them kind of things you meant about in Sodality to- night that we''d ought to do? |
53650 | Was n''t it our work to do, too?'' |
53650 | Well, I remember; an''we both remember; an''answer me this: Do you s''pose them young things in there is any differ''nt than we was? |
53650 | Well, I wonder how it''s believed to be in the sight of the Lord?'' |
53650 | What are we going to do for ourselves this year? |
53650 | What did he mean by that, do you s''pose?'' |
53650 | What did you come in?'' |
53650 | What did you say to us? |
53650 | What do they do in Europe on the Fourth o''July, anyway?'' |
53650 | What do you mean about the Ten Commandments?'' |
53650 | What else could they do? |
53650 | What if that''s all-- they meant us to do?'' |
53650 | What in creation ailed us all? |
53650 | What is it you want me to do for you?'' |
53650 | What leads you to suppose that Nature really wants him to live, anyway?'' |
53650 | What say, Timothy?'' |
53650 | What say, ladies?'' |
53650 | What say, ladies?'' |
53650 | What will he do when you''re-- when you go away?'' |
53650 | What you doin''to''em? |
53650 | What you goin''to do for them? |
53650 | What''ll we put in the paper then?'' |
53650 | What''s a fence beside folks?'' |
53650 | What''s that if it ai n''t patriotic?'' |
53650 | What''s the bakery like where you buy it? |
53650 | What''s the matter with him?'' |
53650 | What''s there to cheer them up? |
53650 | What''s your name, Boy?'' |
53650 | What_ should_ we do without the rainbow? |
53650 | When did any of us ladies ever fail that''s here? |
53650 | Where do you get it? |
53650 | Where had his father gone? |
53650 | Where had his father gone? |
53650 | Where is the old- time hospitality? |
53650 | Where you goin''to_ get_ a place for''em? |
53650 | Where--''"''Only two?'' |
53650 | Which way do you like?'' |
53650 | Who do I ever bear false witness against unless I know they''ve done what I say they''ve done? |
53650 | Who was I to leave in the_ tent_? |
53650 | Who was waiting for any of us? |
53650 | Who''s coming?'' |
53650 | Why do n''t you do it regular an''manly?'' |
53650 | Why do they call''em_ tinklin''_ cannibals?'' |
53650 | Why not give''em a place to meet and be together, normal and nice, and some of us there to make it pleasant for''em?'' |
53650 | Why not leave the child at the bakery? |
53650 | Why not leave the child there? |
53650 | Why not there? |
53650 | Why should n''t it make a man? |
53650 | Why, how could I do anything else?'' |
53650 | Why?" |
53650 | Will you all come to see her?'' |
53650 | Will you tell me if there is anything more womanly than my right to help make the world as decent for my children as I would make my own home?'' |
53650 | Will you tell me, Silas Sykes, where you''re going to curfew''em_ to_?'' |
53650 | Will you?'' |
53650 | Wo n''t those and the conservatories do you?'' |
53650 | Wo n''t you be my advocate?'' |
53650 | Would n''t we all rather hev one of our sick headaches,''she says, firm,''than mebbe make ourselves the Laughing Stock? |
53650 | You''re going right that way, ai n''t you?'' |
53650 | Your wife, that''s the editor? |
53650 | Yours and mine and Friendship Village''s? |
53650 | _ What makes us let him die?_''"She said it so calm that it caught even my breath-- and my breath, in these things, ai n''t easy caught. |
53650 | _ What_ are they, daddy?" |
53650 | _ Where to?_ What say, Silas?'' |
53650 | _ Where to?_ What say, Silas?'' |
53650 | _ Where''s the line-- where''s the line?_ How do we know which is the ones to do for? |
53650 | _ Where''s the line-- where''s the line?_ How do we know which is the ones to do for? |
53650 | _ You?_''"''I thought mebbe the building and the School Board, too, was_ for_ the good o''the young folks,''I says to him, sharp. |
53650 | ai n''t the night grand? |
53650 | do?'' |
53650 | he asks, shrill,''like my mama did?'' |
53650 | he said,''why did you let the car come back without you? |
53650 | says Mis''Sykes,''_ what_ is their mothers thinkin''of?'' |
53650 | says Silas, crisp; and''''Mandy, what the blazes do you mean?'' |
53650 | says Silas;''why do n''t some o''you say somethin''?'' |
53650 | she said,''why ai n''t some of us thought o''that before? |
41151 | ''Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth?'' |
41151 | ''Dick?'' 41151 ''Did he lie about your coming to see him?'' |
41151 | ''Lee,''I cried,''why am I here?'' 41151 ''No? |
41151 | ''So we''ve a broker in the house, eh?'' 41151 A quarrel, eh? |
41151 | A speculator, eh? 41151 A what?" |
41151 | About the light? 41151 After that, what did you do?" |
41151 | All right? |
41151 | And do you think this very strange gentleman will condescend to help me, Jenkins? |
41151 | And how long have you been in his employ? |
41151 | And how much nearer to the solution have I carried you? |
41151 | And it is n''t hers? |
41151 | And now shall I drive you home? |
41151 | And that gives you the right to intrude on my privacy, I suppose? |
41151 | And that proves? |
41151 | And the body has not been recovered? |
41151 | And the second thing? |
41151 | And this gentleman is Mr. Trenton, I take it? |
41151 | And this one looks like a gentleman, is that it? |
41151 | And what is this business you are always talking about? |
41151 | And when you turned on the light how many persons were in the room? |
41151 | And while you were there did you hear any sounds, a person walking, for instance? |
41151 | Another theory gone up in smoke? |
41151 | Answers satisfactory? |
41151 | Any increase lately? |
41151 | Any of his belongings still around? |
41151 | Any windows on this side? |
41151 | Anyone else''s? |
41151 | Anything new? |
41151 | Are you Ben Kite? |
41151 | Are you a mind- reader? |
41151 | Are you absolutely certain? |
41151 | Are you also caring for the one hundred and fifty thousand dollars that he drew from the bank and that is now reposing in your strong box? |
41151 | Are you and Mrs. Darwin the only members of the household? |
41151 | Are you sure? |
41151 | Are you sure? |
41151 | Are you the only two people awake in this house? |
41151 | Are you trying to frighten me by pretending that you believe that I killed Philip Darwin? |
41151 | As regards Grenville? 41151 But finding him there unexpectedly might she not have shot him to secure the letter?" |
41151 | But if he witnessed events, why does n''t he clear Ruth then? |
41151 | But not welcome to look at the articles themselves, is that it? |
41151 | But the shot in the dark? |
41151 | But what right have you to question me? |
41151 | But why do n''t you surround the place with the police right away? |
41151 | But why, man, why? |
41151 | But why? 41151 But, McKelvie, what about the actual time when Philip Darwin was killed, twenty minutes before Ruth ever set foot in the study?" |
41151 | But, Ruth, I thought your father lived here with you? |
41151 | But, heavens, man, how did she get in? |
41151 | But, hello, what''s in this envelope? |
41151 | But-- the combination? |
41151 | By Jove,said Jones, then added quickly,"What about the second bullet, then? |
41151 | By the way, McKelvie, where did it go? |
41151 | By the way, how much was his whole fortune? |
41151 | Ca n''t some of them produce alibis? |
41151 | Can you give me the amount of his balance? |
41151 | Can you spare me a few minutes? |
41151 | Can you tell me where I can find Ben Kite to- night? |
41151 | Carlton, do you still believe in me? |
41151 | Carlton, have they really dared to commit Ruth to jail? |
41151 | Cora-- Manning? 41151 Could anyone have escaped by the door then?" |
41151 | Could she not have written to warn you, just as well? |
41151 | Could you see the door of the study from your position in the drawing- room? |
41151 | Daddy''s address? 41151 Darwin knew then that Dick was his nephew?" |
41151 | Describe the man who questioned you? |
41151 | Desperate measures, eh? 41151 Did I do that to you, Carlton?" |
41151 | Did McKelvie search the room? |
41151 | Did Mr. Darwin mention to you recently that he intended changing his will? |
41151 | Did Mr. Orton explain how he came to be in the study? |
41151 | Did anyone come out or go in? |
41151 | Did he really mean to kill himself? |
41151 | Did he take it in gold or notes? |
41151 | Did it sound in front or behind you? |
41151 | Did it sound very close to you, or far away? |
41151 | Did n''t you think it peculiar that she should leave suddenly at that time of night without leaving her address behind? |
41151 | Did the maid give you Mr. Davies''address? |
41151 | Did the murderer also light the lamp? |
41151 | Did you not think it odd that your mistress should send for Mr. Davies at that time of night? |
41151 | Did you notice anything odd about it? |
41151 | Did you notice whether he was wearing a ring on the little finger of his left hand? |
41151 | Did you remark the gold and blue? 41151 Did you see Mr. Lee Darwin leave the house yesterday morning?" |
41151 | Do n''t you see that the light comes from the right side of that cluster and not from the center? |
41151 | Do n''t you suppose he comes here to see the girl? 41151 Do you also identify this handkerchief?" |
41151 | Do you believe she killed Darwin? |
41151 | Do you get the significance? |
41151 | Do you know anyone by the name of Cora Manning? |
41151 | Do you know what occasioned the quarrel between the husband and wife? |
41151 | Do you know what time he got back? |
41151 | Do you know where we are going? |
41151 | Do you know whether Cunningham was in to- day? |
41151 | Do you know whether Mr. Darwin keeps any of his valuable papers in that safe? |
41151 | Do you know whose it is? |
41151 | Do you mean that he is out of town? |
41151 | Do you realize that your silence will militate against you? |
41151 | Do you really believe that he can find a ray of light amidst the Stygian darkness of this horrible business? |
41151 | Do you recall the exact words? |
41151 | Do you recognize this handkerchief? |
41151 | Do you remember my saying that Lee''s use of rose jacqueminot looked bad for him? 41151 Do you remember the night he told us that pleasant fiction about the one hundred and fifty thousand dollars? |
41151 | Do you still persist in saying there was someone else in the study? |
41151 | Do you suppose it could have been in a former reincarnation? |
41151 | Do you suspect? |
41151 | Do you take me for a mere calculating machine without any human feelings and consideration for others? 41151 Do you think the body will ever be recovered?" |
41151 | Do you think the police will let you see them? |
41151 | Do you want a taxi for to- morrow, then? |
41151 | Do you want a taxi? |
41151 | Does he strike you as the kind that would be gentle with his prisoners? 41151 Dream it? |
41151 | Even if it should lead you into unforeseen channels? |
41151 | Ever read Gaboriau? |
41151 | For my sake? |
41151 | For what purpose? |
41151 | For what reason? |
41151 | For what reason? |
41151 | Giving up the case when it''s just becoming exciting? 41151 Has counsel been appointed to defend her?" |
41151 | Has he a strong box? |
41151 | Has he seen you before? |
41151 | Has the doctor been here? |
41151 | Have I been asleep all that time? |
41151 | Have n''t I? 41151 Have n''t you read the papers?" |
41151 | Have n''t you the wit to see that the inquest was in the hands of the police from the start? 41151 Have you also a duplicate key?" |
41151 | Have you any objections to my remaining here with you? |
41151 | Have you any provisions in the house? |
41151 | Have you any reason to suspect Mrs. Darwin other than the fact that she held the pistol in her hand? |
41151 | Have you ever heard of Cora Manning? |
41151 | Have you none, then? |
41151 | He did n''t happen to mention that he was ruined, did he, on the afternoon of the seventh? |
41151 | He did not actually say so? |
41151 | He did not answer and I went on:''Why did n''t you listen to my explanation that morning? 41151 He did not get along with his father, I understand?" |
41151 | Hello, where the devil did you come from? |
41151 | Here in the house? |
41151 | Home? 41151 Home?" |
41151 | How did Cunningham happen to have a sachet bag embroidered with his initials when Cora did not know him as Cunningham? |
41151 | How did I know she would come to the study? 41151 How did he enter and leave the room?" |
41151 | How did he know the combination that you used? |
41151 | How do you account then for the lighting of the lamp from the safe? |
41151 | How do you know he sent a telegram? |
41151 | How do you know it''s not a trap? |
41151 | How do you know that it was Mr. Darwin who unlocked it? |
41151 | How do you know? |
41151 | How do you make that out? |
41151 | How does it happen that you know so much about him, Jenkins? |
41151 | How long has Mr. Darwin been in the habit of locking his study? |
41151 | How long have you been in your present position, Annie? |
41151 | How many more of these blooming things are we likely to run across anyway? 41151 How on earth did he know she would come into the room? |
41151 | How should I know? |
41151 | How? |
41151 | How? |
41151 | How? |
41151 | I could n''t hear what they said----"Then how did you know that they were quarreling about the letter? |
41151 | I say, Mr. Davies, ca n''t you give a fellow a few more details? |
41151 | I suppose you are right, but how did he get in then? |
41151 | I thought you said the study was in darkness? |
41151 | I was stunned for the moment, and then I found voice to say,''You know him, too?'' 41151 I? |
41151 | If Dick was in the study how did he get away without my seeing him? |
41151 | If someone had pulled the cord of the lamp would you have been able to see that person? |
41151 | If what he says is true,whispered Jones to me,"where does Mrs. Darwin come in? |
41151 | If you will be so kind I should like to be shown to a vacant room and might I borrow a suit of pajamas? |
41151 | Indeed? 41151 Is Miss Manning in?" |
41151 | Is he away very much? |
41151 | Is he the type to commit murder in cold- blood? |
41151 | Is it Lee? |
41151 | Is it necessary to the investigation? |
41151 | Is it not odd that a man of Mr. Darwin''s-- er-- wealth-- should introduce his secretary on an equal footing with his family? |
41151 | Is it true that he removed his securities from Cunningham''s office and used them to speculate with? |
41151 | Is that the reason that Sherlock Holmes is an egotist, sir? |
41151 | Is that the reason you told Orton to repeat his evidence? |
41151 | Is there an attic to the house? |
41151 | Is there any possibility of suicide? |
41151 | Is there anything else I can offer you? |
41151 | Is this the man? |
41151 | Is this the man? |
41151 | Is this the paper? |
41151 | Is this the pistol in question? |
41151 | It must have been, for who else has a key to those doors? 41151 It stands to reason, does it not, that if the murderer loves Miss Manning he must know that she uses rose jacqueminot perfume?" |
41151 | Jones, can you open that safe? |
41151 | Kindly permit me to conduct this investigation,he said curtly, then to Ruth,"Mrs. Darwin, was your husband in the habit of wearing rings?" |
41151 | Knowing that Mrs. Darwin was in the study, why did you give the police the impression last night that she had heard the shot from upstairs? |
41151 | Land sakes, you do n''t mean to tell me, young man, that you think she did it? |
41151 | Lee Darwin gone South? |
41151 | Lee-- a prisoner? 41151 Lee? |
41151 | Look here, do you think I''m lying to you? |
41151 | May I examine its contents? |
41151 | May I keep it? |
41151 | May I look at it? |
41151 | May I look inside this envelope? |
41151 | May I see that handkerchief that you are holding so tightly in your hand? |
41151 | Memo: How was the light turned on? 41151 Might there not have been someone else who left by the windows before you lighted the room?" |
41151 | Miss Manning, did you see this man''s face so that you could swear to it? |
41151 | Miss Manning, have you ever seen this man before? |
41151 | Mistuh McKelvie? |
41151 | Mr. Cunningham, do you know whether the will that was destroyed was in Mrs. Darwin''s favor? |
41151 | Mr. Cunningham, what are all these people doing here? |
41151 | Mr. Cunningham, you do n''t by any chance happen to know the combination? |
41151 | Mr. Cunningham? 41151 Mr. Darwin, did you ever hear of Cora Manning?" |
41151 | Mr. Darwin, did you ever see that handkerchief before? |
41151 | Mr. Darwin,McKelvie said, as Lee opened his eyes again,"are you strong enough to answer some questions?" |
41151 | Mr. Davies entered ahead of you? 41151 Mr. Davies, did you not think it strange that she should send for you so late at night?" |
41151 | Mr. Davies, you know, of course, that if a man dies intestate, his wife inherits his property? |
41151 | Mrs. Darwin''s finger- prints, I understand? |
41151 | Mrs. Darwin, do you recognize this pistol? |
41151 | My dear man, where are your reasoning powers? 41151 No, I''ve come to the end of my tether--""You do n''t mean that you''re giving up the case?" |
41151 | Not a safe? |
41151 | Not even to the extent of losing several millions? |
41151 | Nothing escapes you, does it? |
41151 | Now I trust that you are satisfied? |
41151 | Now,I demanded,"what''s it all about?" |
41151 | On foot or in a taxi? |
41151 | On what do I base that conclusion? |
41151 | Ought to bring results, eh? 41151 Pardon my curiosity, sir,"he whispered eagerly,"but did you see Mr. McKelvie, sir?" |
41151 | Ready? |
41151 | Ready? |
41151 | Ruth, dear,I said, taking her little trembling hands in both my own,"why did you send for me? |
41151 | Ruth, do you think you could get that letter for me? |
41151 | Shall I telephone for a doctor, Mr. Davies? 41151 Shall I tell him, Carlton?" |
41151 | She quarreled with him, you say? 41151 Shot? |
41151 | Since he was so secretive, might he not have put some of his securities in that safe? |
41151 | So,he said, in that high- pitched voice, sarcastically strident in its intonation,"you thought to get ahead of me, eh? |
41151 | Surely you are not of the opinion that he killed Darwin? |
41151 | Surely you do n''t believe that he really quarreled with his uncle about Mrs. Darwin? 41151 Tell me,"he said,"do you believe it was cleverness or sheer bravado that made the criminal light the study with the door unlocked? |
41151 | The car was waiting? |
41151 | The last of his securities? 41151 The only question to be solved was the one, Where was Darwin? |
41151 | The study was in darkness then? |
41151 | The woman in the case? 41151 Then Mr. Darwin was not killed instantly?" |
41151 | Then Mr. Davies was acquainted with Mrs. Darwin before her marriage? |
41151 | Then he was not home for dinner? |
41151 | Then may I ask by what right you constituted yourself Mr. Darwin''s lawyer, and acted as Mrs. Darwin''s counsel at the inquest? |
41151 | Then since it is quite evident that you did not love Philip Darwin, will you explain why you married him at all? |
41151 | Then what--? |
41151 | Then why did he remove that money from the bank? |
41151 | Then why was he troubling himself to make a new will? |
41151 | Then you can tell us when that safe was built? |
41151 | Then you have no objections to my retiring? |
41151 | Then you know who he is? |
41151 | Then you know who the criminal is? |
41151 | Then you think there may have been someone else in the room? |
41151 | There is no hope of finding the body? |
41151 | Third? 41151 Under what circumstances?" |
41151 | Was it normal, hurried breathing, or was it labored? |
41151 | Was it--? |
41151 | Was n''t it odd that Ruth failed to recognize Cunningham as her husband when he spoke to her at the inquest? |
41151 | Was n''t it strange-- his buying only one? |
41151 | Was n''t there? |
41151 | Was she gone five minutes? |
41151 | Was that it? |
41151 | Was there not a will in his favor before the wedding? |
41151 | Well, how did he do it? |
41151 | Well, perhaps under those circumstances--he appeared to reflect, then said abruptly,"Would you call Dr. Haskins a man who knew his business?" |
41151 | Well? |
41151 | Well? |
41151 | Well? |
41151 | Well? |
41151 | Were you making the bed that it took you ten minutes to fix it? |
41151 | What about Lee? |
41151 | What about Mrs. Darwin''s testimony that he was in the hall? |
41151 | What about family resemblance? |
41151 | What about the safe? |
41151 | What about young Darwin? |
41151 | What advice did Mr. Cunningham give you at the inquest? |
41151 | What advice did you give Darwin when you returned from Chicago? |
41151 | What are you doing here? |
41151 | What brought you back this morning if you had left the house for good? |
41151 | What can I do for you? |
41151 | What did he do after you promised silence? |
41151 | What did he mean by weapon then? |
41151 | What did you come for then, you blarneyer? |
41151 | What did you do then? |
41151 | What did you think he meant to convey by those words of his? |
41151 | What do you advise then? |
41151 | What do you expect to learn by all this questioning? |
41151 | What do you know about him? |
41151 | What do you make of this, McKelvie? |
41151 | What do you mean by putting such an indignity upon me? |
41151 | What do you mean by that last statement? |
41151 | What do you mean by that? |
41151 | What do you mean? |
41151 | What do you mean? |
41151 | What do you mean? |
41151 | What do you propose to do then? |
41151 | What do you suppose Philip did with all that money? |
41151 | What do you want of me? |
41151 | What do you want? |
41151 | What does he want? |
41151 | What evidence do you refer to? |
41151 | What footprint? |
41151 | What for? |
41151 | What happened after I went down? |
41151 | What happened when we chased him before? 41151 What has become of Darwin''s securities?" |
41151 | What is Lee Darwin''s connection with the affair? |
41151 | What is it, Carlton? |
41151 | What is it, Claude? 41151 What is it, Jenkins? |
41151 | What is it, Riley? |
41151 | What is it, Ruth? |
41151 | What is it, a new clue? |
41151 | What is it? |
41151 | What is it? |
41151 | What is the meaning of all this? |
41151 | What is? |
41151 | What makes you ask? |
41151 | What makes you certain he was standing when he was shot? |
41151 | What makes you think he is in New York? |
41151 | What new trail? |
41151 | What on earth were you doing in that bedroom? |
41151 | What picture of Dick? |
41151 | What questions did he ask you? |
41151 | What reasons could he possibly have? |
41151 | What time did you close the house last night? |
41151 | What time do you usually lock up? |
41151 | What time is it, Jenkins? |
41151 | What was Mr. Trenton''s attitude toward your uncle? |
41151 | What was the reason for young Trenton''s removal from New York six months ago? |
41151 | What was there for me to do, Carlton, but to acquiesce? |
41151 | What were you doing in the study? |
41151 | What you want, stranger? |
41151 | What you want? |
41151 | What''s the idea of building a house with holes in the wall? 41151 What''s the idea? |
41151 | What''s the interpretation, McKelvie? |
41151 | What''s the name of the man who told you about the suicide? |
41151 | What''s the objection then to showing them to me? |
41151 | What''s the trouble, now? |
41151 | What? |
41151 | When did you last see Mr. Darwin alive? |
41151 | When did you last see your uncle? |
41151 | When did you show him this letter? |
41151 | When he came back the morning of the eighth, were you really positive that he had been drinking, or did he give you another impression as well? |
41151 | When you first recognized my official capacity what made you think something had happened to your uncle? |
41151 | When you sent Mrs. Darwin into the study you were both aware, of course, of Mr. Darwin''s presence in that room? |
41151 | When? |
41151 | Where did the second bullet go? |
41151 | Where did they come from? |
41151 | Where did you find it, Jones? |
41151 | Where did you find it? |
41151 | Where did you get that picture of Dick? 41151 Where did you learn all this?" |
41151 | Where do you discharge your duties? |
41151 | Where is her maid? |
41151 | Where to? |
41151 | Where were you at that particular time? |
41151 | Where''s McKelvie? |
41151 | Where''s the diamond then? |
41151 | Which one of those having sufficient motive for killing Darwin answers to the description: Clever, unprincipled, absolutely cold- blooded? |
41151 | Who and what is Cora Manning? |
41151 | Who is Mr. McKelvie, Jenkins? |
41151 | Who opened up the house this morning? |
41151 | Who wants''i m? |
41151 | Who was it? |
41151 | Whom? 41151 Whose did you think it was when I first held it up?" |
41151 | Why did Mr. Orton''s presence in the study surprise you? |
41151 | Why did Philip Darwin put that ring on his finger and then take it off again? |
41151 | Why did Richard Trenton come to New York and then commit suicide? |
41151 | Why did he build such a large safe? |
41151 | Why did n''t Philip Darwin live at his club then, when he came of age? |
41151 | Why did n''t you go over to the safe and capture him then? |
41151 | Why did n''t you open the door a crack? |
41151 | Why did you not light the study instead of groping in the dark? |
41151 | Why does any sane person want to light his lamp from his safe? |
41151 | Why incredible? |
41151 | Why not? 41151 Why should a man like Mr. Darwin preserve a stoneless ring?" |
41151 | Why, Carlton? |
41151 | Why, how could I know what he was doing when I did not know he was at home? |
41151 | Why,I stammered, all the wind taken out of my sails,"what about the-- the secret entrance?" |
41151 | Why? |
41151 | Why? |
41151 | Will it help you? |
41151 | Will you answer me three questions? |
41151 | Will you give me briefly the details of the case? |
41151 | Will you let us in to the main wing through the passageway, please? |
41151 | Will you please tell me then when I can find him at home? |
41151 | Will you return at once with my chauffeur? 41151 Would it be asking too much to allow me to see my uncle''s body?" |
41151 | Would not the next morning have been ample time? |
41151 | Would you swear to that fact? |
41151 | Would you swear to that fact? |
41151 | Would you tell him-- now? |
41151 | Yes, and I presume she kept the man she loves in duress all this time? 41151 Yes?" |
41151 | Yet he might have done so last night? |
41151 | You are Mr. Darwin''s lawyer? |
41151 | You are Mr. Darwin''s secretary? |
41151 | You are acquainted with the details of Mr. Darwin''s business, are you not? |
41151 | You are positive of this? |
41151 | You are sure of the time? |
41151 | You are sure that Mr. Darwin was alone at eleven- thirty? |
41151 | You are sure that it was n''t because you knew beforehand that he was dead? |
41151 | You are sure you brought me all the keys? |
41151 | You are sure you locked all the doors and windows securely? |
41151 | You are sure? |
41151 | You are sure? |
41151 | You are then acquainted with his private affairs also? |
41151 | You could swear to that? |
41151 | You did n''t happen to remove it, did you? |
41151 | You did n''t hear any rumors that he was speculating in M. and R. stock, for instance? |
41151 | You did n''t see Mrs. Darwin go into the study? |
41151 | You did not chance to see anyone when you applied your eye to the key- hole? |
41151 | You do n''t mean to tell me that it was the criminal himself who had the nerve to come there to- night? |
41151 | You do? |
41151 | You have discovered something new? |
41151 | You have heard nothing from him since he left? |
41151 | You have news of Dick? |
41151 | You have no idea what was in the note? |
41151 | You have notified the police? |
41151 | You have some information to impart? |
41151 | You have told us everything? |
41151 | You heard the evidence concerning the windows? |
41151 | You identify the handwriting? |
41151 | You know Jones, then? |
41151 | You know of course that we do not make it a practice to take up criminal cases? |
41151 | You know where it is and you have n''t produced it? |
41151 | You know where she has gone? |
41151 | You mean he has only just died? 41151 You mean that he had already been shot when Ruth entered this room?" |
41151 | You mean that he is a private detective? |
41151 | You mean you are going to try to locate the criminal since we can find no clues to help Ruth? |
41151 | You obeyed? |
41151 | You really believe that, Ruth? 41151 You said that Mrs. Darwin entered the study to reclaim a paper which was of value to you, did you not?" |
41151 | You said that on the night of the seventh of October, Miss Manning went away from here? |
41151 | You saw and heard him at the inquest? 41151 You saw it too, then? |
41151 | You testified last night that you had heard the shot? |
41151 | You think Dick might have done it? |
41151 | You think that is wise? |
41151 | You think you''ll be able to catch him? |
41151 | You will be permitted to testify in her behalf? |
41151 | You''re not joking? 41151 You''ve got your pistol with you?" |
41151 | Your honor, may I make a suggestion? |
41151 | ''Did he? |
41151 | ''Do you?'' |
41151 | ''He should know how to play fast and loose, eh? |
41151 | ( 10) Is Cora Manning the woman in the case and if so, who and what is she? |
41151 | ( 11) What has become of Darwin''s securities? |
41151 | ( 12) What is Lee Darwin''s connection with the affair? |
41151 | ( 13) Why did Richard Trenton come to New York and then commit suicide? |
41151 | ( 14) What is the relation between Mr. Cunningham and the murdered man? |
41151 | ( 2) Did the murderer also light the lamp? |
41151 | ( 3) How did the murderer enter and leave the study? |
41151 | ( 4) What was the motive for the murder? |
41151 | ( 5) Why did the doctors disagree, and which was in the right? |
41151 | ( 6) Why did Philip Darwin put that ring on his finger and then pull it off? |
41151 | ( 7) Whose is the blood- stained handkerchief? |
41151 | ( 8) Where did the second bullet go? |
41151 | ( 9) Why is there so much evidence against Mrs. Darwin, and who would most desire to injure her? |
41151 | A coward''s attitude? |
41151 | A second Sherlock Holmes, eh?" |
41151 | Am I correct so far?" |
41151 | Am I perfectly rational and sane?" |
41151 | Am I right?" |
41151 | Am I right?" |
41151 | Ames?" |
41151 | And did n''t he, while living in this house, have an opportunity to witness and resent the treatment accorded to his daughter? |
41151 | And do you believe for a moment that the district attorney will give credence to a fact which Coroner Graves practically ruled out of his court?" |
41151 | And for the police?" |
41151 | And is it reasonable to suppose that it took him twenty minutes to shoot his victim and place him in that chair?" |
41151 | And now, Mr. Jones, having doped it out, as you expressed it, would you mind telling me who committed that murder?" |
41151 | And, of course he knew that he was ruined?" |
41151 | As I drove toward town I remarked,"Was there really someone in that safe, McKelvie?" |
41151 | As we descended the steps I said curiously,"What did you find, McKelvie?" |
41151 | Besides, if you did not want anyone prying into your safe, what precaution would you take to prevent it?" |
41151 | Besides, the study was in total darkness----""You are sure the study was in darkness?" |
41151 | But how did McKelvie know this latter fact? |
41151 | But in that event why had he not come forward to free Ruth from jail? |
41151 | But what about the safe?" |
41151 | But where in Kingdom Come was I going to find it? |
41151 | By the way, that vindictive old man did n''t shoot him, did he?" |
41151 | CHAPTER V THE SECRETARY What was Orton going to say? |
41151 | Ca n''t you imagine the clash between them?" |
41151 | Coroner Graves pondered a moment, then asked abruptly,"Have you ever noticed any signs of ill- feeling between your master and mistress?" |
41151 | Could it be that others besides ourselves had heard the shot? |
41151 | Could the weapon be murder and the answer to the problem the fact that Ruth was shielding her brother again? |
41151 | Cunningham?" |
41151 | Cunningham?" |
41151 | Darwin''s?" |
41151 | Darwin?" |
41151 | Darwin?" |
41151 | Darwin?" |
41151 | Darwin?" |
41151 | Darwin?" |
41151 | Darwin?" |
41151 | Davies?" |
41151 | Davies?" |
41151 | Davies?" |
41151 | Did I say a month? |
41151 | Did Jones think he could win out where McKelvie had been unsuccessful? |
41151 | Did McKelvie have any idea of the man''s identity, or was he also groping in the dark? |
41151 | Did he also play fast and loose in his domestic affairs?" |
41151 | Did he instigate the murder and then in remorse commit suicide?" |
41151 | Did he not tell you what you should or should not say in answer to the coroner''s questions?" |
41151 | Did n''t he say he had a bad cold or something of the sort? |
41151 | Did n''t you say yourself that he was there that night when you first showed me his stick- pin?" |
41151 | Did you know that he was here the night of the murder?" |
41151 | Did you know that he was making a new will when he was shot?" |
41151 | Did you never hear of a man''s cleaning his pistol and recharging it?" |
41151 | Did you open the study door even a crack that time by any chance?" |
41151 | Did you recognize the perfume?" |
41151 | Did you remain in the house when Mr. Frank Darwin went to Europe in 1906?" |
41151 | Do n''t you see he has me in his power?" |
41151 | Do n''t you suppose he realized as you did that he was primarily to blame for Mrs. Darwin''s marriage? |
41151 | Do n''t you suppose that if I had any valuable evidence I should have used it to advantage long ere this?" |
41151 | Do you mean that he had been gradually removing them from your care?" |
41151 | Do you see that car? |
41151 | Do you suppose she gave it to him?" |
41151 | Do you think he was in the habit of writing in the dark?" |
41151 | Do you think she''s starving, too?" |
41151 | Does the young idiot think all that could happen in two minutes? |
41151 | Had I locked him in to breathe his last alone, when perhaps I might have saved his life? |
41151 | Had he then been alive when I carried Ruth from the room? |
41151 | Had the case against her progressed to the point where she needed legal advice? |
41151 | Had we any proof that his story was true? |
41151 | Have you come to remind me that it is long past my bed- time?" |
41151 | Have you discovered anything of value so far?" |
41151 | Have you ever studied psychology? |
41151 | Have you forgotten that there are three men guarding the outer door?" |
41151 | He could n''t possibly know when, could he?" |
41151 | He had been successful, but what had he expected to find? |
41151 | He looked at me thoughtfully a moment and then added,"You were wondering why, being a broker yourself, you had not heard of it? |
41151 | He should know how to play fast and loose, eh? |
41151 | He turned to his physician,"You were saying, Doctor?" |
41151 | He''s a red- whiskered chap, is he not?" |
41151 | His voice was so high- pitched with excitement that my questions vanished from my mind as if by magic, and all I could exclaim was,"What is it? |
41151 | How are you going to get around it?" |
41151 | How can I ever thank you? |
41151 | How can that be?" |
41151 | How could he possibly divine that I would urge her to get me that letter when I only spoke on impulse myself?" |
41151 | How dared his father let him loose upon the world without teaching him the first principles of self- restraint? |
41151 | How did McKelvie do it? |
41151 | How did he impress you, as regards his character, I mean?" |
41151 | How did the criminal, if he was behind Ruth, shoot Philip Darwin with such accuracy in the dark?" |
41151 | How did you know so unerringly that the lamp was also lighted from the safe?" |
41151 | How do you explain the circumstance?" |
41151 | How do you suppose that entrance came to be there so very handy for the criminal''s purpose?" |
41151 | How does what Cunningham told us affect the case as it now stands?" |
41151 | How many of last night''s events had come under his notice? |
41151 | How much had I forgotten in the six months that had passed? |
41151 | How then do you account for the discrepancies in these various facts, for facts they are?" |
41151 | I can give the same evidence I gave before?" |
41151 | I do n''t happen to possess that, too, do I?" |
41151 | I gave him my hand, but not over- cordially as I said, suspiciously,"How did you know I was here?" |
41151 | I heard Lee''s wondering,"Uncle Phil?" |
41151 | I remarked that a broker ought to know how to play fast and loose, and he replied:''Yes, and other things, too, eh? |
41151 | I suppose the police explained to your satisfaction how the murderer shot so accurately in the dark?" |
41151 | I turned my car, and drove as swiftly as I dared along Broadway, asking him,"Do you think that Cora Manning is in hiding because of that quarrel?" |
41151 | If he is a lawyer, where does he conduct his practice? |
41151 | If her voice held a tinge of bitterness who can blame her? |
41151 | If she swore she did know that fact, who could contradict her?" |
41151 | If the murderer used Darwin''s pistol, how is it that only Ruth''s finger- prints are on it?" |
41151 | If therefore the uncle deemed her worthy to become his chief legatee, was it not more than likely that the nephew was also acquainted with the girl? |
41151 | In God''s name why? |
41151 | In wondering silence we listened to McKelvie''s words and Cora said quickly,"In love with me? |
41151 | Is it because you killed your uncle and are afraid that I will tell what I know?'' |
41151 | Is my information correct?" |
41151 | It was then he laughed and said:''So we''ve a broker in the house, eh? |
41151 | Jones''eyebrows went up a trifle, and then he asked,"What was the motive for the murder?" |
41151 | Lee Darwin engaged rooms for that night, did he not?" |
41151 | Lee-- at your house ill? |
41151 | Lee?" |
41151 | May I see him soon?" |
41151 | McKelvie stepped through first and called:"Miss Manning, are you there?" |
41151 | McKelvie took a turn around the room and then asked abruptly,"Does a Mr. Herbert Cunningham, who lives on 84th Street, bank here?" |
41151 | McKelvie?" |
41151 | McKelvie?" |
41151 | Mr. McKelvie, I presume?" |
41151 | No bullet either? |
41151 | Not much of a hold, you think? |
41151 | Not much, was it?" |
41151 | Now I want to know why?" |
41151 | Now, Miss Manning, are you sure he is coming back to- morrow?" |
41151 | Now, the question is, What was he doing between the time he left the hotel and one o''clock on the night of the murder? |
41151 | Oh, I say, McKelvie, what about letting me get busy on the trail of the revolver that made that second shot? |
41151 | Or had the boy been merely pretending to be unconscious, and the old man had been a confederate in the game which they were playing to trap McKelvie? |
41151 | Philip Darwin had an account here, did he not?" |
41151 | Rather a familiar combination, eh? |
41151 | See how quickly you can solve this mystery, wo n''t you please? |
41151 | Seeing that he was getting nowhere he dropped the point, and asked:"Did you also see the pistol in Mrs. Darwin''s hand?" |
41151 | Supposing there had been someone behind you, could you have heard that person?" |
41151 | Sure the bullet fits the pistol?" |
41151 | That something could have been done to save him?" |
41151 | That would imply Lee''s innocence, yet what other possible motive could he have for disappearing?" |
41151 | The question was, how? |
41151 | Then I heard him add to himself,"Where can she be? |
41151 | Then what?" |
41151 | Then you mean that Lee killed his uncle?" |
41151 | Then, of course,''with a still deeper purr,''you have brought me the bullet itself?'' |
41151 | This applies to all the servants, you can swear to that?" |
41151 | Trenton?" |
41151 | Trenton?" |
41151 | Was I too beginning to have hallucinations? |
41151 | Was he merely theorizing, or did he know more than he had told me? |
41151 | Was he someone I knew or a stranger who had hitherto remained unsuspected by us? |
41151 | Was he still in the city or had he left the country? |
41151 | Was it because he was the murderer? |
41151 | Was it merely in the capacity of her friend?" |
41151 | Was it my fancy, or did he pale? |
41151 | Was that all he said?" |
41151 | Was that the way it happened?" |
41151 | Well, doctor?" |
41151 | Well, what of it? |
41151 | Well?" |
41151 | Were you able to tell what it was?" |
41151 | What chance had I of using my knowledge to account? |
41151 | What chance then had the truth for even so much as lifting its head? |
41151 | What did he look like, anyway?" |
41151 | What do you know about this affair?" |
41151 | What does the criminal do then? |
41151 | What does the doctor say?" |
41151 | What else would you expect of Jones? |
41151 | What had occasioned this sudden need for so much cash? |
41151 | What has happened?" |
41151 | What is it? |
41151 | What is the room directly above this end of the study?" |
41151 | What is your father''s present address?" |
41151 | What made you keep them?" |
41151 | What other reason could Dick have for the deception which he had practised upon us all? |
41151 | What paradox was this, then? |
41151 | What part of the room did it appear to come from?" |
41151 | What right had any man to bring up a son in that fashion? |
41151 | What was he getting at, anyway? |
41151 | What was the motive? |
41151 | What was the subject of this quarrel?" |
41151 | What was their reason, do you suppose?" |
41151 | What was to prevent his repeating the act when he realized the injustice that had been done Ruth in forcing her to marry such a man? |
41151 | What were you doing there at that time of night?" |
41151 | What would you?" |
41151 | What''s Cunningham''s relation to the murdered man?" |
41151 | What''s the rest of your story?" |
41151 | When?" |
41151 | Where did he come from?" |
41151 | Where did he go between the morning of the eighth and the afternoon of the ninth? |
41151 | Where did it seem to come from?" |
41151 | Where do you suppose he has hidden Cora Manning?" |
41151 | Where had he been when Ruth left the drawing- room and how close was he to the scene of the tragedy when the shot was fired? |
41151 | Where? |
41151 | Who else could have done it?" |
41151 | Who is in there with you?" |
41151 | Who is this mysterious man?" |
41151 | Who was Gilmore any way? |
41151 | Who was he? |
41151 | Who, then, was the man we had found dead in this room, the man we had buried under Darwin''s name? |
41151 | Whose was the blood- stained handkerchief?" |
41151 | Why did the doctors disagree, and which was in the right? |
41151 | Why did you deny knowing Cora Manning at the inquest?" |
41151 | Why do n''t you get a divorce or at least a separation? |
41151 | Why do you suppose the murderer took the trouble to make those marks in the carpet except to fool the police?" |
41151 | Why had he drugged me then? |
41151 | Why on earth did you pick that old fossil to defend her?" |
41151 | Why should I make it up? |
41151 | Why then did he remain in hiding, or had he returned to Chicago without making use of his"weapon"when he learned that Darwin was dead? |
41151 | Why then does n''t the other bulb light also?" |
41151 | Why was he permitting Cunningham to remain in ignorance of our latest discovery concerning Richard Trenton? |
41151 | Why was it then that Jones and I did not guess the truth the night we heard Lee''s story?" |
41151 | Why was the pistol fired at midnight?" |
41151 | Why? |
41151 | Why?" |
41151 | Will you answer a few more questions?" |
41151 | Would either of them know the combination?" |
41151 | Would he tell me or Orton to summon her? |
41151 | Yes, and how much store would the jury set by Mrs. Darwin''s account then?" |
41151 | Yet what did McKelvie hope to learn by visiting the scene of the suicide? |
41151 | Yet, how could it possibly be? |
41151 | You are not saying it just to comfort me?" |
41151 | You are positive you heard the key turned in the study door when you stood in the hall at ten minutes to twelve?" |
41151 | You are sure you did not light it yourself, unconsciously, perhaps?" |
41151 | You did not hear it fall near you, for instance?" |
41151 | You did not know the object was a pistol you said?" |
41151 | You do n''t suspect him?" |
41151 | You mean-- Cora Manning?" |
41151 | You saw him?" |
41151 | You thought I was such a fool that I would n''t prepare for your visit, eh? |
41151 | You understand?" |
41151 | You''ll excuse us if we hurry along?" |
41151 | You-- you mean murdered?" |
41151 | You-- you wish him to identify the body?" |
41151 | Yourself or your client?" |
41151 | and when I flushed she added more quietly,"Wo n''t you come and sit beside me, please?" |
50586 | ''Are you comin''back, Bill?'' 50586 ''But I do n''t understand,''she said,''if he''s passed the critical stage why is n''t he getting well?'' |
50586 | ''Christ is n''t to blame?'' 50586 ''Did you tackle the trouble that came your way With a resolute heart and cheerful? |
50586 | ''How bad?'' 50586 ''How many anvils have you had?'' |
50586 | ''Is it the Boston light; the last as you pass out?'' 50586 ''Is it the Highland light?'' |
50586 | ''Is it the Minot light?'' 50586 ''Say Bill, do n''t you remember when you tried to play George Washington and the cherry tree and almost cut me down? |
50586 | ''Say, papa, can I go with you?'' 50586 ''Tell me,''he cried,''did she write that of her free will or did you beg her to do it?'' |
50586 | ''The Church is n''t to blame, is it?'' 50586 ''Then who are they from?'' |
50586 | ''Where are you going?'' 50586 ''Who are you?'' |
50586 | ''Who''s that big stiff putting up that game of talk?'' 50586 ''Why was that?'' |
50586 | ''Wo n''t you climb up and sit on my limbs as you used to?'' 50586 ''You would n''t think much of me if I would walk up and slap your wife because you kept a dog I did n''t like, would you? |
50586 | An old Methodist minister said to me a few years ago,''Why, William, you did n''t take the$ 10, did you?'' 50586 And what do you make?" |
50586 | And what have you there? |
50586 | And when did ye leave Chicago, Wally? |
50586 | Are n''t these my children; did n''t I pay the doctor to bring them into the world? |
50586 | Did they win the game of life or did Bill? |
50586 | Did you vote for the saloon? |
50586 | Do you fellows know what sacrifice means? |
50586 | Does she put her arms around some poor sinner and try to save her for Christ? |
50586 | Does she visit the sick? |
50586 | George, you run down and tell Fred I''ve come, will you? 50586 Good Angel, did you ever swear?" |
50586 | Good Angel, did you ever try to put up a stove- pipe in the fall? |
50586 | HEAVENWhat do I want most of all? |
50586 | Have n''t seen him, wife? 50586 He said,''How do you know me?'' |
50586 | He said,''Panathea, where dwellest thou?'' 50586 How Long, O God?" |
50586 | How long sometimes a day appears and weeks, how long are they? 50586 How long?" |
50586 | How many Sunday- school members? |
50586 | How many go to communion? |
50586 | How many go to prayer- meetings? |
50586 | How many members has it? |
50586 | I said,''I have never forgotten you; how is your mother?'' 50586 I said,''Where are the homes of want and squalor? |
50586 | I said,''Where are the hospitals where they take the sick? 50586 If I want to beat them, what is that your business, are n''t they mine?" |
50586 | If you had to get into heaven on the testimony of your washer- woman, could you make it? 50586 Is that what the Bible says?" |
50586 | Is the finished product worth more than the raw material? |
50586 | Is the finished product worth more than the raw material? |
50586 | Jesus said,''Judas, betrayest thou the Son of Man with a kiss?'' 50586 Mr. S. Is he here?" |
50586 | Must I confine myself to the Bible? |
50586 | My God,he would say,"what will mother say?" |
50586 | No; how much do I owe you? |
50586 | No? 50586 Not with me?" |
50586 | Oh, God, what is man, that thou art mindful of him? |
50586 | Oh, devil, why do you hit us when we are down? 50586 Pillsbury, Minneapolis,''Sleepy Eye''?" |
50586 | Say, saloon gin mill, what is your finished product? |
50586 | THE NEED OF REVIVALSSomebody asks:"What is a revival?" |
50586 | The bravest battle that was ever fought, Shall I tell you where and when? 50586 The conductor came along and said:''Where''s your money or ticket?'' |
50586 | The little fellow said:''Say, papa, can I go and play in the water at the lagoon?'' 50586 Well, is he at home?" |
50586 | What If It Had Been My Boy? |
50586 | What Shall the End Be? |
50586 | What are some people going to do about the Judgment? 50586 What do they want to put up a fool sign like that? |
50586 | What do you make paper out of? |
50586 | What do you make? |
50586 | What do you think of the Holy Spirit now? |
50586 | What do you want? |
50586 | What do you want? |
50586 | What do you want? |
50586 | What do you want? |
50586 | What do you want? |
50586 | What do you want? |
50586 | What do you want? |
50586 | What for? |
50586 | What has infidelity done to benefit the world? 50586 What is man, that thou are mindful of him?" |
50586 | What is the trouble? |
50586 | What is your name and what do you want? |
50586 | What is your raw material? |
50586 | What is your raw material? |
50586 | What shall be the end of them that obey not the Gospel of God? |
50586 | What shall be the end of them that obey not the gospel of God? |
50586 | What shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel of God? |
50586 | What shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel of God? |
50586 | What shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel of God? |
50586 | What shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel of God? |
50586 | What shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel? |
50586 | What shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel? |
50586 | What shall the end be? |
50586 | What shall the end be? |
50586 | What was that? 50586 What will you give up?" |
50586 | What''s that bundle, Pa? |
50586 | What''s the matter? |
50586 | What''s this? |
50586 | What,they said,"have you got on the water wagon?" |
50586 | Where are you going? |
50586 | Where are you going? |
50586 | Where did you get all that money? |
50586 | Where is he now? 50586 Wherein does Jesus Christ fail to come up to your standard and the highest conception of the greatest God- like spirit? |
50586 | Who is that one for, Jesus? |
50586 | Who is that one for? |
50586 | Who''ll come into the kingdom of God? 50586 Who''ll yield his heart to Christ? |
50586 | Who''s that one for? |
50586 | Why? 50586 Why?" |
50586 | Why? |
50586 | Will a man rob God? |
50586 | Would you let me see it? |
50586 | Would you pray again and put in that verse? |
50586 | You have let Jesus in? 50586 ''Did you believe me to be virtuous when you came here to ask me to be your wife?'' |
50586 | ''How much did he leave?'' |
50586 | ''Lord, is it I?'' |
50586 | ''My God, hast thou forsaken me?'' |
50586 | ''Whom seek ye?'' |
50586 | 53:5- 6) and that= He= bore the penalty of= your= sins( 1 Peter 2:24), and that= your= sins are forgiven because Jesus died in= your= stead? |
50586 | A gin mill; what do you make? |
50586 | A little girl showed a man some presents she had received and he asked her,"How long may you keep them?" |
50586 | A man comes along and says:"Are you a drunkard?" |
50586 | A man was delivering a temperance address at a fair grounds and a fellow came up to him and said:"Are you the fellow that gave a talk on temperance?" |
50586 | A stranger once asked:"What is the most powerful and influential church in this town?" |
50586 | A university professor was greeted by a friend of mine who took him by the hand, and said:"What do you think of the Holy Spirit?" |
50586 | A young man one time joined a church and the preacher asked him:"What was it I said that induced you to be a Christian?" |
50586 | A young preacher just out of the seminary said:"Must I confine myself in my preaching to the Bible?" |
50586 | After years have passed, are there still evidences of the presence and work of the evangelist? |
50586 | Along came a young fellow, I should judge he was thirty, who looked prematurely old, and he said,''Pard, will you give me a dime?'' |
50586 | And as we are God''s ambassadors why should we fear what the devil may do? |
50586 | And do you mean to say that is a good economic transaction to you? |
50586 | And fourth,"Do I practice what I preach?" |
50586 | And if anyone tells me he has tossed on the scrap heap the plan of atonement by blood I say,"What have you to offer that is better?" |
50586 | And now, I want to know, my farmer friend, if this has been a good commercial transaction for you? |
50586 | And now, while we''re all still, who''ll come down and say''I''m looking above the world?'' |
50586 | And the people spake against God and against Moses, Wherefore have ye brought us up out of Egypt to die in the wilderness? |
50586 | And they looked into the sea and the hogs were bottom side up, but Jesus said,"What is the matter?" |
50586 | And they would come and I would say,"How are you? |
50586 | And what do you think was in that package? |
50586 | And what have you got to show for it? |
50586 | And who were they? |
50586 | And will you come home and be with us when they bring him back? |
50586 | And you tell me you ca n''t make an instant decision to please God? |
50586 | Another long pause, and then you hear,"Have all taken part that feel free to do so? |
50586 | Another man comes along and I say:"Are you a church member?" |
50586 | Are n''t you boys doing the same thing? |
50586 | Are n''t you looking for a knot- hole to crawl through? |
50586 | Are you a business man? |
50586 | Are you afraid of the doctor when you are sick? |
50586 | Are you afraid to give it to him? |
50586 | Are you doing the same thing? |
50586 | Are you lost? |
50586 | Are you ready to do his will? |
50586 | Are you ready to surrender? |
50586 | Are you saved? |
50586 | Are you the first person that has found that out and are you fool enough to go to hell because they are going to hell? |
50586 | Are you willing to present yourself? |
50586 | Are your children Christians? |
50586 | Back comes the answer,"How long?" |
50586 | Brutal, staggering men transformed into respectable citizens? |
50586 | But I do n''t look like a man who would die quickly, do I? |
50586 | But a man says:"Bill, will He forgive a murderer? |
50586 | But suppose there is a hell? |
50586 | But suppose there is no hell? |
50586 | But the infidel says:"Mr. Sunday, why are there so many intelligent people in the world that do n''t believe the Bible?" |
50586 | But there is nothing that can help me out now; and if the umpire calls me out now, wo n''t you say a few words over me, Bill?'' |
50586 | But what does the Lord say? |
50586 | Can it be that you fail to realize his power? |
50586 | Can these church members ever again lapse into dead conventionality? |
50586 | Can you conceive anything being grander than this world if it had n''t a lot of things in it? |
50586 | Can you give me enough?" |
50586 | Can you help me?" |
50586 | Can you help me?" |
50586 | Can you tell me why?" |
50586 | Champenoy?'' |
50586 | Charles G. Finney, after learning the name of any man or woman, would invariably ask:"Are you a Christian?" |
50586 | Come on, are you ready? |
50586 | Come up and hear me preach, will you, John?'' |
50586 | Commodore Vanderbilt poor and needy with his$ 200,000,000? |
50586 | Did Martin Luther trim his sails to the breeze of his day? |
50586 | Did he ever find it? |
50586 | Did n''t I say he forgave Paul? |
50586 | Did you ever look down on a finer crowd? |
50586 | Did you ever thank God for hearing? |
50586 | Did you ever thank God for the blessing of taste? |
50586 | Did you ever thank God for the bread you eat, while so many others are hungry? |
50586 | Did you ever thank God for the doctors and nurses and hospitals? |
50586 | Did you ever thank God for your eyes? |
50586 | Did you ever thank God that you can sleep? |
50586 | Did you ever thank God that you have two good eyes while so many others less fortunate than you must grope their way in blindness to the coffin? |
50586 | Did you ever thank him for the enemy that has been baffled, for the lie against you that has failed? |
50586 | Did you ever thank him that you can see the sunrise and the sunset and can see the flowers and the trees and look upon the storm? |
50586 | Did you ever think that thousands of people who were just as good as you are, are beating their heads against the walls of padded cells? |
50586 | Did you ever think what it would mean to be deaf? |
50586 | Did you ever wake up in the morning and thank God that you have had a good night''s rest? |
50586 | Did you want to save me?" |
50586 | Do n''t the Lord have a hard time? |
50586 | Do n''t you feel ashamed? |
50586 | Do n''t you know that eighteen out of thirty who are converted are converted before they are thirty years old? |
50586 | Do n''t you know that every bad man in a community strengthens the devil''s mortgage? |
50586 | Do n''t you know that sixteen out of twenty who are converted are converted before they are twenty years old? |
50586 | Do n''t you know that? |
50586 | Do n''t you remember the old swing you made?'' |
50586 | Do n''t you think that God grieves when you push him out of your life? |
50586 | Do n''t you want to see men sober? |
50586 | Do they prohibit? |
50586 | Do they prohibit? |
50586 | Do you believe that? |
50586 | Do you believe the streets of heaven are paved with literal gold? |
50586 | Do you care, Jesus, if I sit there?" |
50586 | Do you carry insurance on your stock? |
50586 | Do you ever realize that you are God''s representative-- God''s ambassador? |
50586 | Do you expect it to burn? |
50586 | Do you know that in infidelity the gospel is suicide? |
50586 | Do you know who that young man was? |
50586 | Do you know? |
50586 | Do you mean to tell me that the godless, card- playing conditions of the Church are normal? |
50586 | Do you see where you lose out? |
50586 | Do you think that would stop the curse of the liquor traffic? |
50586 | Do you think you can annihilate hell because you do n''t believe in it? |
50586 | Do you think your scoffs can extinguish the flames of hell? |
50586 | Do you trust God enough to let him do what he wants to do? |
50586 | Do you want to pay taxes in boys, or dirty money? |
50586 | Do you wonder that it was an infidel who started the question:"Is life worth living?" |
50586 | Do you wonder that it was some fool woman, an infidel woman, that first started the question:"Is marriage a failure?" |
50586 | Do you? |
50586 | Does he ever expect God''s going to get water enough to flood that?" |
50586 | Does the Saloon Help Business? |
50586 | Does the butcher know that you are on your way to heaven? |
50586 | Does the man who brings your laundry know that you belong to church? |
50586 | Does the man who hauls away your ashes know that you are a Christian? |
50586 | Does your milkman know that you are a Christian? |
50586 | Does your newsboy know that you have religion? |
50586 | Ever hear anything like that? |
50586 | First-- Are you kindly disposed toward me? |
50586 | For the nurse who watches over you that you may be restored to health? |
50586 | For the surgeon who comes with scalpel to save your life or relieve your sufferings? |
50586 | For was not this the trail that led the lost to salvation, the way home to the Father''s house? |
50586 | Fourth-- Do you practice what you preach? |
50586 | Glad Tidings to All What is the Gospel that the people ought to obey it? |
50586 | God is n''t to blame, is he?'' |
50586 | Going to heaven? |
50586 | Going to hell? |
50586 | Has God done anything for us as a nation, has he done anything for us as individuals, that commands our gratitude? |
50586 | Have n''t you got a little saffron? |
50586 | Have you asked the milkman? |
50586 | Have you called them up at the newspaper office? |
50586 | Have you furnished yours? |
50586 | Have you got a silver dollar? |
50586 | Have you got any beef, any pork, any mutton?" |
50586 | Have you said anything to the delivery boy-- to the butcher? |
50586 | Have you said anything to the newsboy who throws your paper on the doorstep at night? |
50586 | Have you said anything to the telephone girl when you called her up? |
50586 | Have= you= come to God realizing that you are a lost sinner? |
50586 | Have= you= confessed to Him as your Saviour and Master before the world? |
50586 | Have= you= surrendered to Him as your Lord and Master? |
50586 | He answered,"Why did n''t the dog come at me with the other end?" |
50586 | He closes his eyes and says,"Now Jesus, you know,"and so forth, just as he would say to the chorister,"Rody, what is the name of that delegation?" |
50586 | He did n''t believe in the Bible and his daughter said,"What shall I do? |
50586 | He goes up to another mill and says:"Hey, what kind of a mill are you?" |
50586 | He goes up to another mill and says:"Hey, what kind of a mill are you?" |
50586 | He goes up to another mill and says:"What kind of a mill are you?" |
50586 | He read some of the mottos, like''When did you write to mother last?'' |
50586 | He said,"Great God, man, do n''t you know? |
50586 | He said,''You would n''t let me starve, would you?'' |
50586 | He was on crutches, right leg off at the knee, shivering, and he said,"Please, sir, will you come up to the jail and talk and pray with papa? |
50586 | Helen, is that mother coming down the hill?" |
50586 | How are you going to cross over? |
50586 | How are you, Aunty?" |
50586 | How can you get it? |
50586 | How can you promote a revival? |
50586 | How can you promote a revival? |
50586 | How do you know but that God said"streets of gold"in order to convey to us the highest ideal our minds could conceive of beauty? |
50586 | How long did it take him to accept Christ after he had made up his mind? |
50586 | How long did that conversion take? |
50586 | How long, how long art thou?" |
50586 | How many people are there in the United States? |
50586 | How many people pray in humility and truth? |
50586 | How many times have you attempted pride of wealth? |
50586 | How many times have you found yourself exercising pride? |
50586 | How many will go with Jesus to the last ditch? |
50586 | How many will say it? |
50586 | I ask:"Does she get to prayer- meetings?" |
50586 | I can imagine him crying out in the words of Jeremiah:"What will you do in the swelling of the Jordan?" |
50586 | I do n''t look like a man that would die very quickly, do I? |
50586 | I go to a family and it is broken up, and I say,"What caused this?" |
50586 | I have had women say to me,"Mr. Sunday, do n''t you think there is danger of talking too much to them when they are so young?" |
50586 | I heard my friend, George Stuart, tell how he imagined that he walked up to a mill and said:"Hello, there, what kind of a mill are you?" |
50586 | I said to Mr. Preston, who was then a minister:''Have you been to see him?'' |
50586 | I said to my friend,"George, do you see that old drunken bum, down and out? |
50586 | I said,"Grandpa, what are you doing?" |
50586 | I said,"How much is here?" |
50586 | I said,"What will grow, crab apples or pears?" |
50586 | I said,"Who''s that?" |
50586 | I said,''Oh, God, what if that had been my boy?'' |
50586 | I said,''Where are the graveyards, the grave- diggers? |
50586 | I said,''Where, where are the hearses that carry your dead? |
50586 | I said:''What''s the matter, mother?'' |
50586 | I said:''When will the working men go by clad in overalls? |
50586 | I said:''Who is he?'' |
50586 | I saw the sun in all its regal splendor and I said to the people,''When will the sun set and it grow dark?'' |
50586 | I say is that all? |
50586 | I say,"Hey, Colonel Politics, what is the matter with the country?" |
50586 | I say,"What are you doing?" |
50586 | I stagger, and reel, and spew in my wife''s presence, and she says:"Hello, John, what did you bring home?" |
50586 | I step up to a young man on the scaffold and say,"What brought you here?" |
50586 | I thought,"What''s the use? |
50586 | I want the coin, see?" |
50586 | I would say,"Have you seen Fred, or Rody, or Peacock, or Ackley, or any of them?" |
50586 | I would walk around with him and I''d say,"Whose mansion is that, Jesus?" |
50586 | I''m ready; where do you get off at? |
50586 | If Abraham Lincoln had read about Alkali Ike, or Three Fingered Pete, do you think he would ever have been President? |
50586 | If his salvation depended on what his clerks tell about him, would he get there? |
50586 | If the Spirit remains forever, why does n''t his power always show itself? |
50586 | If there is no devil, why do you cuss instead of pray? |
50586 | If we people were able to have panes of glass over our hearts, some of us would want stained glass, would n''t we? |
50586 | If you can, why do n''t you leave it alone? |
50586 | If you could live one hundred years you would n''t want to die, would you? |
50586 | If you put a polecat in the parlor you know which will change first-- the polecat or the parlor? |
50586 | If you would get right with God what would be the result? |
50586 | If your getting into heaven depended on what your dressmaker knows about your religion, would you land? |
50586 | If your husband had to gain admittance to heaven on the testimony of his stenographer, could he do it? |
50586 | Imagine a little minnow saying:"Must I confine myself to the Atlantic Ocean?" |
50586 | In my home? |
50586 | In my lodge? |
50586 | In some insane asylums, do you know what they do? |
50586 | Interest in Manhood"Have you no interest in manhood?" |
50586 | Is Aunty Griffith here?" |
50586 | Is a man cruel that tells you the truth? |
50586 | Is it drink? |
50586 | Is it going to have any different effect on you, whether the gang pays$ 500 or$ 1,000 license? |
50586 | Is it well with thee? |
50586 | Is it well with your husband? |
50586 | Is it= your= purpose to strive to please Him in everything day by day? |
50586 | Is n''t he here?" |
50586 | Is n''t it great? |
50586 | Is n''t it so? |
50586 | Is n''t it time you went red hot after the enemy? |
50586 | Is n''t this my wife, did n''t I pay for the license to we d her?" |
50586 | Is she here?" |
50586 | Is that you?'' |
50586 | Is there any particular kind of life you would like? |
50586 | Is there anything about Christianity that is necessarily uncultured? |
50586 | Is there help? |
50586 | Is your husband a Christian? |
50586 | It is said,''Why can not we improve on the Bible? |
50586 | It means that if you do n''t care any more for yourself than that why should he? |
50586 | Jesus said:"How is that so? |
50586 | Just like a shrimp who would say,"Must I confine my roaming to the Atlantic Ocean?" |
50586 | Just send up word and say,"Jesus, I''ve changed my mind; just put my name down for that, will you? |
50586 | Ladies, do you want to look pretty? |
50586 | Let me ask you one question: Are you ready to surrender to him? |
50586 | Listen, where does it go? |
50586 | M?" |
50586 | My, where''s mother, wife?" |
50586 | Now, when Jesus wanted to give his disciples an impressive object lesson he called in a college professor, did he? |
50586 | Nursing Bad Habits Are you nursing a habit today? |
50586 | O Lord, do you hear us? |
50586 | Of what value is your morality when your soul is lost? |
50586 | Oh, Jesus, is n''t this a fine bunch? |
50586 | Oh, but somebody says, do you call the news of that book that I am on the road to hell, good news? |
50586 | On the building? |
50586 | Or are you so blind to the spiritual that you ca n''t see that you need God''s help? |
50586 | Or hide your face from the light of day With a craven soul and fearful? |
50586 | Out came the farmer:"Hey, why do n''t you use the other end of that fork?" |
50586 | People sometimes ask me,"Who do you think will die first, Mr. Sunday, you or your wife, or your children or your mother?" |
50586 | Peter and James and John? |
50586 | Peter knew what their end would be-- blessings here and eternal life hereafter-- but he said,"What shall the end be of them that obey not?" |
50586 | Praying in Humility How many people pray in a real sense? |
50586 | Preparing for Eternity I said to a fellow one time,"Do n''t you think that possibly there is a hell?" |
50586 | Put it in a refrigerator? |
50586 | Regulate what by high license? |
50586 | Revival Demands Sacrifice When may a revival be expected? |
50586 | Right in your neighborhood, right in your block, how many are Christians? |
50586 | Search the annals of time and the pages of history and where do you find promises like that? |
50586 | Second-- Are you doing this to help me? |
50586 | See how the Lord does things? |
50586 | She said:''What''s your name?'' |
50586 | She saw them coming and cried out,''Have you any news of my boy?'' |
50586 | She took one look and said,''My God, is it you, Frank?'' |
50586 | She will say,"How are you, William?" |
50586 | Shortly after he had gone, the prisoner said to the watchman,"Who was that man that talked and prayed with me?" |
50586 | So he came and chose Moses to lead them, and when Moses got them out in the wilderness they began to knock and said,"Who is this Moses anyway? |
50586 | So that''s what you found, is it, Cowper? |
50586 | Some asked,"Where is the colonel?" |
50586 | Some of them stopped him and said:"What is the matter? |
50586 | Some one would say:"Good Angel, were you ever drunk?" |
50586 | Some people often say to me:"I wonder what the angels do; how they employ their time?" |
50586 | Some say:"Mr. Sunday, why is it that so few aged sinners are converts?" |
50586 | Sunday gets results for God; therefore, reason they, why should we attack him? |
50586 | Sunday has widely circulated his message upon this theme:"WHAT SHALL THE END BE?" |
50586 | Suppose death is eternal sleep? |
50586 | Suppose that when we die that ends it? |
50586 | Suppose there is no hell? |
50586 | Supposing a man should come to you and say,"The title to your property is no good and if some one contests it you will lose?" |
50586 | THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO SUNDAY What does converted mean? |
50586 | Taking a reasonable view of the case, what do we find? |
50586 | Tell me, where did Moses get his faith? |
50586 | That is, are= you= willing to do His will even when it conflicts with your desire? |
50586 | That poor, dirty, triple extract of vice and sin? |
50586 | That seems to have moved him, and I can hear him cry in the words of my text:"What shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel of God?" |
50586 | That you can hear music and the voices of friends and dear ones? |
50586 | That you can leave your home and business, and come here and hear the songs and the preaching of the word of God? |
50586 | The Bible says heaven or hell, so why do you resist? |
50586 | The Gin Mill What is the matter with this grand old country? |
50586 | The Judgment of God What is your life? |
50586 | The butcher says,"What do you want, a piece of neck?" |
50586 | The first recorded words of Jesus are these:"Wist ye not that I must be about my Father''s business?" |
50586 | The governor here and I did n''t know it? |
50586 | The kid looked at me in wonder and said:"Say, boss, why did n''t you chuck that nickel in the sewer?" |
50586 | The man said,"Captain of what, sir?" |
50586 | The most popular song for most of you would be,"''Where is that joy which once I knew, When first I loved the Lord?''" |
50586 | The mother or that godless, maudlin bum? |
50586 | The next day in the street one man said to another:''Have you heard the news? |
50586 | The next question I want to ask is, how can you get it? |
50586 | The old man heard and looked up with a smile on his face and asked:"Did I understand you to say that I am dying?" |
50586 | The operation was performed, and when she regained consciousness, they said:"Bessie, were n''t you afraid when they put you on the table?" |
50586 | The second question:"Have you as a young man lived as you demand of me as a girl that I should have lived?" |
50586 | The song quickly changes to"Oh, Where Is My Wandering Boy Tonight?" |
50586 | The teacher turned to him and said,"And how about you, Wilbur?" |
50586 | The third question:"If I, as a girl, had lived and done as you, as a young man, and you knew it, would you ask me to marry you?" |
50586 | The three addresses given on that day were"What Shall I Do with Jesus?" |
50586 | The two saw each other''s reflections in the French plate behind the bar, and the young man came out and said:"How do you do?" |
50586 | The young fellow said:"I suppose you do n''t remember me?" |
50586 | Then Jesus cried,''My God, why hast thou forsaken me?'' |
50586 | Then he asked the Pharisees:"Is that not proof enough that I am the Son of God, that I make the dead to arise?" |
50586 | Then he talked to that old fellow for two hours, and then the old scoundrel stroked his whiskers, and what do you think he said? |
50586 | Then somebody looked around and said,"Mr. L----, where is your little boy?" |
50586 | Then the stranger said:"Will you please tell me why you said it was the most powerful and influential church in the community?" |
50586 | Then whom are you going to believe, the man who has tried it or the man who knows nothing about it? |
50586 | They took the wounded soldier into their home,''Wo n''t you stay with us and be our son? |
50586 | They would go around and put their grips away in their room, wherever it is, and then they would say,"Can we sit here, Jesus?" |
50586 | Third-- Do you know what you''re talking about? |
50586 | Under the title"What Shall the End Be?" |
50586 | Very well; is it well with the child? |
50586 | Was n''t it good news to her to know that she and all her household would be saved by hanging a scarlet line out of the window? |
50586 | We all jumped down through the violets and varicolored flowers, the air pulsing with bird song, and I cried,"''Are-- all-- here?'' |
50586 | We had a grand meeting last night, Lord, when the crowd come down from Dicksonville( or what was that place, Rody? |
50586 | We have seen that it is good news; now what is it to obey? |
50586 | Well, then, how can I get this life that you want and everybody wants, eternal life? |
50586 | Were there not enough graves in Egypt?" |
50586 | What Will a Dollar Buy? |
50586 | What a Revival Does What is a revival? |
50586 | What are you doing? |
50586 | What business are you in?" |
50586 | What can I do to keep out of hell? |
50586 | What did Methuselah know about smoking cigarettes? |
50586 | What did his dying prayer do? |
50586 | What difference did it make? |
50586 | What difference does it make whether the fire in hell is literal or not? |
50586 | What difference does it make whether the fire in hell is literal, or the fittest emblem God could employ to describe to us the terrible punishment? |
50586 | What difference does that make? |
50586 | What difference would it make? |
50586 | What do I mean by power? |
50586 | What do you cuss for? |
50586 | What do you or I amount to out of 1,400,000,000 people? |
50586 | What do you think God will do if the mother fails? |
50586 | What do you think I did?'' |
50586 | What do you want to do, pay taxes in money or in boys? |
50586 | What do you want?" |
50586 | What does God care about that?" |
50586 | What does it matter if you pack a church to the roof if nothing happens to turn the devil pale? |
50586 | What does such a spectacle mean in a great old university, in a great city? |
50586 | What does that prove? |
50586 | What does that show? |
50586 | What does your money amount to? |
50586 | What does your wealth amount to? |
50586 | What for? |
50586 | What for? |
50586 | What has it ever done to help humanity in any way? |
50586 | What have you found by trusting in the finished work of Jesus Christ? |
50586 | What have you given the world it never possessed before you came? |
50586 | What have you got to show for it? |
50586 | What is it not to obey? |
50586 | What is it to obey the Gospel? |
50586 | What is it? |
50586 | What is it? |
50586 | What is more to blame for the crowded prisons than mothers? |
50586 | What is that ground worth without seed in it? |
50586 | What is that procession? |
50586 | What is that? |
50586 | What is the cause? |
50586 | What is the gospel, and what is it to obey the gospel? |
50586 | What is the matter with our country? |
50586 | What is the matter with the country, Colonel Politics? |
50586 | What is the matter? |
50586 | What is the matter? |
50586 | What is the matter? |
50586 | What is the use of putting chairs in the aisles and out the doors? |
50586 | What is your raw material, saloons? |
50586 | What kind of a mill are you?" |
50586 | What more can he do? |
50586 | What must I do? |
50586 | What paved the way for the downfall of the mightiest dynasties-- proud and haughty Greece and imperial Rome? |
50586 | What shall the end be? |
50586 | What should I do? |
50586 | What was it for Israel to obey? |
50586 | What was it for Noah to obey? |
50586 | What was it for Rahab to obey? |
50586 | What was the end of those who did n''t look at the brazen serpent in the wilderness? |
50586 | What was the end of those who were n''t in the ark with Noah? |
50586 | What was the end of those who were not with Rahab when she hung out the scarlet line? |
50586 | What was the matter with them? |
50586 | What was the result? |
50586 | What will a quart do? |
50586 | What will be the end? |
50586 | What will he do? |
50586 | What will some do? |
50586 | What would you care for an angel''s song if there were no mother''s song? |
50586 | What would you think of the fire department if it slept while the town burned? |
50586 | What''s the difference between those two men? |
50586 | What''s the matter with the country? |
50586 | What''s the matter with the country? |
50586 | What, if through your neglect, that boy becomes a Judas when he might have been a John or Paul? |
50586 | What, if through your unfaithfulness, your boy becomes a curse and your daughter a blight? |
50586 | What? |
50586 | When Napoleon Bonaparte was asked,"What do you regard as the greatest need of France?" |
50586 | When a baby is born, what do you do with it? |
50586 | When all that is gone, when pleasures pass away, and sorrow and weeping and wailing take their place, what shall the end be? |
50586 | When is a revival needed? |
50586 | When is a revival needed? |
50586 | When is a revival needed? |
50586 | When is a revival needed? |
50586 | When may a revival be expected? |
50586 | When may a revival be expected? |
50586 | When may a revival be expected? |
50586 | When should we promote a revival? |
50586 | When the flood came, was n''t it good news for Noah to know that he would be saved in the ark? |
50586 | When there is a neglect of prayer? |
50586 | When your prayers affect God? |
50586 | When? |
50586 | When? |
50586 | When? |
50586 | Whence all the misery and sorrow and corruption? |
50586 | Where are the undertakers that embalm the dead?'' |
50586 | Where are you tonight, old Eternal City of Rome on your seven hills? |
50586 | Where are you? |
50586 | Where can you find a place where they are not? |
50586 | Where did Moses get his backbone to say:"I wo n''t be called the son of Pharaoh''s daughter?" |
50586 | Where did Moses get the nerve to say,"Excuse me, please,"to the pleasures of Egypt? |
50586 | Where do you bury your dead?'' |
50586 | Where else may one so see"the people"; or fundamental human nature so expressing itself? |
50586 | Where have they all gone? |
50586 | Where is the minster, and where are the nurses to give the gentle touch, the panacea?'' |
50586 | Where is the wise? |
50586 | Where live the poor?'' |
50586 | Where will I find it?" |
50586 | Where will he go? |
50586 | Where will you find them?--where wo n''t you find them? |
50586 | Where wo n''t you find them? |
50586 | Which would you rather have, empty buildings or empty jails, penitentiaries and insane asylums? |
50586 | Who are you struggling with? |
50586 | Who can commit it? |
50586 | Who can commit it? |
50586 | Who gets the money? |
50586 | Who gets the nickel? |
50586 | Who gets the ninety- five cents? |
50586 | Who gets the rest? |
50586 | Who gets the twenty cents? |
50586 | Who has died?" |
50586 | Who has the most money Sunday morning, the saloon man or you? |
50586 | Who has to pay the bills? |
50586 | Who is better qualified to be the mediator? |
50586 | Who is the man that fights the whisky business in the South? |
50586 | Who is wise? |
50586 | Who knows but that Judas became the godless, good- for- nothing wretch he was because he had a godless, good- for- nothing mother? |
50586 | Who knows but that it is inhabited by a race unsullied by sin, untouched by death? |
50586 | Who knows the most, God or you? |
50586 | Who pays to feed and keep the gang you have in jail? |
50586 | Who suffers most? |
50586 | Who were filled with the Holy Spirit? |
50586 | Who works the hardest for his money, the saloon man or you? |
50586 | Who''ll come and get under the blood with me?" |
50586 | Who''ll come out clean- cut for God?" |
50586 | Who''ll take his stand for the Lord? |
50586 | Who? |
50586 | Whom did Jesus warn? |
50586 | Why are so few people coming into the kingdom? |
50586 | Why are we so confident that Billy Sunday is the Lord''s own man, when so many learned critics have declared the contrary? |
50586 | Why ca n''t I build the slaughter house? |
50586 | Why ca n''t I run my horse? |
50586 | Why did God give us the Bible? |
50586 | Why did they trust me? |
50586 | Why do n''t some of you go out and soak that guy? |
50586 | Why do n''t you confess? |
50586 | Why do n''t you kiss your wife instead of cursing her? |
50586 | Why do n''t you take a picture of that? |
50586 | Why do n''t you use a little, bud, so that something will come your way? |
50586 | Why do such names stand out on the pages of history as Wesley, Whitefield, Finney and Martin Luther? |
50586 | Why do you come here?'' |
50586 | Why do you lie instead of telling the truth? |
50586 | Why do you starve your spiritual body? |
50586 | Why do you want to be a sinner and refuse to yield? |
50586 | Why have n''t you as much power with God as the one hundred and twenty had at Pentecost? |
50586 | Why is it that with all our universities and colleges we have n''t produced a book like the Bible? |
50586 | Why should not a man go to greater lengths when dealing with living realities of the utmost importance? |
50586 | Why these meager results with this tremendous expenditure of energy and money? |
50586 | Why will God not forgive it? |
50586 | Why? |
50586 | Why? |
50586 | Wife comes out and says,"Hello, John, what have you got?" |
50586 | Will he ask some of the fellows of the town? |
50586 | Will he ask the County Liquor Dealers''Association? |
50586 | Will he go ask some of these old brewers? |
50586 | Will he go ask some old saloon- keeper? |
50586 | Will you accept Jesus Christ as your Saviour? |
50586 | Will you accept Jesus Christ as your Saviour?" |
50586 | Will you come?" |
50586 | Will you do it?'' |
50586 | Will you give me your hand?" |
50586 | Will you go up and talk and pray with papa? |
50586 | Will you say,"God, I did n''t have time enough"? |
50586 | Will you say,"God, I had no light?" |
50586 | Within a month, within a week, within a day, within an hour? |
50586 | Wo n''t you come down to the mission? |
50586 | Wo n''t you do it?'' |
50586 | Would I apologize? |
50586 | Would n''t this be a grand old world if it were n''t for a lot of things in it? |
50586 | Would n''t this city be a great place to live in if some people would die, get converted, or move away? |
50586 | Would vice become virtue because more people follow it? |
50586 | Would you be surprised to be reminded that infidel writers and speakers have always and do always advocate and condone and excuse suicide? |
50586 | Would you introduce a bill to repeal all the laws that do not prohibit? |
50586 | Would you laugh and go on about your business? |
50586 | You are the sovereign people, and what are you going to do about it? |
50586 | You ca n''t stand before God in the Judgment and say,"Jesus, were you down there in the tabernacle? |
50586 | You do n''t believe in quick conversions? |
50586 | You do n''t like it? |
50586 | You drink the stuff and what have you to say? |
50586 | You have seen counterfeit money? |
50586 | You have seen them counterfeiting Christians? |
50586 | You might as well sit around beneath the shade and fan yourself and say"Ai n''t it hot?" |
50586 | You never think of going without breakfast, do you? |
50586 | You say,"If I am satisfied with my life why do you want to interfere with my business?" |
50586 | You say,"Where will I find these people to talk to them?" |
50586 | You say,"Why ca n''t I run my auto? |
50586 | You that vote for it, and you that sell it? |
50586 | You would seize him and put him in jail, and supposing while there, your own son would come and say:"Father, how much does he owe you?" |
50586 | You, who are in rebellion against God? |
50586 | You, who are in rebellion against the authority of God''s government? |
50586 | Your diamond is a fine thing to carry until it''s lost, and of what value is it then? |
50586 | [ Illustration:"DOES YOUR NEWSBOY KNOW THAT YOU HAVE RELIGION?"] |
50586 | [ Illustration:"FIRST-- ARE YOU KINDLY DISPOSED TOWARD ME?"] |
50586 | [ Illustration:"SAY, BOSS, WHY DIDN''T YOU CHUCK THAT NICKEL IN THE SEWER?"] |
50586 | [ Illustration:"WHERE''S YOUR MONEY OR TICKET?"] |
50586 | [ Illustration:"WHO WILL LEAD THE WAY?"] |
50586 | and where are the brawny men who work and toil over the anvil?'' |
50586 | hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world? |
50586 | here?" |
50586 | here?" |
50586 | said I,''To wear and batter all these hammers so?'' |
50586 | what would be your answer? |
50586 | where is the disputer of this world? |
50586 | where is the scribe? |
53802 | ''Tis there ye are sufferin''? 53802 A South American diamond?" |
53802 | A million dollars? |
53802 | A special way of knowing things? |
53802 | A stone, did you say? |
53802 | Aboud how log would i d taig him to ged there ad thad rade? |
53802 | Africa, perhaps? |
53802 | After you had lifted the steamship up into the air,said Luther,"how soon could you get her across the ocean?" |
53802 | Already done it? |
53802 | Am I a liar? |
53802 | And how do you know he did? 53802 And how much bigger,"asked William,"is this than the Sancy?" |
53802 | And how vasd is thad? |
53802 | And much larger than any of the famous diamonds? |
53802 | And that it was a little different from the way I usually sing it? |
53802 | And the Koh- i- noor? |
53802 | And the Star of the South? |
53802 | And the thing is no bigger than your two hands? |
53802 | And they never deceived us? |
53802 | And we have probably been there? |
53802 | And what are your hopes? |
53802 | And what did I say? |
53802 | And what do you say she wants? |
53802 | And what makes light travel so fast? 53802 And what''s that?" |
53802 | And where is it now? |
53802 | And which are you? |
53802 | And you had no idea I was coming? |
53802 | And you really believe i d? |
53802 | And you, Cyrus? 53802 And your father? |
53802 | And your teeth are gone? |
53802 | Any greater age? 53802 Are you Dr. Alton''s son?" |
53802 | Are you absolutely sure that Ruth did not tell him? |
53802 | Are you pretending that you do n''t know why I am here? |
53802 | Are you sure it''s your dollar? |
53802 | Are you sure you can do it? |
53802 | Are you sure,said William,"that we have all seen it?" |
53802 | Are you sure? |
53802 | Are you sure? |
53802 | Are you sure? |
53802 | Are you sure? |
53802 | Are you sure? |
53802 | Are you the only person in the house? |
53802 | Are you the only person in the house? |
53802 | Are you tired? |
53802 | Ashamed of? 53802 Atlantis?" |
53802 | Beads vairy dales, doesn''d i d? |
53802 | Believe it? 53802 Bigger than God?" |
53802 | Bigger than what? |
53802 | Braver? 53802 But Ruth says you often know what people think, or are going to say, before they say it?" |
53802 | But a Christian is lots better than any of the others-- isn''t he? |
53802 | But are you pop sure it can do these things? 53802 But are you sure?" |
53802 | But how can you get hold of the miracle? |
53802 | But how do you know we have never been there? |
53802 | But how will you be supporting Ruth all that time? 53802 But it means for dogs, too, does n''t it?" |
53802 | But not diamonds-- not this same material? |
53802 | But not long? |
53802 | But once a city? |
53802 | But suppose Cyrus is imprisoned for life, or hanged, as often happens to train robbers? |
53802 | But tell me, Defender of Women, why do you wish for a girl? 53802 But tell me, Drowsy,"she demanded,"how came you here and why did you ask all those crazy questions? |
53802 | But the Christian religion is the best, is n''t it-- to go to heaven with? |
53802 | But the famous''Dresden''is that color, is n''t it? |
53802 | But what part of the world? 53802 But what''s the use of so many?" |
53802 | But who ever saw such a diamond? |
53802 | But why is n''t there one? |
53802 | But why not now? 53802 But why should they build their cities in those sunless chasms?" |
53802 | But why so sure, Cyrus? 53802 But you do n''t care for that candy?" |
53802 | But you do n''t remember? |
53802 | But you know it is n''t? |
53802 | But you really do n''t know when? |
53802 | But you_ do_ believe it? |
53802 | But, Mr. Heywood,said Cyrus,"what''s Ruth done that she should be punished and not have what she wants, and wants ever so much?" |
53802 | But, are you sure, Bressani,said the Senior Partner,"absolutely sure that it_ is_ a diamond?" |
53802 | But, of course, you are not absolutely sure it is the same material? |
53802 | Call you? 53802 Can he play ball any better?" |
53802 | Can you tell me, sir, where this is; what place? |
53802 | Can you tell me,said Cyrus,"about how much it is worth?" |
53802 | Changed my mind? 53802 Could n''t this have come from some other planet?" |
53802 | Could our connoisseur be quite such a fool as that? |
53802 | Could you read the thoughts of another person, do you think? 53802 Could you tell me,"he inquired, always deferentially,"the name of the nearest town?" |
53802 | D''ye feel so bad as that, little man? |
53802 | Did all those wives,he asked,"sit with Solomon in one pew on Sunday?" |
53802 | Did he go up at all? |
53802 | Did he say children, too? |
53802 | Did n''t you even think of me yesterday or this morning? |
53802 | Did seven hundred women like that sit around the breakfast table with Solomon every morning? |
53802 | Did the little blond hero happen to notice how I finished the prayer song this morning? |
53802 | Did you ever see the Hope diamond? |
53802 | Did you find this piece all alone, by itself,--apart from others? |
53802 | Didn''d he bake a lod of bunny all of a zudden? |
53802 | Do I have to give it to you? |
53802 | Do n''t know what? |
53802 | Do n''t understand what things? |
53802 | Do n''t you remember ever having seen a portrait of her? |
53802 | Do n''t you see,he said,"the difference between eight and twenty is twelve, is n''t it?" |
53802 | Do n''t you think so yourself? |
53802 | Do n''t you understand how it was? |
53802 | Do people always look around before choosing their religion? |
53802 | Do they have a better chance than Baptists or Methodists or Unitarians? |
53802 | Do they want your help as another doctor? |
53802 | Do you feel that way? |
53802 | Do you happen to know the town of Tarbes? |
53802 | Do you happen to speak English, madam? |
53802 | Do you know nothing of its history? |
53802 | Do you know of any other respectable young woman of your acquaintance who has done anything like it? |
53802 | Do you know of any richer period in human thought? 53802 Do you mean that you will stay here all your life, from a sense of duty?" |
53802 | Do you mean to say that you do n''t know why I am here? |
53802 | Do you mean,said her father,"that your voice carried from this house to his, nearly a mile away?" |
53802 | Do you realize, Signora,he said at last,"that you have developed a most extraordinary faculty?" |
53802 | Do you really think, Ruth, that Cyrus learned of the accident in that way? |
53802 | Do you think Cyrus will get over this, Doctor? 53802 Does it hurt?" |
53802 | Does n''t the Bible say anything about that? |
53802 | Does n''t what? |
53802 | Does your mother know what you have been doing here? |
53802 | Done what? |
53802 | Dried up at your age? 53802 Droitwich?" |
53802 | Elijah what? |
53802 | Father, was Jesus so very good? |
53802 | Father, why is n''t there a picture of my mother somewhere round the house? |
53802 | For you to keep and not give back? |
53802 | Forgot what? |
53802 | Fragments of what? |
53802 | Has she never told you not to cut up books? |
53802 | Have you ever been to Foix? |
53802 | Have you never seen a portrait of her? |
53802 | He knew that you could n''t hear anything_ he_ said? |
53802 | How budge? |
53802 | How could I? 53802 How did he do i d?" |
53802 | How did he like it? 53802 How did that happen?" |
53802 | How did you happen to know, this afternoon, that Mrs. Heywood had broken her leg? |
53802 | How do you do it? 53802 How do you know I wrote a second letter?" |
53802 | How do you know it ai n''t? |
53802 | How has he deceived anybody? |
53802 | How long have you been able to do this? |
53802 | How many? |
53802 | How much did the Cullinan weigh? |
53802 | How much is the Great Mogul? |
53802 | How much? |
53802 | How old? 53802 How punished?" |
53802 | How, funny? |
53802 | I beg your pardon for being so persistent, but may I ask you one more question, even more foolish than the others? 53802 I guess it''s safer than any of the others, is n''t it?" |
53802 | I mean what is it made of? 53802 I mean, which kind of religion is the-- is the safest?" |
53802 | If one,said Cyrus,"is enough for men around here, why should your Solomon need seven hundred?" |
53802 | If you speak English wo n''t you please say something? 53802 If you thought of me so much, why did n''t you write to me?" |
53802 | Important? 53802 In America?" |
53802 | In New York? 53802 In the state of Massachusetts?" |
53802 | Irreparable injury? 53802 Is Cyrus guying us, Doctor, or is he only dotty?" |
53802 | Is Dr. Alton at home? |
53802 | Is God a Congregashalist? |
53802 | Is a married feller stronger and can he run faster than the feller that is n''t married? |
53802 | Is it not possible your own brain may have played you a trick? 53802 Is it so very remarkable?" |
53802 | Is it some new form of electricity you discovered? |
53802 | Is it the palace, or villa, of some King, or Prince or Duke-- or something? |
53802 | Is it there now,--the machine? |
53802 | Is n''t the circus better? |
53802 | Is n''t there a famous Sancy diamond? |
53802 | Is n''t this America? |
53802 | Is she in France? |
53802 | Is she not at home? |
53802 | Is that really true, Cyrus? 53802 Is that true?" |
53802 | Is that yours? |
53802 | Is the district difficult to reach? |
53802 | Is there a portrait of your mother here? |
53802 | Is this a habit of yours-- making love in the dark to women you do n''t know? 53802 Is this much larger,"inquired Cyrus,"than that Dresden diamond?" |
53802 | Is this really the end? |
53802 | Is what? |
53802 | It is blue, is n''t it? |
53802 | Just a little one? |
53802 | Just what did she say, Stella? |
53802 | Just what do you mean, Cyrus? |
53802 | Just what is it? |
53802 | Know him? 53802 Larger than this?" |
53802 | Me? 53802 Me? |
53802 | Never? |
53802 | Never? |
53802 | No, ma''am,"Do you know when he will return? |
53802 | Nobody in Longfields has more than one, have they? |
53802 | Not Cyrus? |
53802 | Not anywhere in the house? |
53802 | Not even a minister? |
53802 | Not like it? 53802 Not now? |
53802 | Nothing else at all? |
53802 | Of course he has told you where you were born? |
53802 | Oh, Miss Ruth, are you ill? |
53802 | Oh, it''s you she wants, is it? |
53802 | On your way to my house? |
53802 | Our children? |
53802 | Perhaps what? |
53802 | Really? 53802 Really?" |
53802 | Ruins of what? |
53802 | Ruth,he said,"do you know how Cyrus heard of your mother''s accident so soon after it happened?" |
53802 | Sent what? |
53802 | Seven hundred, all alive at once? |
53802 | Shall we let him come? |
53802 | She? 53802 So you will never forgive me?" |
53802 | Sorry for what? |
53802 | Stay here? 53802 Tell you what?" |
53802 | That is funny, is n''t it? |
53802 | That shows how relative all things are, does n''t it? 53802 That would be funny, would n''t it?" |
53802 | The nature of the country? |
53802 | Then how do you know they want me? |
53802 | Then how does he get it? |
53802 | Then it ca n''t be any part of Asia, or even India? |
53802 | Then it is the largest you have ever seen? |
53802 | Then she is here, after all? |
53802 | Then she was your step- mother perhaps? |
53802 | Then this diamond of mine,he said,"would be ten times bigger than the Koh- i- noor or any of those other stones?" |
53802 | Then what state_ is_ this? |
53802 | Then why be hiding something? 53802 Then why did n''t you bring a larger piece? |
53802 | Then why do you do it? |
53802 | Then you crossed an ocean? 53802 Then you think it is not glass?" |
53802 | Then, how could we see it?--from a railway train-- or from a steamship? |
53802 | These things were scattered about the ground? |
53802 | This certainly is not a hospital, is it? |
53802 | Thought what? |
53802 | To what? |
53802 | Vorty- eight billions of biles? 53802 Was he married when he was a child?" |
53802 | Was he sure it was the Diva? |
53802 | Was she Italian? |
53802 | Well you look so, anyway; does n''t he, Martha? |
53802 | Well, Countess, will you give me your solemn word of honor to guard the secret if I tell you? |
53802 | Well, Miss Ruth Heywood, and Mr. Cyrus Alton, what can I do for you this morning? |
53802 | Well, ai n''t it true? |
53802 | Well, children, what is it? |
53802 | Well,--isn''t He? |
53802 | Well-- now-- is that a nice business, Ruth, for a model husband? 53802 Whad thigs?" |
53802 | What are you saying? |
53802 | What did she say? |
53802 | What do they believe,--the Unitarians? |
53802 | What do you mean, Cyrus? 53802 What do you mean, Ruth? |
53802 | What do you mean? |
53802 | What do you mean? |
53802 | What do you mean? |
53802 | What do you think I dreamed? 53802 What do you think did happen, Drowsy?" |
53802 | What does he say? |
53802 | What does it matter? 53802 What does it say?" |
53802 | What for? |
53802 | What hurt? |
53802 | What is it, Uncle Fred? 53802 What is it?" |
53802 | What is she singing? |
53802 | What is still coming, Cyrus? 53802 What is that?" |
53802 | What is the nearest town of importance;--the nearest city? |
53802 | What is to take its place, Cyrus? |
53802 | What is your name? |
53802 | What kind of a stone? |
53802 | What more can I say, Drowsy? 53802 What mountains?" |
53802 | What on earth is that? |
53802 | What part of France? |
53802 | What state? |
53802 | What thing? |
53802 | What thing_ do_ you want to know? |
53802 | What was it? |
53802 | What was its history, Bressani? |
53802 | What was this man''s name? |
53802 | What''ll you bet I ca n''t hit Luther from here? |
53802 | What''s a bad habit? |
53802 | What''s bigger? |
53802 | What''s the difference? |
53802 | What''s the kind of good that it does? |
53802 | What''s the matter, Cyrus? 53802 What''s the use of a ring?" |
53802 | What''s the use of crawling about on the earth like a bug? 53802 What''s your scheme?" |
53802 | When did Dr. Alton say he would be back? |
53802 | When did he go? |
53802 | When did that happen? |
53802 | When do you expect her? |
53802 | When was the last time? |
53802 | When you say any quantity, do you mean enough to run a typewriter-- or an automobile? |
53802 | When? |
53802 | Where could I find out? 53802 Where did he live?" |
53802 | Where did you get such an idea, Ruth? |
53802 | Where did you get this money, Cyrus? |
53802 | Where has he gone? |
53802 | Where? |
53802 | Where? |
53802 | Which do you like best? |
53802 | Which do you think, Joanna? |
53802 | Which kind are the surest? |
53802 | Which next? |
53802 | Who but you could call me here? |
53802 | Who is his bardner? |
53802 | Who is it? |
53802 | Who then? |
53802 | Who? |
53802 | Who? |
53802 | Who? |
53802 | Who? |
53802 | Whose house do you think it is? |
53802 | Whose idea is this? |
53802 | Why blush? |
53802 | Why did you never happen to tell me? |
53802 | Why do n''t they tell us things worth remembering? 53802 Why do we come here, father? |
53802 | Why do you ask, Cyrus? |
53802 | Why not? 53802 Why not? |
53802 | Why not? |
53802 | Why not?'' 53802 Why of course not?" |
53802 | Why of course not? |
53802 | Why shameful, Countess? |
53802 | Why, who told you? |
53802 | Why-- what was it? |
53802 | Why? 53802 Why?" |
53802 | Why? |
53802 | Will he ever gum bag, Jibby? |
53802 | Will he stay long? |
53802 | Will you do me a favor? |
53802 | Will you please take this note and the flowers to Ruth, Stella, and ask if I can see her? |
53802 | Will you promise not to be angry or say anything bad? |
53802 | With no dynamo, nor motor, nor transformer? |
53802 | With no instruments whatever? |
53802 | Yes, but-- but in what ways is a feller better? |
53802 | Yes, of course, but how long ago did you find you could do this? |
53802 | Yes, of course, wo n''t you come in? |
53802 | Yes, that is true, is n''t it? |
53802 | Yes, you have done it before, but how do you do it? 53802 Yes-- that Worcester is the one you mean, is it not?" |
53802 | You are telling me the truth, are n''t you, old friend? |
53802 | You bead he is bious? |
53802 | You came in that? |
53802 | You do n''t know in what country you were when you found it-- or bought it? |
53802 | You do n''t mean that you are not coming back to-- to Longfields-- to me? 53802 You do n''t really mean it?" |
53802 | You do n''t want to grow up and know less than anybody else-- even less than school children? |
53802 | You have never heard of any one else who has been there? |
53802 | You know nothing of the history of those people, of their manners and customs? |
53802 | You mean her-- her mind is affected? |
53802 | You mean if he answered back you could n''t get it? |
53802 | You mean no bad weather? |
53802 | You mean what kind of glass? |
53802 | You mean,said the Senior Partner,"it would be impossible to guess, even approximately, at its value?" |
53802 | You remember Cyrus Alton, do n''t you, Uncle Fred? |
53802 | You remember our wedding at the Unitarian Church, away back in that enchanted past? |
53802 | You say these ruins are very old? |
53802 | You say we have all heard of this country? |
53802 | You say you-- you knew of the accident? |
53802 | You think it might be rock crystal? |
53802 | You will forgive me, Ruth, wo n''t you? |
53802 | ''Tis the belly ache?" |
53802 | ''What''s it going to cost you?'' |
53802 | 206"But once a city?" |
53802 | 208"Older than human history"209"The dried bones of its own past, whatever it was"212"But why build their cities in those sunless chasms?" |
53802 | A few days later, when he was curled up at one end of the sofa with a book, he asked:"What is the transmigration of souls?" |
53802 | Across the water?" |
53802 | Afraid you are going to die?" |
53802 | Alton?" |
53802 | Alton?" |
53802 | Alton?" |
53802 | Alton?" |
53802 | Alton?" |
53802 | Am I not even to correspond with her?" |
53802 | And after all why should I call you? |
53802 | And as for The Only Woman in the world, if other women had changed their minds why not this one? |
53802 | And did he fix the vane?" |
53802 | And he has regretted it ever since?" |
53802 | And how?" |
53802 | And if God is good and not mean-- why did he make Bobby Carter a hunchback?" |
53802 | And if men are so smart, why did n''t they use electricity thousands of years ago instead of just now? |
53802 | And it''s true, is n''t it?" |
53802 | And was it a message? |
53802 | And where did you think yourself? |
53802 | And who cares anyway? |
53802 | And why not keep heat all winter? |
53802 | And why not, pray?" |
53802 | And why not? |
53802 | And why not? |
53802 | And why should she, poor thing? |
53802 | And you have really done it, Drowsy?" |
53802 | And you really consider robbery an honorable business?" |
53802 | And, anyway, why should a bird be so much better off than men and other animals? |
53802 | Any greater age?" |
53802 | Are we in Massachusetts?" |
53802 | Are we to laugh at it?" |
53802 | Are ye sick? |
53802 | Are you absolutely sure no previous knowledge of each other''s intentions may have helped a little?" |
53802 | Are you fond of pictures?" |
53802 | Are you little or big?" |
53802 | As he caressed the glistening marvel he asked:"Do other people know of these ruins?" |
53802 | As he seated himself beside her, she asked:"Were you ever married, Cyrus?" |
53802 | As the two men stood by the work bench, and Katz took a second look at his visitor''s face, he said:"What''s the matter? |
53802 | Because what? |
53802 | But dell be, is he really goig to dry vor i d?" |
53802 | But did n''t he say when he was coming back?" |
53802 | But s''pose I died in a few days, would you have to be married all the rest of your life to a dead boy?" |
53802 | But what do we have to do after we are married?" |
53802 | But what is it?" |
53802 | But where will you go when you once get up?" |
53802 | But where''s the fun of it?" |
53802 | But where? |
53802 | But who told you our Diva was here about?" |
53802 | But whose is it?" |
53802 | But why are you so interested in religion all of a sudden? |
53802 | But why these questions? |
53802 | But you prefer cocoanut pie to all the others?" |
53802 | But, even more gently than before, he inquired:"You do n''t know what state we are in?" |
53802 | By what mysterious agency had this yearning of a woman''s heart stirred the brain of the far away Cyrus? |
53802 | Ca n''t you open them wider?" |
53802 | Calmly, but with an obvious effort at self control she answered:"Do you think there is no gossip in Longfields, no comment on my unexpected arrival? |
53802 | Can you beat it?" |
53802 | Can you tell me what place this is?" |
53802 | Coming a step nearer, he demanded with suppressed enthusiasm:"Do you care for snakes or mice?" |
53802 | Could anything be more frightful than to know, at times, what people really thought of you? |
53802 | Could there be a harmony between these two spirits so intimate as to render the written word superfluous? |
53802 | Could this be a deaf and dumb asylum? |
53802 | Could you tell me what-- er-- what state this is?" |
53802 | Cyrus also smiled--"But tell me, father, just for fun, what religion is the best?" |
53802 | Cyrus listened, and understood; then inquired:"Was He a Congregashalist?" |
53802 | DREAMS? |
53802 | Dear me, Cyrus, do you think of taking your wife to the moon?" |
53802 | Did he ever get his bunny bag?" |
53802 | Did he really go up that way with those fat horses?" |
53802 | Did she die here in this house?" |
53802 | Did you ever happen to realize what a self- starting, Johnny- on- the- Spot, up- to- date miracle your memory is?" |
53802 | Do brave men run away? |
53802 | Do n''t they all know that?" |
53802 | Do n''t you believe what the Bible says?" |
53802 | Do n''t you remember?" |
53802 | Do you happen to be interested in electro kinetics?" |
53802 | Do you hear?" |
53802 | Do you mean a letter?" |
53802 | Do you s''pose they all slept in the same bed?" |
53802 | Do you think an unmarried woman can travel about the world alone with a young man as I did, and keep her good name?" |
53802 | Do you think it would be funny to dig ditches all your life and drive oxen like old Sim Barker?" |
53802 | Do you want to marry a train robber?" |
53802 | Does a dentist do it-- or something like that?" |
53802 | Does he allow you to do such things?" |
53802 | Does it take long to have it done?" |
53802 | Does n''t your mother punish you for telling such fibs?" |
53802 | Dreaming you are a bird?" |
53802 | Got the cash with you?" |
53802 | Greek or Roman, perhaps?" |
53802 | Has he been to the very center of the earth?" |
53802 | Has he lived up to it?" |
53802 | Have you any objections to being a millionaire?" |
53802 | Have you lost any limbs?" |
53802 | Have you seen it work yourself?" |
53802 | He recalled the look in her eyes when----"Do tell us what you think of it-- just how you feel about it, Cyrus?" |
53802 | Here the much embarrassed Ruth interrupted:"Please do n''t think, Dr. Gladwin, that----""That you treat other patients as kindly? |
53802 | How are you? |
53802 | How can you do such a thing?" |
53802 | How could I? |
53802 | How could you tell what I was going to say?" |
53802 | How do you feel?" |
53802 | How do you know? |
53802 | How does the miracle get its power?" |
53802 | How far are we from Worcester?" |
53802 | How old are you?" |
53802 | How old was he?" |
53802 | How on earth could I get it?" |
53802 | How var away is Bars, eddyway?" |
53802 | How? |
53802 | How_ can_ you say such a thing?" |
53802 | If I got into a big cannon ball and was shot up into the air how many hundreds of miles would I go before I would fall back? |
53802 | If she hated and despised him, why live? |
53802 | If you are the faithful soul you pretend to be, why did n''t you write me months ago?" |
53802 | In Australia?" |
53802 | In a higher, thinner voice he demanded:"What makes one kind of electricity do what another kind ca n''t? |
53802 | In a voice between a gasp and a shout of rage he demanded:"Who is that boy? |
53802 | In this vicinity?" |
53802 | Is Cyrus going to New York?" |
53802 | Is Joanna your sister?" |
53802 | Is he wild on other subjects, or is it only one screw that''s loose?" |
53802 | Is it a desert-- like Sahara, for instance?" |
53802 | Is it an emergency call?" |
53802 | Is it better that way?" |
53802 | Is it nothing but glass, after all?" |
53802 | Is it your wish to sell this diamond to us?" |
53802 | Is she there?" |
53802 | Is that a joke? |
53802 | Is that just what she said?" |
53802 | It is rather pleasant here, do n''t you think?" |
53802 | It said, distinctly, but in a tone too low for the taller people to hear:"How do you do, little stupid?" |
53802 | It was Pliny, the elder, who said,"Indeed, what is there that does not appear marvelous when it comes to our knowledge for the first time?" |
53802 | It was all by sea?" |
53802 | Just for the pleasure of doing this?" |
53802 | Just guess at it?" |
53802 | Just tell me what kind of a place this is? |
53802 | Just whad is i d?" |
53802 | Kide of sleeby eyes, hasn''d he?" |
53802 | Marry?" |
53802 | May I touch your face just a little?" |
53802 | Mine?" |
53802 | Mr. Bressani in a low, somewhat awe stricken tone, said:"And there is really much of it?" |
53802 | Not this very minute?" |
53802 | Of others, beside our invalid, here?" |
53802 | Of what good this sudden wealth when his best friend, after these years of economy and self sacrifice, was not here to enjoy it? |
53802 | Oh, why begin all over again? |
53802 | Or is it his unspoken words that you read?" |
53802 | Or was he merely amusing himself at her expense? |
53802 | Or was it an individual form of spiritual sympathy, some ethereal harmony attuned by superhuman guidance to a chosen few? |
53802 | Our friendship is too precious for that, is n''t it? |
53802 | Pointing to a dish of fruit on a further table, he asked:"Wo n''t you have an apple?" |
53802 | Really, is it you?" |
53802 | Really?" |
53802 | She might be a perfect copy of myself? |
53802 | So you think it''s perfectly natural for a man to hide from his old friends all knowledge of his marriage-- as he would a murder?" |
53802 | Something on your mind?" |
53802 | Tell me, have you the same wonder- working eyes and mouth and haughty bearing? |
53802 | That I am no more to you than anybody else?" |
53802 | That seems an awful lot for one man, does n''t it?" |
53802 | That you are going to stay here forever?" |
53802 | That''s fair, is n''t it?" |
53802 | That''s robbery, is n''t it?" |
53802 | The same message?" |
53802 | The same, I suppose?" |
53802 | Then Cyrus, after a good look into the face of the dog beside him:"Whose soul do you suppose is in Zac?" |
53802 | Then Mr. Bressani asked:"What_ is_ this diamond''s country?" |
53802 | Then as his eyes rested on a little music box that lay on the table beside him, he exclaimed, with enthusiasm:"You like good music?" |
53802 | Then why pretend you did n''t know you were in England?" |
53802 | Then, after another silence:"But where did he get it? |
53802 | Then, with a smile:"I suppose you have often known what_ I_ was thinking?" |
53802 | Then, without committing either of us, if you are still as blind, as reckless and perverse as you are to- night, you can----""Still alive, Ruth?" |
53802 | There was touch of contempt in Cyrus''s manner as he replied:"You do n''t even know what I mean?" |
53802 | This city of Worcester is in the State of Massachusetts, is it not?" |
53802 | Turning to Cyrus, he inquired,"What are you going to live on? |
53802 | Was he a wandering lunatic escaped from his keepers, preferring darkness to light? |
53802 | Was he on the border land of the supernatural? |
53802 | Was his son the master of a vital secret, a mysterious power now unknown to science but, in future years perhaps, to be common knowledge? |
53802 | Was it in Cambridge?" |
53802 | Was it long ago that she died?" |
53802 | Was it the voice he had heard in the darkness-- in the motor, that night? |
53802 | Was it within the realms of material science? |
53802 | Was this hideous gloom a regular habit with English nights? |
53802 | What about the surface of Abyssinia? |
53802 | What are the products of the Cape of Good Hope? |
53802 | What better test of my affection could you want? |
53802 | What can it be?" |
53802 | What do I have to do?" |
53802 | What do we do first?" |
53802 | What do you mean, Ruth?" |
53802 | What do you mean? |
53802 | What do_ you_ think it is, glass?" |
53802 | What held him in Longfields-- or anywhere else? |
53802 | What is going to be your business?" |
53802 | What is it?" |
53802 | What is that, father?" |
53802 | What is the material?" |
53802 | What things?" |
53802 | What traveler, in his senses, could be so far astray? |
53802 | What''ll you have, Ruth?" |
53802 | What''s a tooth, an eye, or a few hairs more or less to an honest lover?" |
53802 | What''s his name?" |
53802 | What''s his name?" |
53802 | What''s his name?" |
53802 | What''s his occupation, now?" |
53802 | What''s the news from Longdeado?" |
53802 | What''s the process?" |
53802 | What? |
53802 | When the hat was again on his head, he looked calmly at the girl with the eyes and inquired:"Why did you call me stupid?" |
53802 | When you get up to- morrow and wish to get well and strong you will begin to eat again, wo n''t you?" |
53802 | When? |
53802 | Where I am?" |
53802 | Where are the Barbary States? |
53802 | Where is he?" |
53802 | Where is she? |
53802 | Where is she?" |
53802 | Which is the largest African Lake? |
53802 | Who calls me?" |
53802 | Who could believe a human voice or a thought could penetrate those black, appalling depths? |
53802 | Who could enter this bower unless shadowed by the Breath of Scandal? |
53802 | Who in the world, except Joanna would mourn, or even miss him? |
53802 | Who in thunder cares for the climate of Uruguay or the exports of Ecuador? |
53802 | Who in thunder wants to know about the products of Madagascar? |
53802 | Who is he? |
53802 | Who is he? |
53802 | Who''d ever be such a fool as to want to remember the population of Thibet? |
53802 | Why a boy? |
53802 | Why be a skeptic? |
53802 | Why did n''t you see it by day light?" |
53802 | Why did you call me across the water? |
53802 | Why do n''t they tell me things I want to know?" |
53802 | Why do n''t you button up your coat in front? |
53802 | Why do you think I do n''t like it?" |
53802 | Why has he run away? |
53802 | Why important, Cyrus?" |
53802 | Why manufacture power when the whole universe is vibrating with it? |
53802 | Why not keep some overnight to read by? |
53802 | Why not? |
53802 | Why not? |
53802 | Why not?" |
53802 | Why part again? |
53802 | Why should a hen-- just a hen-- have wings and not a boy? |
53802 | Why should they know it? |
53802 | Why should you ask such a question?" |
53802 | Why stick so tight to the ground? |
53802 | Why try to improve an already perfect thing? |
53802 | Why zo zlow?" |
53802 | Why, Cyrus, what_ do_ you mean? |
53802 | Will they believe that you, whom they have known from boyhood, whom they respect and like, would carry me off by force, entirely against my will?" |
53802 | Will you?" |
53802 | Will you?" |
53802 | Will you?" |
53802 | With some impatience William demanded:"Now just what do you mean, Cyrus?" |
53802 | With the Bressani eyebrows still in the air their owner inquired:"You say this was lying on the top of the ground?" |
53802 | Wo n''t you please say that in English?" |
53802 | Wo n''t you walk in?" |
53802 | Would a stone keep on dropping till it came out the other side?" |
53802 | Would it be worth sixty times four hundred thousand dollars? |
53802 | Would n''t it?" |
53802 | Would that be all right?" |
53802 | Would that be satisfactory to you?" |
53802 | Would you be so mean as that?" |
53802 | Would you get tired of me?" |
53802 | Would you mind just telling me what part of the country we are in? |
53802 | Would you mind seeing him just a minute, and looking at it?" |
53802 | You do n''t really mean what you say? |
53802 | You know what a box kite is?" |
53802 | You mean fifteen hundred years? |
53802 | You really do not know what I mean?" |
53802 | [ Illustration:"BUT ONCE A CITY?" |
53802 | [ Illustration:"BUT WHO EVER SAW SUCH A DIAMOND?" |
53802 | [ Illustration:"BUT WHY BUILD THEIR CITIES IN THOSE SUNLESS CHASMS?" |
53802 | [ Illustration] IX DREAMS? |
53802 | _ Luther._ Do you promise to endure with all your worldly goods? |
53802 | _ Luther._ Will you hold on for better than worse? |
53802 | _ Luther._ Will you take this wedded boy for your husband? |
53802 | _ Luther._ Will you take this wedded girl for your wife? |
53802 | _ Luther._ You promise to obey? |
54621 | ''You wish me to go, then?'' 54621 Ai n''t he nice lookin''?" |
54621 | Am I? |
54621 | And Daly''s? |
54621 | And I suppose my mother was very much frightened? |
54621 | And I suppose that would be fatal? |
54621 | And I suppose there are some grand buildings? |
54621 | And after he got your money he had no further use for you? |
54621 | And did his wife allow that? |
54621 | And did you die? |
54621 | And do you want your old place again? |
54621 | And he broke his promise? |
54621 | And on one of these occasions he was impudent to you? |
54621 | And the other half of the money? |
54621 | And what can that be? |
54621 | And what''s the street and number? |
54621 | And where did you get so much money? 54621 And where do I come in?" |
54621 | And will you give me the raft? |
54621 | And write a fair hand? |
54621 | And yet you rebuked or snubbed him? |
54621 | And you are actually reduced to pawning it? |
54621 | And you give me such a valuable present? |
54621 | And you lived on that? |
54621 | And you say I can get a room for two dollars a week? |
54621 | And you say he is an experienced salesman? |
54621 | And you were brought up to work on the farm? |
54621 | And you would like that? |
54621 | And yourself? 54621 Are n''t you an ex- bell- boy?" |
54621 | Are none of your family living? |
54621 | Are you Giles Packard? 54621 Are you Giles Packard?" |
54621 | Are you all right? |
54621 | Are you fond of hunting, Rupert? |
54621 | Are you going to make any more applications, Leslie? |
54621 | Are you here alone? |
54621 | Are you not well? |
54621 | Are you repeating what he said exactly? |
54621 | Are you rich? |
54621 | Are you still a bell- boy? |
54621 | Are you sure you''ve got money enough to pay for them? |
54621 | Are you travelin''alone? |
54621 | Are you working? |
54621 | Are your father and mother both living? |
54621 | At what number does he live? |
54621 | But do you realize what a responsibility you are assuming? |
54621 | But how can your small earnings support three persons? |
54621 | But how shall we live in that case, Rupert? 54621 But is n''t that a high rent to pay?" |
54621 | But suppose in my sleep I''d thrown out my arm, as I sometimes do, and hit the snake? |
54621 | But was it in a condition for use? |
54621 | But what calls you to this house, any way? |
54621 | But where will you sit? |
54621 | But why are you here? 54621 But why is this?" |
54621 | But why should he work for such low wages then? |
54621 | But you do n''t object to it? |
54621 | But you have probably seen other cities-- St. Louis, or Chicago? |
54621 | But-- aren''t they dangerous? |
54621 | But-- do you think there is any chance to get in elsewhere? 54621 Ca n''t I assist you?" |
54621 | Ca n''t you cut down his pay? |
54621 | Ca n''t you give us the refusal of it for a day? |
54621 | Ca n''t you turn the key? |
54621 | Can I do anything for you, sir? 54621 Can I do anything for you? |
54621 | Can I go? |
54621 | Can you direct me to Palmer''s Theatre? |
54621 | Can you get through and lower yourself to the floor? |
54621 | Can you suggest any way in which I can recover my property? |
54621 | Can you tell who left the message? |
54621 | Could I buy some food at your house? |
54621 | Did he come down stairs? |
54621 | Did he give you a note for the three thousand dollars you lent him? |
54621 | Did he make you any offer? |
54621 | Did he put on airs with you? |
54621 | Did he tell you where his office was? |
54621 | Did he? 54621 Did he?" |
54621 | Did n''t I tell you? 54621 Did n''t I tell you?" |
54621 | Did n''t you ever hear of New York? |
54621 | Did n''t you ever think of being an actor? |
54621 | Did n''t you find anything to do there? |
54621 | Did n''t you hear me say that his father was a wealthy merchant? |
54621 | Did n''t you leave a note for him? |
54621 | Did n''t you wake me some time ago? |
54621 | Did she give it up willingly? 54621 Did she say anything to you when she went out?" |
54621 | Did the gentleman mention his name to you? |
54621 | Did you always live here? |
54621 | Did you come here directly from pa''s store? |
54621 | Did you ever hear of the firm of Rollins& Lorimer? |
54621 | Did you ever hear the like? |
54621 | Did you get into the office? |
54621 | Did you have any trouble when in Mr. Lorimer''s store? |
54621 | Did you leave home without letting him know? |
54621 | Did you like it? |
54621 | Did you make an effort to recover the money? |
54621 | Did you never speak any prose pieces? |
54621 | Did you retire on a fortune? |
54621 | Did you say there was as much as five dollars in the purse? |
54621 | Did you say you were off this afternoon? |
54621 | Did you see him? 54621 Did you speak to him?" |
54621 | Did you? 54621 Did your father lose all his property?" |
54621 | Do n''t you enjoy seeing anything? 54621 Do n''t you know me, Giles?" |
54621 | Do n''t you like to speak pieces? |
54621 | Do n''t you live with your father? |
54621 | Do n''t you need a bookkeeper? |
54621 | Do n''t you think of working, sir? 54621 Do you feel at all nervous about your first appearance in a star part?" |
54621 | Do you know Mr. Benton''s son, Julian? |
54621 | Do you know anything about the Society for the Relief of Indigent Laundresses? |
54621 | Do you know him? |
54621 | Do you know if Giles has been successful? 54621 Do you know the girl?" |
54621 | Do you know where there''s a good place to take supper-- a good country supper? 54621 Do you know, Rupert, I think I will learn to act those parts in time?" |
54621 | Do you like it? |
54621 | Do you live around here? |
54621 | Do you live far off? |
54621 | Do you mean Giles Packard? |
54621 | Do you mean that she has taken it, Rupert? |
54621 | Do you mean to insult me? 54621 Do you mean to tell me that you know Albert Fraser?" |
54621 | Do you see that, Mrs. Marlow? 54621 Do you suspect anyone of taking your purse?" |
54621 | Do you sustain him in interfering with my work? |
54621 | Do you think Mr. Sylvester knew about the gold? |
54621 | Do you think so? |
54621 | Do you trust your clerks to do the work while you are away? |
54621 | Do you want the money to- day? |
54621 | Do you wish to go there? |
54621 | Does he know that you have had thoughts of becoming an actor? |
54621 | Does he pay other salesmen as poorly as he pays you? |
54621 | Does he, sir? |
54621 | Does it cost a great deal of money to go to New York? |
54621 | Does it pay you well? |
54621 | Does n''t he pay more to his other salesmen? |
54621 | Does n''t your father work? |
54621 | Does she look the part? |
54621 | Does your mother prefer the city to the country? |
54621 | Drat the child? 54621 Eh? |
54621 | Eh? 54621 Even if your wants were all provided for in that time?" |
54621 | Five hundred dollars a month? |
54621 | For whom are you going to work? |
54621 | From whom? |
54621 | Get ready a little supper for us, will you? 54621 Got sacked, eh?" |
54621 | Had you not laid up any money? |
54621 | Has Mrs. Marlow been here to- day? |
54621 | Has he been dead long, doctor? |
54621 | Has this Mr. Lorimer a family? |
54621 | Have you a couple of hours to spare? |
54621 | Have you any plans in that direction? |
54621 | Have you ever been there? |
54621 | Have you ever lived there? |
54621 | Have you ever traveled on the Elevated cars? |
54621 | Have you found a place? |
54621 | Have you given him any money? |
54621 | Have you had supper yet? |
54621 | Have you inquired for work? |
54621 | Have you known him long? |
54621 | Have you met with any success? 54621 Have you noticed rather a flashy young man, looking like a dude, with an eyeglass and cane?" |
54621 | Have you noticed that? 54621 Have you room for another, Mr. Packard? |
54621 | He must have given you a note? |
54621 | He stayed some time, then? |
54621 | He used to work for your father? |
54621 | He wants it in advance, does n''t he? |
54621 | How about him? |
54621 | How about your mother? |
54621 | How are you getting along, Mrs. Marlow? 54621 How are you goin''to get back?" |
54621 | How came it in your pocket? |
54621 | How came you here? |
54621 | How came you to know Stephen Lorimer? |
54621 | How did he appear? |
54621 | How did it happen that you did not buy it? |
54621 | How did you get so hard up? |
54621 | How do you do, Rupert? |
54621 | How do you know it is his? |
54621 | How do you know my name? |
54621 | How do you like New York? |
54621 | How do you like my selection of housekeeper, Uncle Ben? |
54621 | How do, Mortimer? 54621 How does she play?" |
54621 | How early should I get off at night? |
54621 | How far away is that? |
54621 | How is it that you ca n''t tell, if the purse is yours? |
54621 | How is that? |
54621 | How is the little boy? |
54621 | How is the world using you, Leslie? |
54621 | How long has he been married to your mother? |
54621 | How long has your papa been lying here? |
54621 | How long have you been in our employ? |
54621 | How many did you have in the first place? |
54621 | How many have you got left? |
54621 | How much are you goin''to give her? |
54621 | How much do you ask? |
54621 | How much do you get? |
54621 | How much does he pay his cash boys? |
54621 | How much have you? |
54621 | How much money was there in the purse you say the boy took from you? |
54621 | How much will you be paid? |
54621 | How much? |
54621 | How was that? |
54621 | How were you received? |
54621 | How, then, do you tell time? |
54621 | How, then, is your mother getting along? |
54621 | How? |
54621 | I am glad at least that no fault is found with you, but what shall we do? 54621 I expect it is a great deal larger than Denver?" |
54621 | I mean was he cordial? |
54621 | I suppose it is solid gold? |
54621 | I suppose you are wondering where I met my new friend, Rachel? |
54621 | I suppose you know that my father has a nice new store on Third Avenue, near Forty- second Street? |
54621 | I suppose you live in the country? |
54621 | I suppose you understand what is the matter with me? |
54621 | I suppose you wo n''t mind roughing it, Rupert? |
54621 | I thought you had met with an accident? |
54621 | I want you to be plain with me, Rupert Do you think I am too old to be married? |
54621 | I was too much for the butcher boy, eh, Rupert? |
54621 | I wonder what mischief Clayton is up to now? |
54621 | I wonder whether he is well paid? |
54621 | I''ve worked, too,he said,"but what''s the good of it all?" |
54621 | If he took all your money, how are you goin''to pay for your dinner? |
54621 | If it is n''t hers,said the old lady sharply,"how did she happen to describe it so exactly?" |
54621 | In relation to a clerk in our employ? |
54621 | Is Albert Fraser a nice fellow? |
54621 | Is all your property in cattle, Giles? |
54621 | Is he a cowboy? |
54621 | Is he a friend of yours, Rupert? |
54621 | Is he cold? |
54621 | Is he out of work? |
54621 | Is he related to Stephen Lorimer? |
54621 | Is he rich? |
54621 | Is it a pooty good business? |
54621 | Is it a relation of yours? |
54621 | Is it for yourself? |
54621 | Is it oroide? |
54621 | Is it possible? 54621 Is it possible?" |
54621 | Is it possible? |
54621 | Is it that you are engaged to the fair Pauline? |
54621 | Is it you, Julian? |
54621 | Is n''t it your wedding ring, mother? |
54621 | Is n''t it? 54621 Is n''t that pretty hard? |
54621 | Is n''t that rash? 54621 Is she a friend of yours?" |
54621 | Is she pretty? |
54621 | Is that all the evidence you have? |
54621 | Is that always the case? 54621 Is that boy going off with my money?" |
54621 | Is that meant as a threat? |
54621 | Is that my uncle''s coat? |
54621 | Is that so? 54621 Is that where you live?" |
54621 | Is that your husband? |
54621 | Is that your watch? |
54621 | Is the writer correct in his statements? |
54621 | Is there anything you would like to ask me in reference to it? |
54621 | Is this true? |
54621 | Is this true? |
54621 | Is your sister sick? |
54621 | Is-- is there any chance to go into that business? |
54621 | Let me see,he said, tapping Rupert on the shoulder,"you are the bell- boy who came near being murdered by a crank?" |
54621 | Look here, Rupert, wo n''t you let me share the expense? 54621 May I ask if you are in the same business as Frank?" |
54621 | May I ask your name, sir? |
54621 | May I have another in the morning? |
54621 | Mother,he cried, entering out of breath,"where did you put the purse I gave you?" |
54621 | Mr. Boone,said Rupert, when they were fairly on their way,"are you related to Daniel Boone?" |
54621 | My scheme of getting you to return Uncle John his money? |
54621 | No,replied Rupert, laughing,"but I enjoy the wild mountain scenery; do n''t you?" |
54621 | Now suppose we are out ten days-- that will make thirty dollars, wo n''t it? |
54621 | Now, Mr. Packard, what do you advise me to do? |
54621 | Now, young man,said the attendant,"do you want the dollar and a quarter I offered you on your ring?" |
54621 | Of course you do n''t know how this was received by your father? |
54621 | Of what have you been robbed? |
54621 | Oh, a cowboy? |
54621 | Oh, it''s a secret, is it? |
54621 | Oh, you threaten, do you? 54621 On the whole, your father did not find him satisfactory? |
54621 | Possibly you may have wondered what his business is here? |
54621 | Shall I order some champagne, Rupert? |
54621 | Shall I tell you why I am so liberal? 54621 Shall you answer it?" |
54621 | She told you about a telegraph boy calling on me? |
54621 | Should you be willing to be a bell- boy for the next twenty years? |
54621 | So it is here you are employed? |
54621 | So it was a telegraph boy who brought the message? |
54621 | So soon as that? |
54621 | So we meet again? |
54621 | So, Kate, you have had your purse stolen, have you? |
54621 | Suppose you do n''t get a chance to go on the stage, would you be willing to take a business place? |
54621 | Suppose your father reads the account? 54621 Sure his name is Sylvester, is it? |
54621 | Sure, where did he hear that? |
54621 | Surely you are not in earnest? |
54621 | Surely you are not my Uncle John? |
54621 | That is a wonderful city, is n''t it? |
54621 | The fifty dollars would be sure? |
54621 | Then I suppose he is well up in the fundamental rules of arithmetic? |
54621 | Then I suppose you will be ready to accept the place of bell- boy? |
54621 | Then what fault did he find with him? 54621 Then why come here at all?" |
54621 | Then why do you mind tellin''me where he lives? |
54621 | Then why not leave it? 54621 Then will you come and marry me?" |
54621 | Then you are not satisfied with the position of a bell- boy? |
54621 | Then you are out of work now? |
54621 | Then you did n''t have your leg broken, after all? |
54621 | Then you do n''t remember your cousin, Giles Packard? |
54621 | Then you do n''t think he will pursue you? |
54621 | Then you have only sold eight? |
54621 | Then you knew him? |
54621 | Then you know where he lives? |
54621 | Then you wo n''t accept my help towards paying for the child''s maintenance? |
54621 | Then you wo n''t be inconvenienced by losing Fred''s board? |
54621 | Then you wo n''t give me my money? |
54621 | Then your leg is n''t broken? |
54621 | To enter our employment? 54621 To what do you refer, Rupert?" |
54621 | To whom, then? |
54621 | Try what? |
54621 | Want to try, mam? |
54621 | Was any messenger boy sent from here this afternoon to Elizabeth Street? |
54621 | Was he impudent to your father? |
54621 | Was he really so dangerous? |
54621 | Was the firm name''Rollins& Lorimer?'' |
54621 | Was there any particular thing that you wished to do? |
54621 | Well, Rupert, what business did the superintendent have with you? |
54621 | Well, did you hear anything of the purse? |
54621 | Well, my friend,he said,"I presume you have made up your mind to secure a position for your son?" |
54621 | Well, who has a better right? 54621 Well,"said an attendant, courteously,"what can I do for you?" |
54621 | Well? |
54621 | Well? |
54621 | Were you, indeed, sir? |
54621 | Were your families intimate? |
54621 | What are they? |
54621 | What are you discharged for? |
54621 | What are you doing here? |
54621 | What are you doing, Leslie? |
54621 | What are you doing, then? |
54621 | What are you thinking about, Rupert? |
54621 | What are you? |
54621 | What became of Lorimer? |
54621 | What brings you here, Rupert? |
54621 | What can I do for you, Rupert? |
54621 | What can he want at those theatres? |
54621 | What can it mean? |
54621 | What did I tell you, Giles? |
54621 | What did she wear? |
54621 | What did you think of it, Rupert? |
54621 | What did you think of my acting, Rupert? |
54621 | What do you advise me to do? |
54621 | What do you know about the telegraph boy, Grace? 54621 What do you mean by that? |
54621 | What do you mean? |
54621 | What do you mean? |
54621 | What do you propose to do? |
54621 | What do you refer to? |
54621 | What do you say to the Windsor Hotel? |
54621 | What do you see? |
54621 | What do you think of me as a bookkeeper, Uncle John? |
54621 | What do you think of that, Rupert? |
54621 | What do you think, doctor? |
54621 | What do you want on it? |
54621 | What does all this mean? |
54621 | What does he want here? |
54621 | What does she say to it? |
54621 | What does this mean? |
54621 | What for? |
54621 | What is astonishing? |
54621 | What is his full name? |
54621 | What is his name? |
54621 | What is it, and where? |
54621 | What is it, mother? 54621 What is it, then?" |
54621 | What is it? |
54621 | What is that? |
54621 | What is the matter, Johnny? |
54621 | What is the matter, Rupert? |
54621 | What is the matter, mother? |
54621 | What is the matter, mother? |
54621 | What is the matter? |
54621 | What is the name of that boy? |
54621 | What is this I hear, Rupert? |
54621 | What is your name? |
54621 | What is your name? |
54621 | What is your name? |
54621 | What kind of a purse was it? |
54621 | What kind of meat is this? |
54621 | What kind of work? |
54621 | What luck? |
54621 | What makes you think so? 54621 What makes you think that?" |
54621 | What message did the telegraph boy bring you, mother? |
54621 | What might your business be? |
54621 | What pay are you to get? |
54621 | What rent do you pay? |
54621 | What ring is this, Rupert? |
54621 | What shall we do? |
54621 | What sort of children are they? |
54621 | What time is it? |
54621 | What time is it? |
54621 | What wages did they pay you? |
54621 | What was it all about? |
54621 | What was the name of the gentleman in Harlem from whom you say you obtained the purse? |
54621 | What will my hours be? |
54621 | What will you do when you are sixty- five? |
54621 | What will you give me on this ring? |
54621 | What''s that? |
54621 | What''s the matter, Mrs. Marlow? 54621 What''s the use of workin''? |
54621 | What''s them? |
54621 | What, after his impudence to me? |
54621 | What? |
54621 | When am I to commence work? |
54621 | When are you going to see Mr. Clayton again? |
54621 | When did you make application for a place? |
54621 | When will your husband be home? |
54621 | When you want to go? |
54621 | Where are you staying? |
54621 | Where can they have taken my boy? |
54621 | Where did he live? |
54621 | Where did you come from? |
54621 | Where did you get it? |
54621 | Where did you get it? |
54621 | Where did you get that overcoat you have on? |
54621 | Where did you pick up your Indian friend? |
54621 | Where do you live? |
54621 | Where do you live? |
54621 | Where do you live?'' |
54621 | Where do you wish to go? |
54621 | Where does Mrs. Rollins live? |
54621 | Where does he keep his canoe? |
54621 | Where does he live? |
54621 | Where does your mother live? |
54621 | Where have you been living? |
54621 | Where have you been, mother? |
54621 | Where have you been? |
54621 | Where have you left Ben? |
54621 | Where in the world did you come across Mrs. Rollins? 54621 Where is he now?" |
54621 | Where is he now? |
54621 | Where is his office? |
54621 | Where is it now? |
54621 | Where is she, then? |
54621 | Where is that? 54621 Where is the insane man?" |
54621 | Where mought you be goin''? |
54621 | Where was that? |
54621 | Where were you sitting? |
54621 | Where''ve you been gallivantin''to? |
54621 | Where? |
54621 | Whereabouts? |
54621 | Who brought the paper? |
54621 | Who pays your expenses if you are earning nothing? |
54621 | Who told you such nonsense? |
54621 | Who''ve you got with you? |
54621 | Whom have you in his place? |
54621 | Why ca n''t she go out and get a bit of amusement like other folks? |
54621 | Why did he give you the purse? |
54621 | Why did n''t I put the purse in my trunk? |
54621 | Why did n''t I say that was my cousin''s name? |
54621 | Why did n''t you stay in Colorado? 54621 Why did you wish to know?" |
54621 | Why do n''t you ask the boy how much money there is in the purse? |
54621 | Why do n''t you live in the Newsboys''Lodge? 54621 Why do n''t you live there, too?" |
54621 | Why do you give this warning? 54621 Why do you leave Tenney& Rhodes?" |
54621 | Why does n''t Ben come? |
54621 | Why is that? 54621 Why not?" |
54621 | Why should I? 54621 Why should n''t I be all right, George?" |
54621 | Why so? |
54621 | Why was n''t I satisfied with the five dollars? |
54621 | Why? 54621 Why?" |
54621 | Why? |
54621 | Why? |
54621 | Will it be convenient for you to remain in the city and prosecute this man? |
54621 | Will papa soon be well? |
54621 | Will the proprietor of the Somerset Hotel receive you back as a bell- boy? |
54621 | Will there be room for Fred, my little ward? |
54621 | Will they recommend you? |
54621 | Will you live with me? |
54621 | Will you look and see if it is there now? |
54621 | Will you tell him you met me, and ask him if he will send money to bring me on to where he lives? 54621 Wo n''t you ask her?" |
54621 | Wo n''t you get tired of the care and responsibility? |
54621 | Wo n''t you jump, John? |
54621 | Wo n''t you let me have one of these oranges for four cents? |
54621 | Wo n''t you sit down? 54621 Wo n''t you stay the evening?" |
54621 | Would I like it? 54621 Would n''t you like to know, Mortimer?" |
54621 | Would you advise me to sell them? |
54621 | Would you be willing to marry an Indian yourself? |
54621 | Would you like to have me speak it for you now? |
54621 | Would you mind givin''me a small bit of meat for my supper, you''ve got so much? |
54621 | Would you mind,said the little woman, hesitatingly,"would you mind if I sent an orange to your sister?" |
54621 | Yes, I have his note-- but what is it worth? |
54621 | You agree to give his son a situation in your Wall Street office? 54621 You are a bell- boy, are you not?" |
54621 | You are sure you can afford to do this, Giles? 54621 You did n''t buy those provisions, Rupert?" |
54621 | You did n''t see anything of Daly or Palmer in the hall, did you? |
54621 | You did not see her go near the bureau, Grace? |
54621 | You do n''t do business alone, do you? |
54621 | You do n''t happen to know any manager, do you? |
54621 | You do n''t mind having an Indian for a father? |
54621 | You do n''t think there''s anything wrong about Mr. Clayton, do you? |
54621 | You do n''t think you could let me have it for less? |
54621 | You found her asleep? |
54621 | You found it rather a heavy tug, did n''t you? |
54621 | You gave it to me, did n''t you? |
54621 | You have a mother and sister, I think you told me? |
54621 | You have n''t met him since you came to New York? |
54621 | You here, Rupert Rollins? |
54621 | You here, Uncle John? |
54621 | You know, of course, that he is n''t a guest? |
54621 | You mean Shakespeare? |
54621 | You said you had twelve dollars? |
54621 | You said you were out of employment, did n''t you? |
54621 | You say you know this man? |
54621 | You want to accept the invitation, I suppose? |
54621 | You were aware that he was Mr. Lorimer''s son? |
54621 | You will know him when you see him again? |
54621 | You will see me all the way home? |
54621 | You wished to see me, sir? |
54621 | You wo n''t refuse that? |
54621 | You would n''t give him a recommendation, would you? |
54621 | You wrote us a letter, I believe? |
54621 | You''ll come back some time? |
54621 | Your father does n''t suspect that you came to the city intending to go on the stage? |
54621 | Your father is not in business with him now? |
54621 | A new hope was born in Rupert''s heart? |
54621 | After supper Packard said,"Are you feeling tired, Rupert?" |
54621 | Ai n''t you got no manners?" |
54621 | And are you poor?" |
54621 | And what''ll be done with your sister? |
54621 | And where does he live?" |
54621 | Anything about Rupert?" |
54621 | Are you at work here?" |
54621 | Are you attending school?" |
54621 | Are you in any employment?" |
54621 | Are you living in New York?" |
54621 | Are you open to an engagement?" |
54621 | Are you?" |
54621 | As it might prove to be a serious mistake he went to the clerk and inquired,"Has Mr. Drayton got a nephew stopping here?" |
54621 | At length he heard some one calling,"Rupert, where are you?" |
54621 | Boone?" |
54621 | But how can you afford to be so kind? |
54621 | But what has that to do with it?" |
54621 | But what will your nephew in Rochester say?" |
54621 | By the way, where is the office?" |
54621 | By what right do you detain me?" |
54621 | Ca n''t we get back the coat?" |
54621 | Ca n''t we kill the snake?" |
54621 | Ca n''t you find me some one-- a pleasant, ladylike person, who would make my house homelike and attractive? |
54621 | Can she beat you?" |
54621 | Can you give me a few?" |
54621 | Can you judge of the value of the watch?" |
54621 | Can you sing or dance?" |
54621 | Can you tell me who it was that was nearly killed by a crazy crank yesterday?" |
54621 | Can you tell me why?" |
54621 | Clayton?" |
54621 | Could you come up to my room?" |
54621 | Darke?" |
54621 | Did I really look dreadful?" |
54621 | Did I tell you that I expect to start on my return to Colorado to- morrow?" |
54621 | Did n''t I tell you that I would meet you here this evening?" |
54621 | Did n''t you ever eat any?" |
54621 | Did you ever see Elsie Leslie act?" |
54621 | Did you save nothing, then, by your long years of business?" |
54621 | Did you want to climb up any of the mountains?" |
54621 | Do n''t the detective know you?" |
54621 | Do you ever see anything of Rupert Rollins?" |
54621 | Do you feel any better?" |
54621 | Do you get good pay here?" |
54621 | Do you know her?" |
54621 | Do you know him?" |
54621 | Do you know if any of his family were ever crazy?" |
54621 | Do you know this gentleman with me?" |
54621 | Do you know what makes the difference between you and me?" |
54621 | Do you know who she was?" |
54621 | Do you know, Mr. Packard, I imagine there are very few bell- boys in New York who are as rich as I am?" |
54621 | Do you really think Sophie could act?" |
54621 | Do you see that house yonder?" |
54621 | Do you see that old gentleman over by the window?" |
54621 | Do you think I ought to discharge him?" |
54621 | Do you think they will come?" |
54621 | Do you think your mother would marry me? |
54621 | Do you wish to buy anything in my line?" |
54621 | Do you wish to look at it?" |
54621 | Does Mr. Benton still find his place on Grand Street agreeable and satisfactory?" |
54621 | Does he take either of these papers?" |
54621 | Eh? |
54621 | Graves?" |
54621 | Has Eben Jackson got any children?" |
54621 | Has he bettered himself in Colorado?" |
54621 | Has he got a boat?" |
54621 | Has n''t a man a right to wear an overcoat?" |
54621 | Has your son a fair education?" |
54621 | Have you a father and mother living?" |
54621 | Have you all that you need?" |
54621 | Have you any idea where he went?" |
54621 | Have you any reason to think you will succeed any better there?" |
54621 | Have you come into a fortune?" |
54621 | Have you known her long?" |
54621 | Have you made a ten- strike?" |
54621 | Have you the key?" |
54621 | He had his gun with him, but even if he should succeed in shooting anything, how could he cook it? |
54621 | He paused as he reached their bench, and asked anxiously,"Has either of you seen a young man, nicely dressed and carrying a cane?" |
54621 | How are you getting on?" |
54621 | How came you to think so?" |
54621 | How did she account for having so much money?" |
54621 | How did you become acquainted with the man you recommend?" |
54621 | How did you escape from him?" |
54621 | How did you find out that I was here?" |
54621 | How does it happen that you are out of a place?" |
54621 | How does it happen you are so far away from the hotel?" |
54621 | How is the little boy you took charge of? |
54621 | How is your wife?" |
54621 | How long do you expect to stay in the city?" |
54621 | How much money have you brought with you?" |
54621 | How old be you?" |
54621 | How would it do for him to shoot it in the head, which he judged was the most vulnerable part? |
54621 | I am rich and have no family ties?" |
54621 | I began with such pieces as''Casabianca''--you know that, do n''t you?" |
54621 | I hope your son does n''t drink?" |
54621 | I suppose he was honest?" |
54621 | I suppose you wo n''t mind roughing it?'' |
54621 | I wonder if he ever reflects upon the inevitable end of his dishonesty?" |
54621 | I would like to have helped her, but I am poor myself, and----""Wo n''t you accept this?" |
54621 | If a boy could have those happy experiences, why not he? |
54621 | If you have a little more time to spare wo n''t you come in and stay a short time?" |
54621 | Is he subject to fits?" |
54621 | Is he your friend?" |
54621 | Is it in Colorado?" |
54621 | Is n''t he a good salesman?" |
54621 | Is n''t he, Sal?" |
54621 | Is n''t it time to get up?" |
54621 | Is n''t it, Rupert?" |
54621 | Is that a paying business?" |
54621 | Is that what you mean, Eben?" |
54621 | Is there any reason why you should not go?" |
54621 | Is there anything you would rather see than this wild and romantic scenery?" |
54621 | Is your mother living?" |
54621 | Is your work hard?" |
54621 | Keep your eyes open, do n''t you?" |
54621 | Lorimer?" |
54621 | Lorimer?" |
54621 | Marlow?" |
54621 | Marlow?" |
54621 | May I hope that you will write me sometimes?" |
54621 | Mines?" |
54621 | My boy, can you tell me what the purse contains?" |
54621 | Now how much money is Mr. Packard paying you for going with me?" |
54621 | On the impulse of the moment he went up to the young guest, and asked, in a low tone of sympathy,"Are you in any trouble?" |
54621 | Onthank?" |
54621 | Onthank?" |
54621 | Onthank?" |
54621 | Plympton?" |
54621 | Rollins?" |
54621 | Rollins?" |
54621 | Rollins?" |
54621 | Rupert, would you mind tellin''the gentleman that you know a poor widder that would be thankful for his kind assistance?" |
54621 | Shall I ever see him again, or am I doomed to starve to death in this wilderness?" |
54621 | Shall I show you?" |
54621 | Shall I wait for you?" |
54621 | Shall I wait for you?" |
54621 | Shall you be ready to go back with me on Monday, Rupert?" |
54621 | Shameful, is n''t it?" |
54621 | Spenser?" |
54621 | Suppose I make you my guardian?" |
54621 | Suppose the train should go through?" |
54621 | Sylvester?" |
54621 | Sylvester?" |
54621 | Tell your friend-- what''s his name?" |
54621 | That''s a good income, is n''t it?" |
54621 | The knife was taken from him, and the clerk, horror- struck, leaning over him, asked,"What did you do with the boy?" |
54621 | The next question that suggested itself to Rupert was,"What object could Mrs. Marlow have in sending off his mother on a wild goose chase?" |
54621 | Then how do you happen to be wearing it?" |
54621 | Then you''d advise me to pay the money?" |
54621 | There must have been some cause of complaint?" |
54621 | Uncle John, are you willing that I should take charge of your money?" |
54621 | Vanderbilt?" |
54621 | Was Ben capable of such black treachery? |
54621 | Was he destined to starve in this out of the way region? |
54621 | Was it possible, he asked himself, that he had been robbed? |
54621 | Waters?" |
54621 | Waters?" |
54621 | Well, do you accept my offer?" |
54621 | Were you awake when I went out?" |
54621 | Were you employed in the store?" |
54621 | What brings you here?" |
54621 | What business have you followed?" |
54621 | What can you do with him?" |
54621 | What do you say to this?" |
54621 | What do you think of it?" |
54621 | What do you think, Rupert? |
54621 | What do you want me to do? |
54621 | What good would it do me?" |
54621 | What have you done?" |
54621 | What is his name?" |
54621 | What is the young man''s name?" |
54621 | What is your name?" |
54621 | What makes you think so?" |
54621 | What of him?" |
54621 | What salary were you accustomed to earn?" |
54621 | What should he do? |
54621 | What theatre do you prefer?" |
54621 | What was the matter? |
54621 | What was to be done? |
54621 | What would you advise me to do? |
54621 | What yer gawkin''at? |
54621 | What''s the matter?" |
54621 | What''s yours?" |
54621 | What?" |
54621 | When can you make room for him?" |
54621 | When do you wish me to go?" |
54621 | When shall you be ready to come to New York?" |
54621 | Where can I find you again?" |
54621 | Where do you live when you are at home?" |
54621 | Where do you live?" |
54621 | Where do you live?" |
54621 | Where is he?" |
54621 | Where is my mother?" |
54621 | Where is the hotel?" |
54621 | Who is that man with you?" |
54621 | Who is the Pauline? |
54621 | Why are you here?" |
54621 | Why did n''t they discharge me, too?" |
54621 | Why do n''t you try Romeo?" |
54621 | Why do you ask?" |
54621 | Why have you come East?" |
54621 | Why is it that no one is willing to employ an old man? |
54621 | Why not? |
54621 | Why, my dear friend, what are you thinking of?" |
54621 | Will that be satisfactory?" |
54621 | Will that do?" |
54621 | Will you arrange to pay it? |
54621 | Will you be back soon? |
54621 | Will you go with me to- night to see Mansfield in''Jekyll and Hyde''?" |
54621 | Wo n''t other firms be affected by the dull times?" |
54621 | Wo n''t you call at the house? |
54621 | Wo n''t your business permit you?" |
54621 | Would n''t you speak to the gentleman for me?" |
54621 | You are sure I am not putting you out?" |
54621 | You do n''t think there''s anything wrong, do you?" |
54621 | You have a family, have you not?" |
54621 | You have accumulated some property?" |
54621 | You have n''t a place in your office now, have you?" |
54621 | You said you''d pay for it, did n''t you?" |
54621 | You will spend all your money, and what will you do then?" |
54621 | You wo n''t interfere with me?" |
54621 | are you two acquainted?" |
54621 | asked Grace, anxiously,"and what did you go out for?" |
54621 | in the middle of the week?" |
54621 | is it?" |
54621 | you do n''t mean it?" |
30623 | ''Sire?'' 30623 ''Spose he wants to buy them''ere smokestacks?" |
30623 | A Confederate officer? |
30623 | A Confederate officer? |
30623 | A little more? 30623 A man should go through most anything for his religion.--Haven''t noticed my horse there, have you, Johnny?" |
30623 | A man? |
30623 | A name, a name? |
30623 | A new country,roared Tall Mose,"but where?" |
30623 | A short señor? |
30623 | A spy, sire? |
30623 | About taxation? |
30623 | About the ivory cross? 30623 After refusing them to the Federals, to the men who_ fought_ for them? |
30623 | Ah, Michel-- le beau sabreur!--and did you enjoy it, mon ami? |
30623 | Ah, Monsieur le Troubadour? |
30623 | Ah, doctor, you will have him well and sound within a week, I know? 30623 Ah, ever faithful little old man, but are you brave enough for the horror of it? |
30623 | Ah, one who interests the young person now before me, eh? |
30623 | Ah, señor,Juarez placidly inquired,"what if a chief magistrate did not know when to trust? |
30623 | Ah, the poor little crow? 30623 Also?" |
30623 | Always a Frenchman, eh, mon lieutenant? |
30623 | Always a spectator, always, even of myself!--God, dost thou know? 30623 Am I saying I did, name of a name? |
30623 | Among them was my--He nerved himself to it, some way--"my best friend, that peerless----""Who?" |
30623 | And I find,she cried,"I find you here, you, Fernando?" |
30623 | And Marquez let you come, you who are so important to him now? |
30623 | And Miss Burt? |
30623 | And Miss Jacqueline? |
30623 | And a Frenchman, Miss Jack- leen? |
30623 | And according to that consideration, mademoiselle? |
30623 | And at the same time win bright renown for ourselves, instead of what will be called harsh cruelty? |
30623 | And can she do some to- day, and can you send it on to overtake me by to- morrow? |
30623 | And did I,Driscoll had begun angrily, but she was already gone, and he finished it to himself,"did I once intend to leave you?" |
30623 | And do n''t I wonder too? |
30623 | And have him identify me after we''d gotten the ransom? 30623 And how much difference, exactly, would your four o''clocks make on the planet Mars, my good woman?" |
30623 | And is that not reason enough? |
30623 | And not have a man left when we do get up? 30623 And remotely supposing,"she said,"that our army_ might_ come back again?" |
30623 | And similarly with permission, señor, who are you? |
30623 | And so,he said, trying to do it lightly,"I have this unknown American to thank for the pleasure of seeing you, mademoiselle? |
30623 | And so_ you_ had to come and tell us? |
30623 | And that,the youth cried doggedly,"is still enough to----""To do things for France, eh petit piou- piou?" |
30623 | And that? |
30623 | And the orders, the orders from Maximilian? |
30623 | And the other, an American? |
30623 | And the others? 30623 And the red puppy, how near here did_ he_ come with you?" |
30623 | And then, hombre? |
30623 | And then? |
30623 | And then? |
30623 | And this, is this fulfilling your sacred obligations? |
30623 | And thou? |
30623 | And we others, we may tag along, n''est- ce pas? 30623 And what did he do, this American?" |
30623 | And what is your interest, Miss-- Jack- leen? |
30623 | And what mission could that be, my good friend? |
30623 | And what then, señor? 30623 And what''s a duke----?" |
30623 | And when? |
30623 | And where,he asked,"or rather, to whom, should Your Mercy imagine?" |
30623 | And who is Don Anastasio, pray? |
30623 | And who,drawled the American at a quizzical pitch of inquiry,"may Don Rodrigo be?" |
30623 | And why not, pray? |
30623 | And why not, pray? |
30623 | And why not? 30623 And why not?" |
30623 | And why, since he is not concerned about that? |
30623 | And why, sire? 30623 And why_ do n''t_ we start to- night?" |
30623 | And will that hurt so much? |
30623 | And would not you have followed after me? |
30623 | And would that merit this august displeasure, sire? |
30623 | And yet you trusted him, a stranger, with your signature? |
30623 | And you both went? 30623 And you did not guess? |
30623 | And you squeezed the poor devils all the harder for your weevily corn and shoddy boots? |
30623 | And you wish me to find out who she is? |
30623 | And you''persuaded''him? |
30623 | And you, Don Tiburcio? |
30623 | And you, it appears, are Captain Maurel-- Maurel, but that is French? |
30623 | And you, monsieur? |
30623 | And you, monsieur? |
30623 | And you? |
30623 | And your pipe--her lip curled and smiled at the same time--"the pipe does not, neither?" |
30623 | And--Dupin gripped his cigar hungrily--"and Rodrigo?" |
30623 | And, and how many men has Shelby at Sand Spring? |
30623 | And, and that is, mademoiselle? |
30623 | And,he went on, gaining momentum,"I do n''t reckon you''ll be forgetting Arkansas, and the ague and rattlesnakes? |
30623 | And-- you do not come back? |
30623 | Another of your jokes----"Inspired of the Evil One? 30623 Answer? |
30623 | Any theory as to what you''ve got there? |
30623 | Are there guerrillas there? |
30623 | Are you going to let me pass? |
30623 | Back from San Luis, and prowling round here as usual, eh? 30623 Because of a greater attraction?" |
30623 | Because you return to Paris, surely not? 30623 Because-- don''t you know, señor, that travelers here must pay toll? |
30623 | Berthe, did your mistress know that Lopez would shoot him before he could be pardoned? |
30623 | Berthe, you pitiful little ninny, are you coming? 30623 Berthe,"mademoiselle at that instant called,"oh you little ninny, are you coming ever?" |
30623 | Berthe,she cried, even as the whim came,"one is tired after playing the goose, n''est- ce pas? |
30623 | Berthe,she cried,"shall I slap you?" |
30623 | Besides, are you not to go with me just the same? |
30623 | Bien, Señor Murguía, and now will you explain what no other messenger from our unknown friend has done? 30623 But Fernando,"the girl persisted,"who is there to-- to admit me? |
30623 | But I forget, your compatriot----"Monsieur Ney?--Yes? |
30623 | But I hope as you''ll bide with us, sir? |
30623 | But Miramon, hombre? 30623 But could I, in honor?" |
30623 | But did n''t I see him riding away? |
30623 | But do n''t you see, sire,she hurried on eagerly,"that we will have to fight the Americans? |
30623 | But do you think they will be in time, Berthe? 30623 But have you--_asked_ her?" |
30623 | But he-- he does not send bad news, nothing, sire, of Her Imperial Highness? |
30623 | But hombre-- No, our unseen friend of the Republic, our Chaparrito, would not ask for Maximilian''s pardon? |
30623 | But how are we to know, sir,Ney persisted,"that you are so terrible on your own account?" |
30623 | But how can I tell,Maximilian demanded petulantly,"that my destiny really lies in Mexico?" |
30623 | But how can I? 30623 But how else,"Maximilian persisted,"can such a man know so much?" |
30623 | But how many have you, really? |
30623 | But if he will tell us? |
30623 | But if you had-- oh, what would madame----"Now then,the practical American interrupted,"where''s Murgie?" |
30623 | But monsieur,she cried,"may not others have plans as vital as yours? |
30623 | But señor, how, how many Confederates are there altogether west of the Mississippi? |
30623 | But señor,Rodrigo protested,"do n''t we charge straight up?" |
30623 | But señorita,he protested,"what will Your Mercy do? |
30623 | But sire----"''Sire''? 30623 But suppose, señor,"he whispered,"suppose the need of absolution was again postponed, even now?" |
30623 | But surely,the Mexican objected,"Don Rodrigo is a household word throughout Europe?" |
30623 | But the Cimitario? |
30623 | But the jostling by a woman''s tongue, mademoiselle.--Well, what is it? 30623 But the little monsieur, he looks like a ghost?" |
30623 | But the man to be shot? |
30623 | But the other two? |
30623 | But the wheel? |
30623 | But the women, mi coronel? 30623 But those pretty boys----""The Austrians? |
30623 | But those runaways? |
30623 | But what made him do that, that way? |
30623 | But what''s the use? 30623 But what''s this about Maximilian?" |
30623 | But what''s your plan? |
30623 | But where''s the harm? |
30623 | But who is the''she?'' 30623 But whose suggestion? |
30623 | But why are n''t you a reader of the poets? 30623 But why follow me?" |
30623 | But why not? 30623 But why, Don Anastasio,"asked Tiburcio purely in fantastic mischief,"did you bring such a disturbing man to our happy country?" |
30623 | But why,Maximilian demanded sternly,"have you not put to use the few weeks you have been here?" |
30623 | But why? 30623 But will they be in time? |
30623 | But you called? |
30623 | But you see, there was such a lot of bloodshed scheduled for the next day? |
30623 | But, Captain, why not smoke up-- big? 30623 But, I shall sail this very month, I----""And never return, never to Mexico?" |
30623 | But, Meagre Shanks, where''d you leave''em? |
30623 | But, Your Majesty----"Is Napoleon, then, so liberal a paymaster? |
30623 | But, for example, Berthe, who inspired this? |
30623 | But, mademoiselle, the bandits? 30623 But, señor,"the don objected testily,"with what status, pray? |
30623 | But,demanded Driscoll,"does n''t her title carry some sort of a-- a compensation?" |
30623 | But,demanded Jacqueline eagerly,"how is it you did feel?" |
30623 | But,he stammered,"there-- oh what danger can there be in their going?" |
30623 | But,protested the girl,"if they capture Your Highness, if they-- if they hold you for trial?" |
30623 | But,said Tiburcio,"I''m not doing it, and why? |
30623 | But,weakly protested Murguía,"but who believes that Don Rodrigo turns any of it over to the Liberal-- to the rebel cause?" |
30623 | But-- but, if I should convince you, mademoiselle, that the majesty which only asks to kneel is genuine? |
30623 | Buzzards? |
30623 | By letting it out this way-- voilà, if madame will kindly slip it on? |
30623 | By running away with you? 30623 By water?" |
30623 | Ca n''t you hurry''em up a bit? |
30623 | Can-- can they really come? |
30623 | Captain Maurel''s, the fine black one? |
30623 | Carpet bags? |
30623 | Challenge? |
30623 | Charity, then? |
30623 | Colonel Dupin? |
30623 | Come for your money? |
30623 | Come now,he argued plaintively,"let me in, do n''t be selfish? |
30623 | Could that be a smile? |
30623 | Could we cut our way out? |
30623 | Crazy? |
30623 | Crazy? |
30623 | Dama Mayor? |
30623 | Dan, you''re not going to tell me----"That_ we_ surrendered, we, the Missourians, the flower of''em all? 30623 Danger, child? |
30623 | Death? |
30623 | Did Her Majesty pout, then? |
30623 | Did I not come for that? 30623 Did n''t I tell you to set a close watch?" |
30623 | Did n''t I try to save_ my_ cargo, off Savannah, and did n''t I lose my sloop to boot? 30623 Did she,"he asked, but not very hopefully,"did she have any cause to dislike this American?" |
30623 | Din Driscoll,he began solemnly,"_ you_ know that devil breed? |
30623 | Din-- whatever it is-- that''s not a Christian name? |
30623 | Dios mio, I suppose Your Mercy and his tender heart refers to the Decree? |
30623 | Do n''t I know it? 30623 Do n''t I? |
30623 | Do n''t you know I''m in a hurry? |
30623 | Do n''t you see we''re busy? |
30623 | Do n''t, Shanks, you----"Devils? 30623 Do ye call me chief?" |
30623 | Do you know, Berthe, I do not believe it came at all? |
30623 | Do you know, Din,he began,"those two girls are only half educated? |
30623 | Do you know,he said,"this is the second time I''ve heard that question to- day? |
30623 | Do you mean to tell me,he demanded,"that this Maximilian who makes speeches about not deserting intends now to sacrifice these poor helpless devils? |
30623 | Do you not know that----She darted between him and the door--"that he recognizes no rules of war? |
30623 | Do you understand, Colonel Lopez, that your guard here was asleep? 30623 Does Napoleon''s letter satisfy none of your doubts?" |
30623 | Does Y''r Mercy want soap too? |
30623 | Does this trial interest you so much, mademoiselle? |
30623 | Don Fernando-- Majesty? |
30623 | Don John the Baptist then, como le whack? |
30623 | Don Rodrigo? |
30623 | Done what, miss? |
30623 | Doña Luz, Your Mercy means? 30623 Eh? |
30623 | Eh?--What say? |
30623 | F''r instance, if the señoritas vanish before he gets here, he wo n''t blame you? 30623 Fat-- who''s she?" |
30623 | Feelings, artist? 30623 Fernando?" |
30623 | For Vera Cruz, sire? |
30623 | Four o''clock-- late? |
30623 | Frisson? |
30623 | From Shorty? |
30623 | Give up a queen''s ransom? |
30623 | Going on by water? |
30623 | Good news, then? |
30623 | Got a match, Harry? |
30623 | Gracious, Murgie, off so early? |
30623 | H''m''n,the girl ejaculated,"Hamlet declines? |
30623 | H''m, what, for example? |
30623 | Ha, then El Chaparrito found one man who was incorruptible? |
30623 | Ha, you recognize it? |
30623 | Had n''t we better be----"Now what,she persisted,"kept you so long up there, for example?" |
30623 | Has Your Highness,she demanded, smiling shyly behind her tears,"has he forgotten the woman''s, rather my consideration, before such a question?" |
30623 | Have all the barbarities of civil war no power to move you? 30623 Have no fears, he is comfortable, here in this very house?" |
30623 | Have occasion to be Maurel yourself sometime, eh? |
30623 | Have some? |
30623 | Have you_ tried_ to stop her? |
30623 | He has sent no word to Maximilian of his arrival? |
30623 | He meant to help the sailors----"But he was not hurt? |
30623 | He must stand trial then? |
30623 | He? |
30623 | He? |
30623 | Her, who? |
30623 | Highness? 30623 His Imperial Majesty seems to concern you profoundly, monsieur?" |
30623 | His-- this gentleman, Tobie, you admitted him? |
30623 | Honest, now? 30623 How are you, captain?" |
30623 | How came you by it? |
30623 | How can I know, señor? 30623 How could they?" |
30623 | How did he escape this second time? |
30623 | How did you occupy yourself while in Tampico? |
30623 | How do you explain your desertion of Her Majesty? |
30623 | How do you know? |
30623 | How do you like your dress? |
30623 | How much? |
30623 | How was His Mercy? 30623 How was I to see you?" |
30623 | How was it that, that_ you_ happened to be sent, señor? |
30623 | How will he enjoy running, I wonder? |
30623 | How, little Soldier- Boy Blue? |
30623 | How, the señorita does not know? |
30623 | How? 30623 How? |
30623 | I can not understand,she said,"why it is the Dragoons have not followed you immediately?" |
30623 | I curse----"Marquez? |
30623 | I have signed it, I believe, Colonel Driscoll? |
30623 | I risk my hide saving you for money, then? |
30623 | I say, mademoiselle,he called back,"I''m glad we left the ship, are n''t you?" |
30623 | I see you''re very damn sullen,_ gra_-cious me!--Reckon they will, captain? |
30623 | I see, and you ca n''t change it afterward? |
30623 | I uh, why_ should_ I wake you, Mis- ter Driscoll? 30623 I wonder,"she mused aloud, in that quaint accenting of the English which can not be described,"when is it that you are going to grow up,_ ever_?" |
30623 | I''m not a n- e- e- n- ya,Jacqueline assured her drowsily,"and if I were, madame, why make a fête out of it this way in the middle of the night?" |
30623 | I, I wonder why the friends of the señoritas do not come? |
30623 | I, señor? 30623 I? |
30623 | I? 30623 I? |
30623 | If I knew, would it be a mystery? |
30623 | If I should tell you, señor? |
30623 | If ever a compatriot of mine had gotten that idea into his-- how you say?--pate, would he not carry it out to the idiotic limit, yes? 30623 If it were not for my leg, Your Mercy----""_ Animal_,"snarled Éloin in his ear,"ca n''t you say''Your Majesty''?" |
30623 | If mademoiselle wishes it mended? |
30623 | In a word, why not brush aside our archduke? 30623 Indeed, Monsieur Éloin?" |
30623 | Indeed, Seigneur Farceur? |
30623 | Indeed, monsieur? |
30623 | Indeed,with fine scorn she demanded of Ney,"and how did you manage it?" |
30623 | Indeed? 30623 Indeed?" |
30623 | Is Your Majesty quite resolved,Jacqueline asked in French,"that the American must be tried? |
30623 | Is he? |
30623 | Is it a Huastecan custom, by the way, to shoot a cavalier the instant he-- ah-- dismounts? |
30623 | Is it dotage already, monsieur? 30623 Is it possible?--Your Mercy does not know?" |
30623 | Is it so bad? |
30623 | Is it to be the-- the''game''at last? |
30623 | Is it,he pursued,"is it because she has n''t any dot? |
30623 | Is n''t it a bit odd,Driscoll queried whimsically,"that an ambassador should be arrested?" |
30623 | Is n''t that rather a curious reproof from a soldier? 30623 Is n''t that rather vague? |
30623 | Is n''t''France''enough of a name for your rallying, monsieur? |
30623 | Is that a pun? |
30623 | Is there no mother,cried the exasperated girl,"to spank both your Majesties?" |
30623 | It is a boon I ask of you, the greatest, and the only one before I go----"Why? 30623 It is if-- if you can forgive me.--Mon Dieu, why did you need to heap this terrible sacrifice on me? |
30623 | It was a decoy then, the card you used? |
30623 | It? |
30623 | Jack''leen, what was it? |
30623 | Jacqueline, you mean? 30623 Jiminy crickets,"he burst forth,"is there anybody on this ranch who can sew?" |
30623 | Killed? 30623 Know what?" |
30623 | Last February? 30623 Let us see,"she mused aloud,"you, your comrades, monsieur, you have no country now? |
30623 | Like this one? 30623 Lopez,"he roared,"what was that message?" |
30623 | Lopez? 30623 Mademoiselle, tell me,_ why_ have you returned?" |
30623 | Mademoiselle, who is this man? 30623 Mademoiselle,"he returned,"and,"he added, with an odd glance toward Berthe,"Madame l''Imperatrice, uh-- how goes it?" |
30623 | Majesty? 30623 Man, man, where are your years of training near my person? |
30623 | Marquez, you mean? |
30623 | María purísima,he exclaimed,"you can not mean, señorita, that you, all alone, will deliver the City of Mexico into our hands?" |
30623 | May I,said Driscoll quietly,"have one minute with you alone? |
30623 | Maybe they''ll divide? |
30623 | Me? 30623 Michel,"cried Jacqueline,"and where in the world now did you get that?" |
30623 | Might we,Jacqueline interposed,"pay our respects to Señor Murguía''s daughter?" |
30623 | Miss Burt? |
30623 | Monsieur, do you hear me? 30623 Monsieur, monsieur, you fight for your captives only-- only to give them up?" |
30623 | Monsieur,Jacqueline questioned demurely, and in her most treacherous way,"how much longer do we yet follow you up and down mountains?" |
30623 | Monsieur,she demanded quick as thought,"my trunk?" |
30623 | Monsieur-- where is he? |
30623 | Must be something like John the Baptist''s day, verdad, señor? |
30623 | Must have died, sir? |
30623 | Must have,Driscoll interrupted,"must have died in any case?" |
30623 | Must n''t hurt his feelings, eh, caballero? |
30623 | My answer? |
30623 | My apologies,spoke a deep voice,"but the señorita, she is going to the City, to the Capital, perhaps?" |
30623 | My daughter? |
30623 | My good man, whatever are you talking about? |
30623 | My identification, you mean? 30623 My own barnyard?" |
30623 | N- o, but if I am not to hear him, why should I see him? |
30623 | N- o? |
30623 | News of Charlotte? |
30623 | No matter,he retorted shortly,"but how did you run across her this time?" |
30623 | No? 30623 None went that way?" |
30623 | Not dead then? 30623 Not even a token to bid me be brave so far away in Austria?" |
30623 | Not if I fixed their horses, and if I do, will you promise to get out? |
30623 | Not killed? |
30623 | Not my Fra Diavolo-- Rodrigo Galán? |
30623 | Not starting to- night? |
30623 | Not what, monsieur? |
30623 | Now look here, Murgie, have you got any more of these dates on?--Yes? 30623 Now maybe,"Driscoll suggested,"maybe you''ll be wondering yourself why you bring your dirty little affairs to me? |
30623 | Now then, Colonel Lopez,Jacqueline addressed him calmly,"may I ask you the way? |
30623 | Now then, you with your dirty little affairs, why do you come to me? |
30623 | Now then,he added to Ney,"what do you say for yourself?" |
30623 | Now what can she mean by that? |
30623 | Now where_ can_ it be? |
30623 | Now, the second question: Does this order come from Marshal Bazaine? |
30623 | Now, then, Señor Emissary,said the President,"what danger hangs over our Republic this time?" |
30623 | Of coh''se,he added soothingly,"the other one is a-- a mighty nice girl, but----""Oh,_ is_ she? |
30623 | Of course, why not? |
30623 | Of dust and mud, for example? |
30623 | Of what water, señor? |
30623 | Oh Your Highness, Your-- Oh, there is something you can tell me that is-- that is inexpressibly better? |
30623 | Oh señor, what''s the use? 30623 Oh, am_ I_ keeping you?" |
30623 | Oh, by the way,he inquired suddenly,"how''s Miss Jack''leen this morning? |
30623 | Oh, does he? |
30623 | Oh, had he? 30623 Oh, he did?" |
30623 | Oh, on account of France? |
30623 | Oh, why have you to be so, so quarrelsome? |
30623 | Oh, why,_ why_,she cried fiercely,"did you not let them kill you?" |
30623 | Oh- ho, come a- visiting, eh? |
30623 | On her account, señor, not Maximilian''s? |
30623 | Once though,Juarez pursued,"you all but lost your Maximilian? |
30623 | One jar, señor? |
30623 | One of your orderlies, Colonel Lopez, I believe? 30623 Only tell me,"she demanded,"what''s happening now, over yonder?" |
30623 | Only two empires to keep me out of a flirtation? 30623 Or Don Tiburcio?" |
30623 | Orders? 30623 Out of----Look here, where''s the danger now?" |
30623 | Parbleu, why not? |
30623 | Pardon? |
30623 | Perhaps a little-- water? |
30623 | Power to stir me? |
30623 | Pray, who is the paragon? |
30623 | Quick, what''s the news at Querétero? |
30623 | Really, and after you''ve been writing us notes from Washington to-- to''get out''? 30623 Really, mademoiselle?" |
30623 | Reckon they''ll get us? |
30623 | Report to Maximiliano? |
30623 | Responsibility? 30623 Régules?" |
30623 | Save my empire? |
30623 | Say,Driscoll interrupted with cool obstinacy,"where''s our friend the captain and that sky- blue Frenchman?" |
30623 | Sealed? 30623 See here, Murgie,"he said,"is this the occasion Rodrigo meant when he talked about my meeting you soon? |
30623 | See here,Driscoll complained,"where''s the rest of the water I''m to have?" |
30623 | Segundino maybe? 30623 Sell the capital?" |
30623 | Served? |
30623 | Señor, señor, you do n''t shoot them that way every day? 30623 Shanks,"he demanded with tense vehemence,"do you suppose I need your woes for a prod? |
30623 | She then presumed to differ from Her Serene Highness, Your Majesty''s mother? |
30623 | Shoot whom? |
30623 | Shot? |
30623 | So Segundino has gone? |
30623 | So he was disappointed? |
30623 | So long as it was n''t any of your infernal farces? |
30623 | So, you would be near me, even now? |
30623 | So,he exclaimed,"milady is arrived, eh, and you bring me her commands?" |
30623 | So,said Jacqueline, appearing under the stars,"monsieur does not wish to be relieved of us? |
30623 | So,she went on tauntingly,"monsieur counts his enemy by numbers then?" |
30623 | Stay,he interposed,"those dusty, muddy rags you have on, that green and red, that''s not a Republican uniform?" |
30623 | Such a quantity of vivas and clarins and national hymns and triumphant dianas, one would imagine, for example, that there had been a great victory? |
30623 | Take this woman to my mother? |
30623 | Tell me, Señor Murguía,he said,"your daughter-- Yes, yes, man, you shall see her!--But listen, what is she like? |
30623 | Tell me, your coming must be explained by that? |
30623 | That Gringo? 30623 That man?" |
30623 | That the sailors did not come back from the ship? |
30623 | That-- that is why you wait? |
30623 | The fine black one? |
30623 | The price? 30623 The risk? |
30623 | The stage at Valles? 30623 The townspeople?" |
30623 | The_ frisson_, oh, those few exquisite seconds of emotion, eh Berthe? |
30623 | The_ terrible_ Rodrigo? |
30623 | Theft? 30623 Then I am to destroy him?" |
30623 | Then by all that''s mysterious,_ who_ would buy? 30623 Then it is true----""That I shall cling to my play- empire? |
30623 | Then naturally your friend did not move? |
30623 | Then por Dios, why does n''t he? |
30623 | Then we might call you a Shorter Yet, and maybe you know where this República is hiding out? |
30623 | Then we''ll all be privates? |
30623 | Then which way did he go? 30623 Then who will buy? |
30623 | Then why does n''t he sell out to Diaz? |
30623 | Then why in the nation,Driscoll demanded,"do you keep hanging round that coach for? |
30623 | Then you are_ not_ going back, back to your own country? |
30623 | Then you must be a Shorter Yet? |
30623 | Then you will not let his sacrifice be in vain? 30623 Then you,"he said earnestly,"would have let me lose you?" |
30623 | Then you-- Your Mercy,he exclaimed,"belongs to Shelby''s Brigade?" |
30623 | Then, the saints bless us,_ who_ are you?... |
30623 | Then,cried Murgía, limping gleefully toward him,"then there will be no pardon?" |
30623 | Then,moaned the Emperor suddenly,"Marquez is not coming back?" |
30623 | Then,said Carroll of Clay,"we''ll need a seaport?" |
30623 | Then,said Driscoll,"could we hire some sort of a rig from you?" |
30623 | Then,said his friend in despair,"it''s because she do n''t, just simply do n''t care for you?" |
30623 | There, there, señorita,said Jacqueline kindly,"His Majesty, I imagine, can explain----""Majesty?" |
30623 | They tell me-- whoa, Demijohn!--you are going to Tampico? |
30623 | Thinking of the Bishop of Sonora''s waiting maid, was he? |
30623 | This is final, is it? |
30623 | This trail go on to Valles? |
30623 | This,said Driscoll,"does not explain why you desert to us?" |
30623 | Those innocent non- combatants, then,Maximilian went on,"so they counted more than a prince with you?" |
30623 | Three days? |
30623 | To Your Imperial Highness''s downfall? 30623 To apologize, you mean?" |
30623 | To make it quite plain,concluded the speaker,"can you assemble enough men within an hour to do a seeming and convincing reverence to your ruler?" |
30623 | To prove it? |
30623 | To save me? |
30623 | To save my play- empire, I suppose? |
30623 | Vespers? 30623 W''y, what''s the matter?" |
30623 | Want to get rid of them, eh, Murgie? |
30623 | We''ve only to yawn at the flies, eh, ma chérie? |
30623 | Well, Don Erastus, how goes it? |
30623 | Well, Jack? |
30623 | Well, Murgie, are we projecting to start to- night? |
30623 | Well, Tibby? |
30623 | Well, and who''s Segundino? |
30623 | Well, are you content now? |
30623 | Well, it_ was_ worth a ransom, the way it turned out.--Sit still, will you? 30623 Well, well, how goes it itself to Your Mercy this evening?" |
30623 | Well, what ails you? |
30623 | Well, what do you bring? |
30623 | Well, what is it? |
30623 | Well, what is it? |
30623 | Well, what next? |
30623 | Well, what of it? 30623 Well, what''s the matter? |
30623 | Well,demanded Driscoll,"what will you ask for?" |
30623 | Well? 30623 Well?" |
30623 | Well? |
30623 | Well? |
30623 | Well? |
30623 | Were n''t they a surprised lot, though? |
30623 | Were you so afraid Dupin would lose his prisoner? |
30623 | Were you with Captain Maurel when we ambushed them near Tampico? |
30623 | What are you talking about? |
30623 | What days were you in Tampico? |
30623 | What difference does that make? |
30623 | What do you mean by this,Boone demanded, as though personally offended,"you''ve got the hospital color, dull lead on yellow? |
30623 | What do you mean? 30623 What do you mean?" |
30623 | What do you mean? |
30623 | What enemies? |
30623 | What for? |
30623 | What is it? |
30623 | What is the matter,Tiburcio demanded,"with pointing a revolver at the Señor Americano right now, and making him deliver?" |
30623 | What must you think of us, Don Anastasio? |
30623 | What new decree? 30623 What of Marquez? |
30623 | What of those townsmen in the trenches? |
30623 | What other, in particular, thinks hard of her that she should care? |
30623 | What was it? |
30623 | What would Your Majesty? 30623 What would madame have?" |
30623 | What''s that about Maximilian? |
30623 | What''s that got to do with it? |
30623 | What''s that, an order from Jefferson Davis? |
30623 | What''s that? |
30623 | What''s the answer? |
30623 | What''s the lay? 30623 What''s the matter with me?" |
30623 | What''s the matter, now? |
30623 | What''s the row? |
30623 | What''s the use,Driscoll objected,"they''d catch me again?" |
30623 | What''s your plan? |
30623 | What, I wonder? |
30623 | What-- what----"Smoked out, you fool? 30623 When you and I, sire, would ride over from Las Palmas incognito?" |
30623 | Where are the Dragoons, Michel? |
30623 | Where did you come from then, when you came to Mobile? |
30623 | Where is he? |
30623 | Where to? |
30623 | Where was she going? |
30623 | Where,he demanded in the huge tones of a victorious general,"is the tyrant''s empress?" |
30623 | Where,inquired Din Driscoll, with a benevolent interest in their doing the thing right,"is the judge advocate?" |
30623 | Where_ are_ you leading, Michel? 30623 Which of you is she?" |
30623 | Which way did they go? |
30623 | Which way did they go? |
30623 | Which way did those thieves go? |
30623 | Which,breathlessly demanded the other,"will interest Marquez, eh? |
30623 | Who has then? |
30623 | Who is he? |
30623 | Who is that? |
30623 | Who is there to tell him, por Dios? 30623 Who receives Us here?" |
30623 | Who the name of a name are you? |
30623 | Who''s he? |
30623 | Who,demanded Maximilian,"has had the presumption to introduce a spy on these grounds?" |
30623 | Who? 30623 Who?" |
30623 | Whose flask is that? |
30623 | Whose? |
30623 | Why are n''t you in pursuit? |
30623 | Why come to you, you mean? 30623 Why did n''t you wake me? |
30623 | Why did you let her go in there? |
30623 | Why do n''t you quarrel? |
30623 | Why do you keep me? |
30623 | Why do you say that-- a play- king? |
30623 | Why else? 30623 Why go over it again? |
30623 | Why is your master not present? |
30623 | Why not? 30623 Why not? |
30623 | Why not? 30623 Why''s that, Murgie?" |
30623 | Why, that-- that Maximilian would not have pardoned? |
30623 | Why, what ails the old boat, I wonder? |
30623 | Why, what-- what do you mean? |
30623 | Why_ will_ you harp on what a grandfather made me? |
30623 | Will Lee''s surrender make such-- such a difference? |
30623 | Will Your Highness kindly let me pass? |
30623 | Will you,asked Driscoll,"take''em now, or after you tell me what I owe''em for?" |
30623 | With about twenty- five thousand men? |
30623 | With violets? |
30623 | Wo n''t you come and see, Berthe? 30623 Would, would Y''r Mercy like another bath?" |
30623 | Y''r Mercy is awake? |
30623 | Y- e- s, but what was the use? 30623 Yes, Tibby, why do n''t you?" |
30623 | Yes, yes, but how did they find you? |
30623 | Yes, you-- have heard from Rodrigo Galán? 30623 Yes-- but will you be ready to start this afternoon?" |
30623 | Yet you wish me to believe that you are only inspired by him? 30623 Yet,"demanded Jacqueline,"how could you know all this, there in your prison room?" |
30623 | You are in the French service? |
30623 | You are not going? |
30623 | You are,she exclaimed, noiselessly clapping her hands as at a play,"then you are-- Oh,_ who_ are you?" |
30623 | You ask how? 30623 You come from, from-- Mexico?" |
30623 | You do bring news from there? |
30623 | You forget that I left this man to be shot? |
30623 | You hear? |
30623 | You know Spanish, do you not, señorita? |
30623 | You know that-- that poor devil Tiburcio? |
30623 | You mean Lopez, Din? |
30623 | You mean Señor Murguía? 30623 You mean that bandit,"cried Ney,"that terrible Rodrigue? |
30623 | You mean that she''s going to Paris too? 30623 You mean, father, for my sake?" |
30623 | You mean,she exclaimed,"that you are going to quarrel-- now?" |
30623 | You miserable little chocolate- hided galoot, why could n''t you wait for me? |
30623 | You really will go back with me? |
30623 | You rec''lect, Din, that there war god we put up in Kirby Smith''s place, who so dashingly would lead us on to Mexico? |
30623 | You say you are an officer,he demanded of the ranchero,"but your Greaser clothes, that''s not a uniform?" |
30623 | You understand, of course, that I might call you a puppy? 30623 You want the coach first?" |
30623 | You wanted proof, Señor Americano, that you crossed the river? |
30623 | You went for your passports, did n''t you get''em? |
30623 | You will save him, madame? 30623 You wo n''t tell anybody, will you, Murgie?" |
30623 | You would retire now,he exclaimed,"now, when every soul here may look for promotion, and none of them more than you, Señor Dreescol?" |
30623 | You would tell me, señor, that El Chaparrito had a safe way? |
30623 | You!--searched Don Tiburcio? |
30623 | You, mademoiselle? 30623 You, you mean Marquez?" |
30623 | You, you wish me to surrender, mademoiselle? |
30623 | You, you''re not fooling me, Din? |
30623 | You-- you gained entrance here by one of these slips? |
30623 | You-- you will let him_ escape?_he challenged them in frantic anger. |
30623 | You_ will_ go, señorita? |
30623 | Your Excellency does not know El Chaparrito? |
30623 | Your Excellency remembers, he remembers Zacatecas? |
30623 | Your Highness,questioned Jacqueline in a kind of daze,"Your Highness did not_ intend_ to escape last night?" |
30623 | Your Imperial Majesty''s wisdom, I see, is not a thing to be turned by the fräulein? |
30623 | Your Majesty saves so many enemies, does he fear that soon he will have none left? |
30623 | Your Majesty, then, wishes me to prepare for his return to the imperial palace to- morrow? |
30623 | Your Mercy is-- is the Emperor? |
30623 | Your Mercy perhaps does not know about the pretty servant he eloped with from the Bishop of Durango''s to Murguía''s hacienda? 30623 Your errand down here must be of considerable importance, Señor Coronel?" |
30623 | Your full name, hombre? |
30623 | Your name? |
30623 | Your prisoner is incommunicado then? |
30623 | Your rank? |
30623 | Your-- Your Excellency remembers? |
30623 | Your-- Your Excellency sees? |
30623 | _ Are_ you going? |
30623 | _ Gra_-cious,exclaimed Driscoll in his counterfeit of a startled old lady,"what''s the matter?" |
30623 | _ He?_ Who in the world----"Why, the, the American monsieur. 30623 _ I_ take_ her_? |
30623 | _ What?_ Oh come, mi capitan, find a better one! |
30623 | _ What?_"Si señor, to_ raise_ the siege! 30623 _ Who_ said life was all beer and skittles?" |
30623 | _ Why_ do you mean to change? |
30623 | _ You?_ Now-- now to what particular wrong in_ your_ case, señor, does the Republic stand thus indebted? |
30623 | _ You?_ Now-- now to what particular wrong in_ your_ case, señor, does the Republic stand thus indebted? |
30623 | Éh bien,returned the señorita,"what would you?" |
30623 | --"Yes, what was the matter with you, anyhow?" |
30623 | A book? |
30623 | A wooer from the throne, indeed? |
30623 | Ah, Monsieur the Patriot, you did go, you did affront the tyrant? |
30623 | Ai n''t Tampico simply waiting for us? |
30623 | Alas,''who can stay the bottles of heaven?''" |
30623 | All right, s''pose you just tell us now more or less about how mighty little you_ do_ know?" |
30623 | All right? |
30623 | And I would have been touched by his clemency? |
30623 | And Michel leads them, you say?" |
30623 | And Murguía? |
30623 | And Rodrigo, do n''t you want your pistol? |
30623 | And anyhow, who''d hold the hill if we left it? |
30623 | And do n''t you suppose_ I''ve_ had letters from home too?" |
30623 | And do you know what for? |
30623 | And he spiritually washes your sins away? |
30623 | And how many guesses did she give you? |
30623 | And how the quinine gave out, and-- and the_ tobacco_? |
30623 | And how the small- pox swooped down on that camp of cane shacks? |
30623 | And if I do n''t get mine to- night, I''ll be associating with you unshrived Mexicans hereafter, and that would be pretty bad, would n''t it? |
30623 | And madame, I was thinking, what will he say if you do not wear it?" |
30623 | And now, the Virgin help-- may the Virgin help whoever''s concerned in this!--But here, you must go, do you hear?" |
30623 | And now? |
30623 | And so you are a-- a Confederate? |
30623 | And that guard in the corridor? |
30623 | And that sword? |
30623 | And the Marquise d''Aumerle? |
30623 | And the man there? |
30623 | And then?... |
30623 | And they all beseeched, Her Majesty and Madame la Maréchale, and I.--But, what would you?" |
30623 | And this other woman, had he wronged her also? |
30623 | And this other? |
30623 | And thus I would be regenerated? |
30623 | And thus she spoke, prettily, saucily, and blushing the while,"And are you so sure, sir, that you are the first?" |
30623 | And ugly? |
30623 | And was it jealousy? |
30623 | And who will see? |
30623 | And why either, if Don Miguel Lopez were not seeking to make friends with the Republic? |
30623 | And why not purchase it with his death, since he must have died in any case? |
30623 | And why not? |
30623 | And why not? |
30623 | And why should n''t I, parbleu? |
30623 | And why should not you, also, sire, you who are the child of destiny?" |
30623 | And why? |
30623 | And yet, did he not keep Rodrigo at bay? |
30623 | And you tell me that her father will come to- morrow, that he will-- surely come?" |
30623 | And, to- night?" |
30623 | And-- and you, monsieur?" |
30623 | And-- what dress was that? |
30623 | And_ he_ does n''t realize, while a delay of only a few days----""Would suffice for his escape?" |
30623 | Any orders? |
30623 | Are you a-- a Texan, Señor Coronel?" |
30623 | Are you the queen, maybe?" |
30623 | Are you?" |
30623 | As though supper, instead of a shooting squad, did not belie it all? |
30623 | As to the banns----""But why--_why_, parbleu?" |
30623 | Because she had wanted a throne? |
30623 | Besides, it would hardly be court usage, granting him an audience so informally, would it?" |
30623 | Bien, have you had any intimation of what he wants? |
30623 | Bien, señores, have you any further questions?" |
30623 | Bien, that accounts for your interest in Maximilian?" |
30623 | Bien, you want a money- getting man for your daughter, eh, Don Anastasio, though you''ll deny that you would give her to any man? |
30623 | Blood and Noise-- What Else? |
30623 | Bueno, could they not do it again? |
30623 | But Captain Morel, señor?" |
30623 | But I s''y, w''at if you and me go down to my cabin and have a_ noggin_?" |
30623 | But I will-- I must, but I can go alone, while you----""Why, what ails the man?" |
30623 | But Juarez was there?" |
30623 | But Miss Burt is_ the_ one you want to take to Missouri? |
30623 | But a bath? |
30623 | But against whom? |
30623 | But child, what are you about? |
30623 | But do you imagine that we would undertake such a fight for Maximilian? |
30623 | But do you know that, in a way, I am Maximilian''s confidant? |
30623 | But for whom, do you suppose? |
30623 | But had n''t you better go and think it over by yourself a little?" |
30623 | But he is dead, do n''t you remember, Fra Diavolo said so?" |
30623 | But how came she by it, and by what right? |
30623 | But how does it happen that you''re not under guard yourself?" |
30623 | But if he abandons Mexico, as Jacqueline would persuade him, what of his prestige then? |
30623 | But if madame----""He is in the drawing- room, then?" |
30623 | But if madame----""Was there a carriage?" |
30623 | But if the poor child has curiosity, monsieur? |
30623 | But in her, who might suspect the consummate diplomat? |
30623 | But in truth, what was she? |
30623 | But may-- may one be allowed a little curiosity?" |
30623 | But not enough to find anything? |
30623 | But not quite, bear that in----""But the rain? |
30623 | But now, what of the self- betrayal into which he had just surprised her? |
30623 | But of her innocence? |
30623 | But perhaps Your Majesty has thought of sending him under guard to the frontier, back to his own country, where he would not longer be an annoyance?" |
30623 | But permit me-- my safety on this trip, what concern can that have for Your Mercy?" |
30623 | But shall I ask the sentinels at the gate?" |
30623 | But she leaves a note, pour prendre congé, eh? |
30623 | But since Y''r Mercy has changed sides----""Now look here, who-- who put you up to this business, I want to know?" |
30623 | But suppose you could n''t get your padre?" |
30623 | But tell me, why do you come to Querétaro? |
30623 | But the coach white with dust, and white curtains flapping, what was that? |
30623 | But the lieutenant colonel placidly inquired,"Carry any government cotton this trip? |
30623 | But this American, what must he feel? |
30623 | But thoroughly? |
30623 | But to start more modestly, how would a lieutenancy suit, do you think?" |
30623 | But to- night, back in that tent just now----""Well?" |
30623 | But was n''t she perched entrancingly on that dragoon saddle, was n''t she, though? |
30623 | But was n''t the nobility of intellect there already? |
30623 | But were n''t there enough of''em without you?" |
30623 | But what anti- climax was here? |
30623 | But what could be the mongrel''s game? |
30623 | But what man was here, in boots and woolen shirt, puffing angrily at a corncob, yet sitting in judgment supreme on the proud Hapsburg himself? |
30623 | But what was the service? |
30623 | But where, now, were his matches? |
30623 | But where, oh where, are the French?" |
30623 | But who are you?" |
30623 | But why did he sentence you to death, why, señor?" |
30623 | But why had she intrigued against his Empire, why had she turned Confederate aid from him? |
30623 | But why in blazes did n''t you go to Escobedo? |
30623 | But why tell such things to the court? |
30623 | But why try to leave him behind, even without a horse? |
30623 | But why-- name of a name-- should Jacqueline try to prevent? |
30623 | But why? |
30623 | But will you, at these stains of blood? |
30623 | But you were about to start?" |
30623 | But, did they know for certain that the bandit was dead? |
30623 | But, suppose that the French remain, would n''t they have to fight? |
30623 | But, we ask,_ ad quod damnum_?--i.e., is n''t it as futile as cauterizing a wooden leg? |
30623 | But, who will save me from mine, I wonder? |
30623 | But-- goodness gracious, man, why do n''t you draw your gun?" |
30623 | But-- if he were the man to hold her, despite herself? |
30623 | But-- what made the shots scatter so? |
30623 | By the way, how are you going to get to Escobedo?" |
30623 | By the way, mademoiselle, do you thank me for the quaver of emotion, for the frisson?" |
30623 | CHAPTER I MEAGRE SHANKS"... and should a man full of talk be justified?" |
30623 | CHAPTER VI IF A KISS WERE ALL"A man, a woman, a passion-- what else matters?" |
30623 | CHAPTER XIV BLOOD AND NOISE-- WHAT ELSE? |
30623 | CHAPTER XVII UNDER A SPANISH CLOAK"What misadventure is so early up, That calls our person from our morning''s rest?" |
30623 | CHAPTER XVIII LITTLE MONARCHS, BIG MISTAKES"How now, good fellow? |
30623 | Can you bear that in mind, señor, no matter what you may hear?" |
30623 | Could liberty be really so glorious? |
30623 | Could not real life be for once as complacent as art? |
30623 | Could such a coincidence happen, could it, outside the neat ordering of a book or play? |
30623 | Could the Coincidence be for naught after all? |
30623 | Curse them both, curse----""Well, curse away, but who, what?" |
30623 | Dauntless cavaliers of the Blood, if they chose to carve themselves a kingdom, why not? |
30623 | De la República? |
30623 | Did Jacqueline care for this prince? |
30623 | Did Little Joe rave? |
30623 | Did he prove interesting?" |
30623 | Did n''t he elope here with her?" |
30623 | Did n''t it now?" |
30623 | Did n''t it rain before Waterloo? |
30623 | Did n''t want to disturb me, maybe? |
30623 | Did you at any time ride across the river?" |
30623 | Do I not know that the savagery has already begun?" |
30623 | Do n''t I die to- morrow?" |
30623 | Do n''t that look like the best scheme?" |
30623 | Do n''t you Mexicans ever bathe before you die?" |
30623 | Do n''t you know how much-- Lord A''mighty, how much!--I''d like to oblige you? |
30623 | Do n''t you see those black shakos, Jim, and those gray coats? |
30623 | Do n''t you see, sir, that in any case you should make us very welcome?" |
30623 | Do n''t you think''someone''is risking a great deal for a little walk on shore?" |
30623 | Do you find a packet there?" |
30623 | Do you forget how you took the traitor Lopez to Escobedo, the night I was betrayed?" |
30623 | Do you go? |
30623 | Do you happen to know, general, how Tampico fell?" |
30623 | Do you notice anywheres that Yankee protectorate we were predicting? |
30623 | Do you resent it now?" |
30623 | Do you see a single one of their uniforms down here? |
30623 | Does mademoiselle approve?" |
30623 | Does she wear red sometimes? |
30623 | Does the ma''am''selle herself happen to have left any deposition?" |
30623 | Don Rodrigo?" |
30623 | Dupin is n''t thinking of anybody but your Fra Diavolo, who must have killed Captain Maurel.--Was he here?" |
30623 | Echo demands,"Retreat?--The Iron Brigade in retreat?" |
30623 | Eh, mi coronel,"he added to Driscoll,"you''ve taught this barbarous gait to the Republic too, I see?" |
30623 | Escape? |
30623 | Escobedo kept away then?" |
30623 | Fatality? |
30623 | Fatality? |
30623 | Flowered calico? |
30623 | For how else could volleys be so well sustained, how else so deadly? |
30623 | Had he not found Don Anastasio stretched upon the ground? |
30623 | Had he not just decided? |
30623 | Had his soul, then, been a cringing one throughout the night just past? |
30623 | Had n''t I better stay----?" |
30623 | Had not the dauntless anciano, the self- same Don Anastasio, fallen in defence of the two French señoritas? |
30623 | Had she really thought to defend herself with that inadequate thing? |
30623 | Had the witness ever, on any occasion, robbed him? |
30623 | Has she large black eyes? |
30623 | Has your country a representative here? |
30623 | Have I asked you even to go?" |
30623 | Have you anyone who saw me cross?" |
30623 | He could answer that? |
30623 | He had a knife-- and a machete-- and a pistol-- and----""_ Who_ was killed? |
30623 | He was going, and when, where, in the wide world, in all time, might they ever meet again? |
30623 | He was-- he was the red- haired puppy, my old friend the Dragoon, who carried you off wounded that day? |
30623 | He will not wait for his friends?" |
30623 | He''s harmless, now, he''s insignificant? |
30623 | He, he is one of your friends?" |
30623 | He? |
30623 | Help me carry her-- unless,"and she deliberately punctuated her scorn,"unless Your Majesty desires to call for aid?" |
30623 | Her Majesty?" |
30623 | Her Mercy did not know that? |
30623 | Her Mercy knew that? |
30623 | Her answer? |
30623 | Hoped he would have a nip of peach brandy? |
30623 | How badly had his reception fared so far? |
30623 | How can that be worse?" |
30623 | How did it happen? |
30623 | How did they know the story was true? |
30623 | How did you come?" |
30623 | How else could I threaten to expose them for contributing to the rebels?" |
30623 | How had His Mercy passed the night? |
30623 | How should an elegant officer from the City and the Court know aught of María de la Luz? |
30623 | How----""Where,"interposed Driscoll,"might one find the nearest stage to Mexico?" |
30623 | How?" |
30623 | I interpret the word of God?" |
30623 | I mean the man who was with you several evenings ago, when you----""When I was carrying off the padre''s sweetheart?" |
30623 | I offer you protection to the City?" |
30623 | I steal from Murguía?" |
30623 | I told her I had been reckoning that she----""Cared, yes?" |
30623 | I want----""Child, child, whom am I to stop?" |
30623 | I would have accepted, the grateful tears streaming from my eyes? |
30623 | If I did, I should not be here, here in your house for the first time, and against your wishes----""Will Your Highness be seated?" |
30623 | If Napoleon did not mean to bid, why then was she staying in Mexico? |
30623 | If Your Majesty would suggest to him this phase----""And you, meanwhile in Europe?" |
30623 | If he could cause that other man to know? |
30623 | If he might ask a question, had they searched the prisoner? |
30623 | If he were primal man of primal nature, the demigod raptor who seizes his mate? |
30623 | If he were shot, how was he to go to Juarez? |
30623 | If it could be-- if it could be that she really knew no reason why she should marry Maximilian? |
30623 | If they had, would n''t I want you to hurry, for then there''d be a conquering Empire waiting for you?" |
30623 | If this were a revelation? |
30623 | If we get there before the Liberals----"...... And why not? |
30623 | If you would believe that, mademoiselle?" |
30623 | If, for the instant, she wonders why a monsieur fights for her, and then why he hazards his life to be rid of her?" |
30623 | If_ he_ knew nothing of the effect, how then could one ask him about the cause? |
30623 | In the north, sire----""How, father? |
30623 | Indeed, what more simple? |
30623 | Is he coming? |
30623 | Is it gallant, then, to disappoint me by getting yourself killed?" |
30623 | Is it? |
30623 | Is n''t he a thief?" |
30623 | Is she well and-- docile?" |
30623 | It ai n''t because, because she''s an aristocrat?" |
30623 | It is your Emperor Napoleon, verdad? |
30623 | It was an infinitely laborious task, and even with completion at last, there was yet the question-- which would break first, bone or masonry? |
30623 | It was at the church here that we would meet her, you know? |
30623 | It''s-- What''s that?" |
30623 | Knighthood? |
30623 | Let me give the order,''Cocher, à Paris!--Voilà, what more''s to be done?" |
30623 | Listen, am I not the father of my people?" |
30623 | Madame will look?" |
30623 | Mademoiselle,_ what_ am I to understand?" |
30623 | Majesty?" |
30623 | Meaning? |
30623 | Might he send a barrel over to his esteemed allies? |
30623 | Miramon, the best among you, where was he?" |
30623 | Mon Dieu, have we not won it? |
30623 | Monsieur-- Oh, mon Dieu, what_ can_ you have to tell me?" |
30623 | Murguía stretched out his arms toward the president of the court,"You will let me go to her, señor? |
30623 | My eye, but hain''t they beastly idiots? |
30623 | Nay, had he a Destiny? |
30623 | No one ever hears from El Chaparrito''less there''s a crisis on, and is there one on now? |
30623 | No? |
30623 | None at all, do you understand, sir?" |
30623 | Not Captain Morel? |
30623 | Nothing good ever happens to anyone in this country, and who can tell what might happen to you when the army is gone? |
30623 | Now Your Majesty will hurry the faster to Vienna?" |
30623 | Now is n''t France a backward place?" |
30623 | Now is this quite clear, or-- do you require my promise on it?" |
30623 | Now s''pose you just wait till Joe Shelby gets back to us in Arkansas, after that conference with the other generals? |
30623 | Now then, shall I bring the men to save your empire? |
30623 | Now then, where''s the emperor we were to catch?" |
30623 | Now then, who was that other intruder?" |
30623 | Now what did Diaz do, but take Puebla by assault before Marquez could arrive? |
30623 | Now what do you suppose, my esteemed compadre, Don Rodrigo would say if we had to confiscate the consignment?" |
30623 | Now where''s that, and what for?" |
30623 | Now will you please get away from that door?" |
30623 | Now, uh, if-- if you would just bring along the other one?" |
30623 | Now, why, by all that''s feminine, was she surprised next morning when the Gray Troop gathered round her coach, as though that were a coincidence? |
30623 | Now,"she went on, unmoved by the fact that he had winced,"the question remains with Your Highness-- does aught besides honor hold you to stay?" |
30623 | Of the cognac, especially?" |
30623 | Oh tell me, señor, there is no bad news of her?" |
30623 | Oh why, why did you not escape this morning, while the road was open?" |
30623 | Oh, I must be true!--Now,_ why_ could n''t those Missourians have sent-- someone else?" |
30623 | Oh, mademoiselle, is there any danger?" |
30623 | Once I found a chance to ask her her name, but she would only tell her given name.--There, you will remember? |
30623 | Once Maximilian had said,"What, Bebello, and art thou a better judge of men than I, thy master and the master of men?" |
30623 | One almost thought she had a dagger in her hand----""Never mind, what else did she say?" |
30623 | One question remained, what could the mission be? |
30623 | Only, if there were but a liqueur, a liqueur to give the after- cigar that last added relish, verdad, señor?" |
30623 | Opened Job his mouth? |
30623 | Or break you over my knee? |
30623 | Or for that American, named Driscoll? |
30623 | Or more to be desired? |
30623 | Or must I have you kicked off?" |
30623 | Or tell me, then, who would buy?" |
30623 | Or was it Juan?" |
30623 | Or were n''t you worrying lest I''d got left back in Tampico?" |
30623 | Or why, more than another man? |
30623 | Outlaw decrees? |
30623 | Perhaps he had settled a debt with the witness? |
30623 | Perhaps you will tell me, sir, why neither the Señor Ney nor Fra-- nor Captain Morel is here?" |
30623 | Perhaps, señor,_ you_ know who El Chaparrito is?" |
30623 | Pigheadedness had made Don Anastasio guilty, why should n''t perjury make him innocent? |
30623 | Possibly I, too, am to be sharpened into a kind of guillotine, eh, señor?" |
30623 | Querétero? |
30623 | Quick, please, mademoiselle, which way?" |
30623 | Race you to the river?" |
30623 | Ready? |
30623 | Reckon you can stand just one? |
30623 | S''pose we just stir up an alibi?" |
30623 | Sacré nom, tell me, where is she? |
30623 | See that''M''? |
30623 | See that''T''on my sombrero? |
30623 | Shall we have the aid he went for? |
30623 | She leaves that he may_ not_ abdicate, while if I stay, she fears that----""He_ will_ abdicate?" |
30623 | She rode, too, so that she could see his face, just ahead of her,"but your faction, the-- yes, the South-- she is already vanquis-- no!--whipped? |
30623 | She who would give life to others, what was her life to be henceforth? |
30623 | She''s-- God, why do n''t he come? |
30623 | Simply because I want to know if you care to escape?" |
30623 | Slaughter, he''s near Brownsville yet, is n''t he?" |
30623 | So if he hears that Prince Max comes this way----""He will find Charlotte instead? |
30623 | So was it this, a blue flowered gown, that made her so suddenly tangible, so tangible and maddening? |
30623 | So, a Liberal army two thousand strong was approaching? |
30623 | So, monsieur permits himself to observe that I need a wardrobe? |
30623 | So, she was to recognize the usurper''s abdication after she had fought and suffered to take the usurper? |
30623 | So----""But why did you wish to come at all?" |
30623 | Suppose I guess? |
30623 | Supposing a chance for escape, could he bring himself to leave Demijohn behind? |
30623 | Supposing he turned his offer from Maximilian to President Juarez, would n''t it, well, look as though he did so to save his hide? |
30623 | Tell me, shall I go, or shall I stay? |
30623 | That I plotted against you? |
30623 | That service? |
30623 | The American? |
30623 | The Batallon del Emperador? |
30623 | The Republic? |
30623 | The crops up there----""Crops? |
30623 | The enemy? |
30623 | The first question: Shall we shoot this American?" |
30623 | The suspicion arises: Was it to win a peace- offering wherewith to make friends again with the Liberals? |
30623 | The two women were hardly more than girls, but who shall fathom the depth of their guile? |
30623 | Then he would break forth again, entreating, commanding,"Your Mercy will let me see her? |
30623 | Then it''s not about the cross? |
30623 | Then she did not mention where they were going?" |
30623 | Then she knew you were coming here to me? |
30623 | Then we would deliver the arms to the United States on their recognizing Our Empire----""Trade us off, you mean?" |
30623 | Then you''re in debt to the government? |
30623 | Then, raising her head, she seemed to perceive His Majesty,"Is n''t a bit older, is he, sire?" |
30623 | Then, what then? |
30623 | There is no stage at Valles---- And, captain,"he dropped Nature abruptly, and turned on the man,"who are you, hombre? |
30623 | There''s her title----""Title?" |
30623 | There''s no admission charge, I imagine, to this battle?" |
30623 | They never did ask"How?" |
30623 | They say that''s the way with the guillotine, eh, Señor Presidente?" |
30623 | They-- yes, here they are, but before reading them, will Your Excellency promise to imagine himself in Miramon''s power?" |
30623 | This one? |
30623 | Title? |
30623 | To know when the time is ripe, to hasten the time----""The time for what?" |
30623 | To leave her with these ruffians? |
30623 | To miss a fight? |
30623 | To provoke a reply elsewhere, he asked Murguía if it were the señoritas, perhaps, and not Captain Morel, who preferred his absence? |
30623 | To say how the Trans- Mississippi would n''t surrender, did n''t you? |
30623 | Treat for terms, do anything, only save your followers and-- yourself, sire?" |
30623 | Universal History? |
30623 | Was his jealousy then so apparent? |
30623 | Was it Marquez, perhaps? |
30623 | Was the princely homage a make- believe, too?" |
30623 | We can not give refuge to the enemies of the United States----""The conditions?" |
30623 | We''re seen a''ready, ai n''t we, sir?" |
30623 | Well Dan, why do n''t you?" |
30623 | Well, well, well, and so you are that rich old hacendado who never gave even a fanega of corn to Republic or French either, unless frightened into it? |
30623 | Well, well, who made you so thoughtful? |
30623 | Well, what''s the matter?" |
30623 | Well?" |
30623 | Well?" |
30623 | Were n''t those the orders, or-- that is, the suggestion?" |
30623 | What answer, fellow?" |
30623 | What caprice might not possess her while on shore, and the ship to sail within a few hours? |
30623 | What could have happened to you last night? |
30623 | What do you mean?" |
30623 | What does it mean?" |
30623 | What else? |
30623 | What gross idiocy-- or treachery-- had thrown away the Empire''s one magnificent chance? |
30623 | What had he betrayed? |
30623 | What has he done?" |
30623 | What if this Confederate aid were to go to the Mexican rebels, as it surely would if the emissary at Tuxtla were shot? |
30623 | What in----""What did you come down here for, I''d like to know? |
30623 | What made a girl do that way? |
30623 | What now were waving tassels to the glory of deeds?--_a cuspide corona_--to a wreath of powder- burned laurel? |
30623 | What now, mon colonel, is the little custom as to guards who sleep?" |
30623 | What of his glory to dazzle the Austrians? |
30623 | What profit to France, since at this moment, before our eyes, her army is leaving?" |
30623 | What race of men were these? |
30623 | What then? |
30623 | What was it? |
30623 | What was the boy trying to say? |
30623 | What was the real object in Driscoll''s innermost thought? |
30623 | What''s that?" |
30623 | What''s the matter with him?" |
30623 | What''s the use?" |
30623 | What''s there to be afraid of? |
30623 | What, indeed, was her answer? |
30623 | What, she demanded, had monsieur to do with the matter in the first place? |
30623 | What, then, might not be possible to these her sons on a foreign shore? |
30623 | What, though, of the soldier? |
30623 | What, though, were fractured arms and busted specs to becoming a republic over night? |
30623 | What_ must_ he be thinking this very instant, and we standing here?" |
30623 | Whatever others may think, Your Highness extends me his respect? |
30623 | When I see that you are safely at the hacienda----""You will go back to America?" |
30623 | Where is she?" |
30623 | Where will Your Imperial Highness begin?" |
30623 | Where would you suggest?" |
30623 | Where, then, was his right to the sceptre he wielded so nonchalantly? |
30623 | Which direction, señor?" |
30623 | Which side to take? |
30623 | Which way?" |
30623 | Who are you to question me, señor? |
30623 | Who could be? |
30623 | Who has him seen cross?" |
30623 | Who has taken these things from me? |
30623 | Who in thunder are you?" |
30623 | Who then shall be regent? |
30623 | Who-- where----Curse you, do_ you_ know?" |
30623 | Who-- who is El Chaparrito?" |
30623 | Who? |
30623 | Who?" |
30623 | Who?" |
30623 | Whose orders?" |
30623 | Why could you not remember that I tried to drive you from your empire? |
30623 | Why did n''t you leave me some? |
30623 | Why did n''t you wait till dark to attack? |
30623 | Why did you not meet me this morning?" |
30623 | Why do we come here?" |
30623 | Why do you stay behind, alone? |
30623 | Why had he freed Murguía, if not to unleash a small terrier at Maximilian''s heel? |
30623 | Why in all hell_ do n''t_ ye lambaste''em?" |
30623 | Why not take from him the only dignity left, that of dying?" |
30623 | Why not, then, escape? |
30623 | Why not, then, leave Mexico to ingratitude, and have done? |
30623 | Why should he seek to thrive despite the mysterious curse that seemed to hover over all things like a deadly miasma? |
30623 | Why was he trying the American over again, if not to poison a friendly mastiff? |
30623 | Why, Berthe, what more would you have? |
30623 | Why, indeed, should mademoiselle not remain among us?" |
30623 | Why, then, pay a dying creditor? |
30623 | Why? |
30623 | Why? |
30623 | Will cause him to surrender?" |
30623 | Will disappoint him? |
30623 | Will you deign to close the door?" |
30623 | Will you fight it out, or surrender?" |
30623 | Will your people commence the battle, or shall we?" |
30623 | Will, will that suit Your Mercy, Señor Coronel?" |
30623 | Would Mademoiselle d''Aumerle forgive him? |
30623 | Would he dispose of the childish objection? |
30623 | Would he return? |
30623 | Would the Herr Americano at once repair to His Highness attend? |
30623 | Would the strange donor reclaim the gift, knowing it was gold? |
30623 | Would they not shoot prisoners too, your new friends?" |
30623 | Would you rebuke them also, as you do me?" |
30623 | Yes, it was the hacienda, but how far was it to the hacienda house? |
30623 | Yet did she give herself the small pains of wheedling? |
30623 | Yet for whom, alas? |
30623 | Yet what made him so stupidly commonplace, and so dense? |
30623 | Yet you ask why I come? |
30623 | Yet you expect it, and ask for clemency, though I deny all the great nations?" |
30623 | You are to answer them.--You will shake your head,''Yes,''or''No''--do you hear me?" |
30623 | You did n''t, uh, mention peach cobbler?" |
30623 | You did not come alone through that terrible coast country?" |
30623 | You do n''t mean----""Do n''t I? |
30623 | You do n''t? |
30623 | You have not read of this morning the Journal Officiel? |
30623 | You knew we were going to meet those fellows?" |
30623 | You know who I am, that I command the Dragoons of the Empress.--Are you listening? |
30623 | You may not believe me, señor, but should I not feel easier if they were-- well, out of the reach of Don Rodrigo?" |
30623 | You mean His Majesty?" |
30623 | You remember two years ago at my hacienda, when Lopez sentenced you to death? |
30623 | You saw how he acted when we offered him something to eat? |
30623 | You will be ready, mademoiselle?" |
30623 | You will marry him?" |
30623 | You''ve seen Clem, little girl? |
30623 | You, an accessory?" |
30623 | You-- you do n''t think, señor, that you would like to take it back?" |
30623 | You----""We''ll let it go at that,"said Driscoll, with a little wave of the hand,"but-- how in----""You scoff already, señor? |
30623 | Your Confederates shall know that Maximilian''s court martial executed you, and is it that your compatriotes will then desire to help Maximilian? |
30623 | Your Mercy figures to himself how long I waited after that? |
30623 | Your Mercy observed how fast I was riding?" |
30623 | Your Mercy will let me go to her?" |
30623 | Your sensations facing death, then escaping?" |
30623 | that service? |
30623 | wouldst thou speak with us?" |
38958 | A son? |
38958 | A-- a fool? |
38958 | Against_ us_? |
38958 | Am I not to have a chance for life? 38958 Am I right about those arrows?" |
38958 | Am I to answer you to- night, sir? |
38958 | Am I to find my pass here among these flowers and blossoms? |
38958 | Am I to sacrifice you? |
38958 | Am I? |
38958 | Am-- am I to resign my commission in the Border Horse, sir? |
38958 | And Shemuel?--and Cade Renard? |
38958 | And after that? |
38958 | And all his agents? |
38958 | And did face our enemies like true people all; is it not so, Michael? |
38958 | And he? |
38958 | And he? |
38958 | And how if they swept us off the causeway with a chain- shot? |
38958 | And if you could only find the man you''d slit his gullet, would n''t you, Cade? |
38958 | And in Cayuga? |
38958 | And in Onondaga? |
38958 | And my honour? |
38958 | And oh Micky why did you say such things to Lord Dunmore last night? 38958 And risk a chain- shot from their twenty- four- pounders?" |
38958 | And she left no word for me? |
38958 | And so serve the enemies of the King? |
38958 | And talk to my five wits of the harvest? 38958 And the eastern door?" |
38958 | And the others here? |
38958 | And then,continued Mount,"he just hunted around till he found me, and we went to hell together-- didn''t we, Cade, old friend?" |
38958 | And then? |
38958 | And you came home and your dear wife had run away with an officer from Sir Peter Warren''s ships-- eh, Cade, old friend? |
38958 | And you came to get me? 38958 And you said you would tell me where she was to be found?" |
38958 | And you will come with me to Johnstown on the morrow, Silver Heels? |
38958 | And you, Michael,asked Mrs. Hamilton,"will you not share my carriage, for old time''s sake?" |
38958 | And you? |
38958 | And-- and from the other-- the one you love-- the fool? |
38958 | And-- and the Six Nations? |
38958 | And-- and the jack- knife made by Barlow? |
38958 | And-- what am I in this club? |
38958 | And-- what then, sir? |
38958 | Are all the settlers in the fort? |
38958 | Are men starving here around us? |
38958 | Are they ground? |
38958 | Are we not to sniff a posset? |
38958 | Are ye mad? |
38958 | Are you a recent recruit, sir, that you marvel at the good- fellowship among us? |
38958 | Are you a runner from Johnstown? |
38958 | Are you an enemy to the King? |
38958 | Are you bound for Cresap''s camp, too? |
38958 | Are you certain that Miss Warren is already in Pittsburg? |
38958 | Are you going to fish? |
38958 | Are you in love with Felicity? |
38958 | Are you knave or fool, that you stand there listening to this threat on my life? 38958 Are you listening?" |
38958 | Are you mad? 38958 Are you mad?" |
38958 | Are you mad? |
38958 | Are you not a messenger from Sir William Johnson? |
38958 | Are you not done with cursing it? |
38958 | Are you not proud? |
38958 | Are you ready, Jack? |
38958 | Are you sure we are followed? |
38958 | Are you, too, of that fellowship? |
38958 | Are you? |
38958 | Are your broken bones mended? |
38958 | Ay,replied an officer of Roxbury Minute Men,"but what if our horses neigh in mid- stream?" |
38958 | Ay-- ay-- why and why not? |
38958 | Believe it? 38958 Betty? |
38958 | British lobster- backs-- eh, Cade? 38958 But ca n''t you see that it''s Dunmore''s policy to bring on a clash?" |
38958 | But what is this Minute Men''s Club? |
38958 | But who is this fellow? |
38958 | But will you not tell me when you first loved me, Silver Heels? |
38958 | But, my boy,said Sir William, huskily,"do you understand that you must go alone on this mission?" |
38958 | But, pray, where is the lady and her maid and the chaise and four? |
38958 | But,he suggested,"can not even the King be deceived by unscrupulous counsellors?" |
38958 | But,said I, puzzled,"does Dunmore expect a messenger from Sir William?" |
38958 | But-- but why are you not among the guests at Province House? |
38958 | Ca n''t some o''you riflemen reach him with old Brown Bess? |
38958 | Ca n''t ye see the savages across the river following? 38958 Ca n''t you feel that you are in a trap?" |
38958 | Cade was in love,explained Mount soberly;"were n''t you Cade?" |
38958 | Cade, old friend, what are you doing? |
38958 | Cade? 38958 Can Dunmore know what he is doing? |
38958 | Can I not trust you, dear lad? |
38958 | Can not you appeal to the law to have it settled? |
38958 | Can we not find a quiet corner hereabouts? |
38958 | Can we not take the Bedford Road? |
38958 | Can you believe I love you still? |
38958 | Can you not see that Colonel Cresap is driving the Cayugas into the King''s ranks? |
38958 | Can you not watch me from the corridor as well as in my cell? |
38958 | Cardigan, which way are they coming? |
38958 | Cayuga,she said, softly;"what make was his rifle?" |
38958 | Club? 38958 Colonel Butler,"repeated Mr. Duncan;"you remember him, do n''t you?" |
38958 | Consider yourself fortunate, eh? |
38958 | Could a gentleman do less? |
38958 | Could anybody know our features? |
38958 | Cruel one, what do you ask that I may adore? |
38958 | D''ye mean to throw me over for that wood- running whelp, Cardigan? |
38958 | Damme, Sir William, d''ye mean to accuse me? 38958 Dare they attack an officer in uniform?" |
38958 | Dear heart, would you take me? 38958 Dear lad,"said the doctor, raising his eyebrows,"did you not know she had gone to Montreal?" |
38958 | Did I say I was a rebel? |
38958 | Did I? |
38958 | Did Miss Warren confess that she loved? |
38958 | Did Miss Warren see me while I was ill? |
38958 | Did n''t you drive me away for Bevan? |
38958 | Did you believe that those were real tears? |
38958 | Did you procure the pass, sir? 38958 Did you say you were hungry?" |
38958 | Did you see the soldiers? |
38958 | Do n''t they come in to the village at all? |
38958 | Do those ragged rascals mean to face a British army? |
38958 | Do you also believe it is coming? |
38958 | Do you also ride with us, Shemuel? |
38958 | Do you believe Dunmore would detain us? |
38958 | Do you believe he did? |
38958 | Do you believe they are setting the gibbets? |
38958 | Do you care? |
38958 | Do you desire some fresh milk, lady? |
38958 | Do you expect to take the King''s highway with Jack Mount? |
38958 | Do you fear me? |
38958 | Do you hear firing,he asked,"far away in the west?" |
38958 | Do you know any of these gentlemen, Jack? |
38958 | Do you know who I am, you beast? |
38958 | Do you know who is coming? |
38958 | Do you know why I am here? |
38958 | Do you mean Miss Warren? |
38958 | Do you mean it? |
38958 | Do you mean it? |
38958 | Do you mean to say that Lord Dunmore is provoking war here at the King''s command? |
38958 | Do you not know what is due to quality? |
38958 | Do you not mean that you love Dunmore? |
38958 | Do you not see it is dark here? |
38958 | Do you realize why I am here? |
38958 | Do you recall how the ferret, Vix, did bite Peter''s tight breeches, Michael? |
38958 | Do you remember that day you bit me in the school- room? |
38958 | Do you say that, sir, because I am ignorant of the poets? |
38958 | Do you still love Jack Mount? |
38958 | Do you suppose we like that picture either? |
38958 | Do you think Cade followed Miss Warren to Boston? |
38958 | Do you think the runner I hired to carry my letter to Sir William will be scalped? |
38958 | Do you think we do things by halves, Cade and I? 38958 Do you want me-- now?" |
38958 | Do you-- do you believe she would listen to him? |
38958 | Do you-- do you dare risk that? |
38958 | Do you? |
38958 | Does Mrs. Hamilton believe I am in love with her? |
38958 | Does he know that it was me he loved so deeply in his madness? |
38958 | Does that count? |
38958 | Doubtless you met him then at Cresap''s camp? |
38958 | Draw me a measure o''buttry ale; d''ye hear, ye slut? |
38958 | Drunk? |
38958 | Dubs all, and bull''s- eyes up is what I play, unless you want to put in agates? |
38958 | Eh? 38958 Even if you loved me before?" |
38958 | Ever hear of Catamount Jack? |
38958 | Fainted? |
38958 | Felicity,said Mistress Molly,"will you conduct as befits your station?" |
38958 | Felicity? |
38958 | For the time? |
38958 | Give up the frontier and go back to Virginia with tails between our legs? |
38958 | Gone? |
38958 | Greathouse, eh? |
38958 | Greathouse, eh? |
38958 | Have I changed? |
38958 | Have I grown? 38958 Have I not sorrow enough without seeing you carried in here with a hole in your breast, you meddlesome ass?" |
38958 | Have n''t you heard from Shemuel? |
38958 | Have you ever before seen a race? |
38958 | Have you looked to him, lad? 38958 Have you seen the soldiers, Micky?--and the fires on the hills?" |
38958 | He knows you now? |
38958 | He marches in the spring with his Maryland and Pennsylvania Rangers-- to pay his respects to Tommy Gage? 38958 Here are your pistols,"I said;"do you know how to use them?" |
38958 | Here? |
38958 | Highway? |
38958 | Hiram? 38958 Hoity- toity, what the devil''s tew pay?" |
38958 | How came that wound? |
38958 | How came you to find me out, here in my retreat? |
38958 | How can I get you a parson if I''m to march here behind you, bearing this nosegay? |
38958 | How can you pass the Neck guard, without the Governor''s leave, sir? |
38958 | How could Sir William, who is at Castle Cumberland, know that? |
38958 | How did you grow? |
38958 | How did you hear of that? |
38958 | How do you feel? |
38958 | How do you know, sir, which partner fate and Mr. Bevan may allot you? |
38958 | How do you know? |
38958 | How do you know? |
38958 | How do you know? |
38958 | How far is it? 38958 How far is the Cayuga castle?" |
38958 | How long do you stay here? |
38958 | How long has this gone on? |
38958 | How long have you been absent from Boston? |
38958 | How long? |
38958 | How many have you? |
38958 | How should I know it,I asked,"when you tell me nothing?" |
38958 | How-- how long shall we hang? |
38958 | Hungry? |
38958 | Hunt-- what? |
38958 | I a member? |
38958 | I can not tell--"Who? |
38958 | I dold you she wass to marry Lord Dunmore; if you hatt asked me I could haff dold you somedings more--"What? |
38958 | I have never smelled powder; have you, sir? |
38958 | I suppose you bring that pretty valentine of hers-- what some people call a warrant-- do you not, Captain Butler? |
38958 | I talk with my baby in the woods; do n''t I, Jack? 38958 I thought you wished to see Colonel Cresap, too?" |
38958 | I''m to be married-- d''ye hear? 38958 I? |
38958 | I? 38958 I? |
38958 | If I call you Felicity Warren, will you go? |
38958 | If he is a true patriot,I said,"how can he deliberately drive the Six Nations to take up arms against the colonies?" |
38958 | If the British are at Roxbury,she said,"we are quite cut off, are we not?" |
38958 | If you are no longer a child,said I,"why do they harness you to the back- board and make you wear pack- thread stays?" |
38958 | If,said I, slowly,"Silver Heels and I are obliged to marry somebody, why can we not marry each other?" |
38958 | If,she began slowly,"I should bid you to supper at my house, would you hurt me with refusal, Michael?" |
38958 | If_ who_ chooses to do so? |
38958 | In his language did he pronounce_ agh_ like_ ahh_? |
38958 | In the face of all his people? |
38958 | In what school have you been taught to make love, sir? |
38958 | Is Colonel Cresap in the fort, corporal? |
38958 | Is Cresap coming here? |
38958 | Is Doctor Connolly Dunmore''s agent? |
38958 | Is Felicity with Sir John? |
38958 | Is Mount sleeping? |
38958 | Is Mr. Bevan going to Boston? |
38958 | Is Mrs. Hamilton at Province House? |
38958 | Is he as close a friend as ever of Colonel Butler and Joseph? |
38958 | Is he dead? |
38958 | Is it a false alarm? |
38958 | Is it a promise, sir? |
38958 | Is it a salmon- rod? |
38958 | Is it a woman who follows us? |
38958 | Is it dark out there in the square? |
38958 | Is it not amusing? |
38958 | Is it not sudden? |
38958 | Is it the Roxbury Road, Cade? |
38958 | Is it too far to swim? |
38958 | Is n''t that where the troops land, sir? |
38958 | Is she here? |
38958 | Is she not to we d the Earl of Dunmore? |
38958 | Is she-- does she fancy she is in love with you? |
38958 | Is that remark addressed to me, sir? |
38958 | Is that the Boston creed? |
38958 | Is that the house? |
38958 | Is that why you cried out? |
38958 | Is the dandelion juice on them yet? |
38958 | Is the wooden bridge all right, Shemmy? |
38958 | Is there a man among us dare demand a pass of the Governor? |
38958 | Is there any trouble? |
38958 | Is there sickness here-- or wounds? |
38958 | Is this all? |
38958 | Is this your house? |
38958 | Jack, borrow a post- whip and warm the breeks of those same post- boys, will you? 38958 Jack,"I said,"is poor Cade cured o''fancy and his mad imaginings?" |
38958 | Jimmy Rolfe, that stout post- chaise, well provisioned, and four strong horses might help us to- night-- eh, friend? |
38958 | Landlord,I asked, carelessly, cutting short another argument,"what may your tavern sign mean with its house running loose on a pair o''legs?" |
38958 | Let me go, sir? |
38958 | Lord Dunmore,I said,"by what privilege do you assume to vapour and handle the hilt of your small- sword in Miss Warren''s presence?" |
38958 | Maister Michael,he whined;"ye''ll no be soopin''till the blessing''s said? |
38958 | May I have the honour of attaching this ribbon to your hilt, sir? |
38958 | May I inquire your name, sir? |
38958 | May I trouble you for that paper? |
38958 | May I wear my uniform, sir? |
38958 | Maybe,he said, spitefully,"you don''d know somedings?" |
38958 | Micky, what are you saying? 38958 Miss Warren wass crying, sir--""What?" |
38958 | More wood- running, Mr. Cardigan? 38958 Mount,"I said, quietly,"does Colonel Cresap know this?" |
38958 | Mr. Duncan,said he,"have you knowledge hereabouts of a certain present sent in your care for Mr. Cardigan here?" |
38958 | My aide- de- camp, Lord Dunmore,said Sir William, bluntly;"your Lordship will remember Captain Cardigan who died before Quebec? |
38958 | My-- mother? |
38958 | My-- my mother''s eyes? |
38958 | Nay, now,she laughed,"do you remember how you played with me at that state dinner held in Johnson Hall? |
38958 | News o''Boston? |
38958 | Not Dunmore? 38958 Not yet?" |
38958 | Now do you know me, Cade? |
38958 | Now what the devil are_ you_ up to? |
38958 | October,he said, pityingly;"did you not know it?" |
38958 | Oh no, my lady, that cock wo n''t fight, d''ye hear? |
38958 | Oh, Captain Butler,said Mount, with a gigantic simper,"how can I resist you? |
38958 | Oh, has he? |
38958 | Oh, you do, eh? 38958 Oh, you do, eh?" |
38958 | Oh, you have, have you? 38958 Oh, you would blow us all up for it, eh?" |
38958 | Oh,observed Sir William, coldly,"a selfish quarrel-- eh? |
38958 | Oh-- Miss-- ahem!--Miss Warren? |
38958 | On our side? |
38958 | On which side, sir? |
38958 | On whose affairs ride you? |
38958 | Our betrothal? |
38958 | Out with the gentleman''s name-- d''ye hear? |
38958 | Perchance, sir, you have news from Boston? |
38958 | Perhaps some day the fever may scorch you-- like our young kinsman Micky-- eh, lad? |
38958 | Perhaps the gendleman cares to look at som goots? |
38958 | Really? |
38958 | Rich or poor? 38958 Riflemen?" |
38958 | Savour the wind; what is it? |
38958 | Scalped? |
38958 | Shall I administer the oath of fellowship, my friend? |
38958 | Shaved for a wig, sir? |
38958 | Shemuel,I said,"what did she say when you told her I was in Fort Pitt?" |
38958 | Shorter than the Pitt trail? |
38958 | Shot? |
38958 | Silver Heels,I asked,"are you afraid to see me?" |
38958 | Silver Heels,I said, choking,"can you not understand that it is I who wish to we d you?" |
38958 | Silver Heels,I said,"does it not seem good to be together again here in the sunshine?" |
38958 | Silver Heels? |
38958 | Since when have you come from Johnstown? |
38958 | Sir? |
38958 | So they say I take the King''s highway, eh? |
38958 | So you come on Sir William''s business to the Cayugas? 38958 So you fancied you loved me?" |
38958 | Some day, Sir William, will you not make me one of your deputies? |
38958 | Spy? 38958 Suppose we both cry quits?" |
38958 | Suppose you wait for me? |
38958 | Sure, she has not thrown over Dunmore for that foolish dragoon, Kent Bevan? |
38958 | Sure? |
38958 | Surely he thanked you and Cade for saving his kinsman''s life; surely he made you welcome at the Hall, Jack? |
38958 | Sweandaea,said Sir William, gravely;"how are you to bear my peace- belts if you know not the red of war from the black of good intent?" |
38958 | That proves me a little mad; does n''t it, Jack? |
38958 | The baby must be nigh fifteen years old now, eh, Cade? |
38958 | The forest? 38958 The scent of the sweet- fern,"she murmured;"do you savour it from the pastures?" |
38958 | The trail''s clear,he whispered, gayly;"now, lass, where is the scullions''stairway? |
38958 | The-- the like-- again? 38958 Then I am wealthy?" |
38958 | Then tell me when my cousin Felicity is coming back? 38958 Then why do you take the King''s highway?" |
38958 | They are bringing cannon-- can you not understand? |
38958 | To ask justice? |
38958 | To the blue hills and the sweet- fern? |
38958 | To- night? |
38958 | Trouble with this old scratch- wig? |
38958 | Truly, Michael? |
38958 | Truly, we stayed and did our duty, did we not, dear heart? |
38958 | Truly? |
38958 | Truly? |
38958 | Twist it off? |
38958 | Wait,interrupted Sir William, who had become deeply interested;"what is''black''in the Mohawk tongue?" |
38958 | War? |
38958 | Was he blotched? 38958 Was he scalped?" |
38958 | Was it not Saint Michael who so soundly spanked the devil? |
38958 | Was it not a school- book? |
38958 | Was not that gentleman Patrick Henry-- the one in black who led the poor savage out? |
38958 | We d? 38958 We his tools, when the silly ass has n''t wits to twiddle his own thumbs?" |
38958 | Well, Captain Butler,he drawled,"what can I do for you?" |
38958 | Well, Jack? |
38958 | Well, Micky? |
38958 | Well, do you know anything about this place called Death? |
38958 | Well, well,he said,"so you are to sail to glory at a rope''s end, eh? |
38958 | Well, what does Mister Everybody know? |
38958 | Well, where the devil have you been, sir, and what the devil have you been about, sir? 38958 Well, why did n''t you say so before you tore up all the parcels?" |
38958 | Well,asked the forest runner, with a chuckle,"do you still think yourself lucky?" |
38958 | Well,cried Mount suddenly,"what do you think of us?" |
38958 | Well,said I,"we ca n''t marry, can we, Silver Heels?" |
38958 | Well,said Mount,"have you seen enough of the lobster- backs? |
38958 | Well? |
38958 | Well? |
38958 | Well? |
38958 | Well? |
38958 | What are we to do while you write? |
38958 | What are we to do? |
38958 | What are you going to do to old Dunmore? |
38958 | What are you going to do? |
38958 | What are you staring at, man? |
38958 | What became of her? |
38958 | What book is that? |
38958 | What business? |
38958 | What can I do, Mr. Cardigan? 38958 What clans shall be raised up?" |
38958 | What d''ye mean by this idiot''s babble? 38958 What day?" |
38958 | What did Sir John do? |
38958 | What did she say? |
38958 | What do I care for Mr. Butler? 38958 What do the Grenadiers want?" |
38958 | What do we care for the Cayugas? |
38958 | What do you know about Jack Mount? |
38958 | What do you mean, sir? |
38958 | What do you mean? |
38958 | What do you mean? |
38958 | What do you mean? |
38958 | What do you say-- loud? |
38958 | What do you suppose it is? |
38958 | What do you wish? |
38958 | What does he mean by leaving me here? |
38958 | What foolishness is this, Felicity? 38958 What for?" |
38958 | What for? |
38958 | What friend of liberty could expect less? |
38958 | What game? |
38958 | What has that to do with us? |
38958 | What have you done? |
38958 | What have you heard from Cresap''s men? |
38958 | What if she turned her swivel on us? |
38958 | What ill? |
38958 | What in God''s name is he doing here? |
38958 | What is he, Jack? |
38958 | What is it, my man? 38958 What is that fellow there with the bear- skin cap and white plume and tassels?" |
38958 | What is that? |
38958 | What is the matter, Cade? 38958 What is the matter, Silver Heels?" |
38958 | What is there to prevent a shot in ambush? 38958 What made you betray my name and quality then, Shemuel?" |
38958 | What man dares attempt to mate you to his friends? 38958 What man is?" |
38958 | What man? |
38958 | What man? |
38958 | What man? |
38958 | What marvel then that my Lord North should misunderstand them, and think to buy their loyalty with tuppence worth o''tea? |
38958 | What may those same arrows be marked with? |
38958 | What of Lord Dunmore? |
38958 | What of it? |
38958 | What of it? |
38958 | What of the Thirteen Sisters? |
38958 | What on earth can I do? |
38958 | What provision was made for Felicity? |
38958 | What score? |
38958 | What the devil are you doing here? |
38958 | What the devil have I to do with your presents and your fish- rods? 38958 What the foul fiend have I to do with''old time''s sake''?" |
38958 | What things? |
38958 | What troops were those, sir? |
38958 | What would become of them? |
38958 | What yoh done to mah li''l Miss Honey- bee? |
38958 | What''s amiss? |
38958 | What''s his business? |
38958 | What? 38958 What?" |
38958 | What? |
38958 | When did Sir William-- die? |
38958 | When does he return? |
38958 | When is Logan to have an audience with Dunmore? |
38958 | When will she return here? |
38958 | When will she return? |
38958 | When? 38958 Where are her post- boys? |
38958 | Where are you going, Cade? 38958 Where do you journey, brother?" |
38958 | Where got you such phrases, Jack? |
38958 | Where have_ you_ been, sir, to leave your client, Miss Warren, at the mercy of Walter Butler? |
38958 | Where is Colonel Guy? |
38958 | Where is Felicity? |
38958 | Where is Shemuel? |
38958 | Where is Silver Heels? |
38958 | Where is he buried? |
38958 | Where is he? 38958 Where is my companion?" |
38958 | Where is my horse? |
38958 | Where is my own money? |
38958 | Where is room 13, Shemuel? 38958 Where is the forest- runner who desires a pass to Lexington?" |
38958 | Where is the pass? |
38958 | Where is your mate? |
38958 | Where on earth did you come from? |
38958 | Where''s the sentry? |
38958 | Where? |
38958 | Which is the maid? |
38958 | Which way, sir? |
38958 | Which way? |
38958 | Who am I to ordain, when He who fashioned yon tow- head designed it to hold neither Latin nor the classics? |
38958 | Who are you, Weasel? |
38958 | Who are you, anyway, Shemuel? |
38958 | Who are you? 38958 Who carried off Proserpine?" |
38958 | Who comes there? |
38958 | Who dares deny me right of speech? |
38958 | Who gave you leave to pouch my ferrets? 38958 Who goes there?" |
38958 | Who is she? |
38958 | Who is that pitiful ass? |
38958 | Who is that young lady? |
38958 | Who is there to mourn for Logan? 38958 Who is this man?" |
38958 | Who is this young man? |
38958 | Who mourns? |
38958 | Who next? 38958 Who the devil is this he- goat with red whiskers?" |
38958 | Who told you he was killed by the French? |
38958 | Who told you that? |
38958 | Who were present? |
38958 | Who-- I? 38958 Who-- I?" |
38958 | Who? |
38958 | Who? |
38958 | Who? |
38958 | Whose? 38958 Why did he go?" |
38958 | Why did he take Miss Warren? |
38958 | Why did they arrest Cresap? |
38958 | Why did you court her? |
38958 | Why did you desert me after you had saved my life? 38958 Why did you desert me, Jack?" |
38958 | Why did you release Felicity from the stocks, Michael? |
38958 | Why do n''t you tell me? |
38958 | Why do you follow me? |
38958 | Why do you not say as much to Sir John? |
38958 | Why do you use such terms? 38958 Why does not my Aunt Molly come to see me?" |
38958 | Why not hang him sooner? |
38958 | Why not sooner? |
38958 | Why not twist his gullet? |
38958 | Why not? |
38958 | Why not? |
38958 | Why not? |
38958 | Why not? |
38958 | Why should he be a dunce when I have taught him? 38958 Why should not the public enter freely a public place?" |
38958 | Why should you not know it? |
38958 | Why to Boston? |
38958 | Why you are here? 38958 Why, then?" |
38958 | Why-- why did she go? |
38958 | Why? 38958 Why? |
38958 | Why? |
38958 | Why? |
38958 | Why? |
38958 | Will she return with him? |
38958 | Will they take off our chains? |
38958 | Will you be gone? |
38958 | Will you be pleased-- to-- to receive Miss Warren immediately? |
38958 | Will you deliver me my warrant and my prisoner? |
38958 | Will you give me my hatchet? |
38958 | Will you go, Silver Heels? |
38958 | Will you go, now? 38958 Will you help him?" |
38958 | Will you kindly hand your keys to me? |
38958 | Will you lodge here? 38958 Will you mind your own business hereafter? |
38958 | Will you not take your turn, Captain Butler? 38958 Will you promise never, never to tell?" |
38958 | Will you speak to me? |
38958 | Wo n''t tell, eh? |
38958 | Wo n''t you tell the Weasel? |
38958 | Would not that brute allow you Betty? |
38958 | Would you care to hear a few facts that have occurred since April, gentlemen? |
38958 | Would you care to see the famous Jack Mount, captain? |
38958 | Would you come back-- now? |
38958 | Would you like to fight for the King? |
38958 | Would-- would you truly we d me? |
38958 | Would_ you_? |
38958 | Ye stinking beggars, d''ye mean to poison us all with the pest? 38958 Yes, I remember him,"I replied;"where is he?" |
38958 | Yes; you mean Jack Mount, the highwayman? 38958 You are not afraid that I will not know how to meet-- it?" |
38958 | You are not going to leave us, are you, lad? |
38958 | You are sure she is there? |
38958 | You are to get us out, do you understand, child? |
38958 | You believe he will follow her? 38958 You did n''t know that I am one of the Minute Club''s messengers? |
38958 | You do not mean to retain this warrant, sir? |
38958 | You had a lovely wife, did n''t you, Cade? |
38958 | You haff found Miss Warren? |
38958 | You have fought them, Cade; you remember? 38958 You have never wavered-- not once-- not for one moment?" |
38958 | You have not followed the sea? |
38958 | You have suffered, sweet? |
38958 | You kissed her, did n''t you? |
38958 | You know I had a wife? |
38958 | You know Miss Warren is here? |
38958 | You know her? |
38958 | You know him? |
38958 | You know me now, do n''t you, Cade? |
38958 | You know me, sir? |
38958 | You land at Phipps''s Farm, sir? |
38958 | You mean Dunmore''s? |
38958 | You mean he will not answer my letter or accord me escort? |
38958 | You mean that you will fight-- us? |
38958 | You mean to ride for it? |
38958 | You mean to say that Butler is back in Pittsburg? |
38958 | You mean-- about Sir William? |
38958 | You rode in company? |
38958 | You shall stay here all night, d''ye hear? 38958 You think,"she said,"that we no longer need this little friend to sorrow? |
38958 | You wavered? |
38958 | You will do no more tricks on the highway? |
38958 | You will go with me, Jack? |
38958 | You will not meet me? |
38958 | You will not we d Dunmore? |
38958 | You will not, I suppose, presume to interfere in my affairs? |
38958 | You will treat them humanely? |
38958 | You wish to see Chief Warragh,I repeated,"and you come with your pouch full of little red sticks?" |
38958 | You would not refuse me? |
38958 | You would not wish to know less than your own wife, would you? |
38958 | You? 38958 You? |
38958 | Your-- what? |
38958 | (_ A black and white belt._)"_ Brother_: What are we to do? |
38958 | --and I do not reply? |
38958 | A border war, with all this trouble betwixt King and colonies hatching? |
38958 | A great man died in last July; and who can take his place?" |
38958 | A race?" |
38958 | A voice broke in from the pigeon- loft above,"Is there a woman below to sew bandages?" |
38958 | A.?" |
38958 | After a moment I said,"Miss Warren, you say, cared for me while I lay ill?" |
38958 | After a moment Mount said,"I suppose you do n''t know where Butler is?" |
38958 | After a moment he added:"Coach and six; post- boys, coachman, footmen, and guards-- all armed-- eh, Cade, old spark? |
38958 | After a moment he added:"Why did you not leave me, lad? |
38958 | After a moment''s silence I said,"Is he worthy of her?" |
38958 | Am I a free agent, damme? |
38958 | Am I a useless, passionless clod, that my blood stirs at naught but pleasure? |
38958 | Am I less brave than that woman whose husband died yonder on his own door- sill? |
38958 | Am I not right?" |
38958 | And I safe here in bed? |
38958 | And Saul Shemuel''s pretending to be asleep under that pine- tree? |
38958 | And Silver Heels, had she sold her beauty for the crest on this man''s coach? |
38958 | And Silver Heels, poor little mouse harnessed in the stocks below? |
38958 | And Sir William, where was he that he came not near me-- me who had lain sick unto death in his service and for his sake? |
38958 | And are there no renegades in Johnstown to hire?" |
38958 | And he fell a- muttering to himself:"King''s highway, eh? |
38958 | And his Majesty might be worse served than by Micky here; eh, Captain Butler?" |
38958 | And must she still taunt me? |
38958 | And my manner made you believe I did not care to see Miss Warren?" |
38958 | And now I ask you, gentlemen, whether in all these broad colonies there are not some few men whose motives are other than sordid? |
38958 | And the Weasel''s watching everything from yonder hazel- bunch? |
38958 | And thus I say to your señor Governor; eh, you good fellow? |
38958 | And what was that, pray?" |
38958 | And what would Esk say? |
38958 | And where should I lead them? |
38958 | And who are you, my important friend?" |
38958 | And who is not suspicious of those who appear to be at pains to conceal their tracks? |
38958 | And who went with you on the burnt trail, Cade? |
38958 | And yet you we d Dunmore?" |
38958 | And you still think yourself in luck? |
38958 | And you''re supping with Jack Mount? |
38958 | And you?" |
38958 | Are the Cardigans the public hangmen?" |
38958 | Are there not fools enough here to- night?" |
38958 | Are they straight, Micky?" |
38958 | Are we near her house?" |
38958 | Are you hit, sir?" |
38958 | Are you jealous?" |
38958 | Are you listening?" |
38958 | Are you not his attorney, man? |
38958 | Are you offended?" |
38958 | Are you turned Huron then with your knives and hatchets and your Seneca belts? |
38958 | Are you waiting for Dunmore''s escort and horses? |
38958 | At which a drunken soldier from the tavern bawled out:"God save our country-- eh? |
38958 | Ay, he meant to kill me, anyhow, for how could he ever again appear in Johnstown if I lived to bear witness to his treachery? |
38958 | Ay, where in the devil''s name had the little baggage hid herself? |
38958 | Besides, who would dare threaten Sir William Johnson, the greatest man in the colonies, and very dearly esteemed by our King? |
38958 | Betty-- do you hear? |
38958 | Bevan?" |
38958 | But by whom? |
38958 | But do n''t they say he''s a rebel?" |
38958 | But how could I lie to Bevan or requite his courtesy with treachery? |
38958 | But how far had death gone?--and would he not return by moonlight, stealthily, casting no shadow? |
38958 | But now? |
38958 | But what can I do to serve you-- first?" |
38958 | But what did I care? |
38958 | But what had come over our staid towns- people and farmers and tenants that they should damn each other for rebels and Tories? |
38958 | Butler?" |
38958 | By Heaven, if aught of mischance has come to him--""The great black horse Warlock, sir?" |
38958 | Ca n''t you kill the leading horses-- wouldn''t that be safer?" |
38958 | Ca n''t you see?" |
38958 | Cade, old friend?" |
38958 | Can England grow such grain? |
38958 | Can I serve you?" |
38958 | Can you hire one? |
38958 | Can you not remember what this day means to me?" |
38958 | Can you not understand that?" |
38958 | Captain Butler, is he idle?" |
38958 | Cardigan?" |
38958 | Cardigan?" |
38958 | Cardigan?" |
38958 | Cardigan?" |
38958 | Cardigan?" |
38958 | Care? |
38958 | Come, shall we seek your father, Billy Bishop, the taker of thieves?" |
38958 | Come, shall we steer au large?" |
38958 | Could I be mistaken? |
38958 | Could I summon help from that? |
38958 | Could this still be the same summer? |
38958 | Could we not make the Charles River at a pinch?" |
38958 | Could you give up ease, hopes, position? |
38958 | Could you give up what sum I may leave you in my will? |
38958 | Could you give up your friends and kinsmen? |
38958 | Could you give up, if need be, the woman you loved? |
38958 | Could you renounce your commission in the King''s army to shoulder a firelock, perhaps a stable- fork, in the ranks of your countrymen? |
38958 | D''ye hear what I say? |
38958 | Dear heart, can you not understand me?" |
38958 | Death?" |
38958 | Did n''t they invite you?" |
38958 | Did n''t you hear me say I washed my hands? |
38958 | Did n''t you, Cade?" |
38958 | Did she not attend you to Boston with Sir John?" |
38958 | Did they mean Sir William''s son, John, by their"diddle dumpling?" |
38958 | Did you discover anything in his face that might betoken-- a-- a fever?" |
38958 | Did you hear me? |
38958 | Did you not hear the bugles from the forts?" |
38958 | Did you not know it?" |
38958 | Did you think I went there for my health? |
38958 | Do I think on the hog- pen when I eat a crisped rasher? |
38958 | Do gentlemen conduct in such a manner towards gentlewomen? |
38958 | Do you forget I am a soldier''s child?" |
38958 | Do you hear me, Silver Heels?" |
38958 | Do you hear me? |
38958 | Do you hear that? |
38958 | Do you hear? |
38958 | Do you know how I came here?" |
38958 | Do you mind that fat coachman, Cade?--and all the post- boys agape and cross- eyed with looking into your rifle- barrel?" |
38958 | Do you not hear that, Cade? |
38958 | Do you not see your mistress coming?" |
38958 | Do you note it? |
38958 | Do you smell it? |
38958 | Do you take me for a Frenchy, captain?" |
38958 | Do you think I could fail to reach Cresap with the whole forest as plain to me as the Stony Way below this hill? |
38958 | Do you think she will lie easy there?" |
38958 | Do you think they would follow me in a retreat? |
38958 | Do you understand?" |
38958 | Do you understand?" |
38958 | Do you want me, Michael?--me?--when all the world lies before you? |
38958 | Do you want to keep us till the fort blows up?" |
38958 | Does Colonel Cresap not know that a single scalp taken from the Cayugas will set the Six Nations on fire-- ay, the Lenape, too?" |
38958 | Does my brother bear but a fragment of one belt? |
38958 | Duncan?" |
38958 | Duncan?" |
38958 | Eh, Cade? |
38958 | Eh, Micky? |
38958 | Eh? |
38958 | Eh? |
38958 | Eh? |
38958 | Eh? |
38958 | Eh? |
38958 | Eh? |
38958 | Eh? |
38958 | Eh?" |
38958 | Eh?" |
38958 | Even after all you now know? |
38958 | Every moment I tarried here in the barracks might bring danger nearer; yet, where was I to go? |
38958 | For had I not thrown Butler and his crew from my trail as easily as I brush a bunch of deer- flies from my hunting- shirt? |
38958 | Forget the highway, Cade? |
38958 | Granted his Latin would shame a French priest, and his mathematics sicken a Mohawk, have I not read the poets with him?" |
38958 | Had I not asked pardon for my foolishness in Johnson Hall? |
38958 | Had I not, in Sir William''s service, braved death for the sake of these same rebels? |
38958 | Had she bargained her innocence for the rank that this toothless conspirator and assassin could give her? |
38958 | Had the novelty of our present peril already grown so stale that the shouting of a rabble over a winning horse could blot it out? |
38958 | Had the storm passed? |
38958 | Hain''t you never seed a express before?" |
38958 | Hamilton?" |
38958 | Has Dunmore ever seen how savages fight? |
38958 | Has he seen naked prisoners writhing at the stake, drenched in blood, eyeless sockets raised to the skies?" |
38958 | Has he seen raw scalps ripped from babies? |
38958 | Have I not been twice to the Virginia line with Brant? |
38958 | Have n''t I been through enough to give me sensitive feelings?" |
38958 | Have you a horse stabled here? |
38958 | Have you been ill long? |
38958 | Have you ever doubted it?" |
38958 | Have you ever killed your enemy? |
38958 | Have you lost her?" |
38958 | Have you never seen a cross- roads gibbet?" |
38958 | Have you not heard from Sir John Johnson?" |
38958 | Have you seen the dragoons, sir? |
38958 | Have you seen your lady? |
38958 | Have you yourself not aged in these five months? |
38958 | Have you?" |
38958 | Have you?" |
38958 | Have your men gone mad? |
38958 | He came, bearing wampum; shall his spirit go out bearing a quiver-- o- tat- sheh- te?--hoo- sah- ha- ho?" |
38958 | He has appointed as deputies Colonel Claus and Colonel John Butler--""Who?" |
38958 | Here?" |
38958 | Hey? |
38958 | His wife ran away somewheres-- didn''t she Cade?" |
38958 | How came I here? |
38958 | How came you here?" |
38958 | How can a heart be humbled which has loved such a woman?" |
38958 | How could she listen without scorn, look at him without loathing? |
38958 | How dare you address such language to the Earl of Dunmore?" |
38958 | How in God''s name could she endure him? |
38958 | How then can you propose to let loose these Indians on the people of our colonies?" |
38958 | How was I to get at him? |
38958 | How''s Mrs. Parleyvoo and the little Parleyvoos? |
38958 | How, Mr. Cardigan? |
38958 | I am innocent, what? |
38958 | I cried, angrily;"pull out there!--do you hear me, fellow?" |
38958 | I puy me Delaware paskets in Baltimore-- eh, Jack?" |
38958 | I said, hotly;"do you believe I would cry quits now? |
38958 | I said, sharply;"do you wish to have us all arrested? |
38958 | I think your name is Captain Butler?" |
38958 | I''ll none of it, d''ye hear?" |
38958 | I_ wo n''t_ stay here, d''ye hear?" |
38958 | Idle again? |
38958 | If I''d only had Cade with me--""But-- where''s the Weasel?" |
38958 | If my hands are not clean, would you foul your own?" |
38958 | If we stand not for our women, who will?" |
38958 | In a faint whisper,"When?" |
38958 | Is it loyalty for us to do so?" |
38958 | Is it not better for me to stay here among these people who trust me? |
38958 | Is it not better that I remain and labour among my people in the cause of liberty? |
38958 | Is it not fair and pretty to the eye? |
38958 | Is it true they are coming, lads?" |
38958 | Is it you, sir?" |
38958 | Is she alone, Jack?" |
38958 | Is the young one with you afraid?" |
38958 | Is there no work to do, Jack, save the sheriff''s? |
38958 | Is there not one soul unchanged?" |
38958 | Is there satisfaction in it? |
38958 | Is your rifle loaded, sir? |
38958 | It harrows him, does n''t it, Cade?" |
38958 | It was, I think, responsibility and not cowardice that frightened me; for who was there to take care of Silver Heels if anything happened to me? |
38958 | Justice? |
38958 | Law? |
38958 | Let me serve you, sir, for I do long so to help you?" |
38958 | Look at this Province of New York? |
38958 | Love? |
38958 | May I honourably ask you how you come by this jack- knife?" |
38958 | May I request, gentlemen, that you send a delegate to the committee which will wait upon the Governor to- morrow to intercede for the starving man?" |
38958 | Might it not be a Devonshire town? |
38958 | Mount earnestly advised her to give up the toll- gate until the border had quieted; but she only stared, saying,"How, then, are we to live?" |
38958 | Mount''s?" |
38958 | Mr. Cardigan,"he said,"would you kill deer in May? |
38958 | My heart began to beat madly; could it be possible that Sir John had brought Silver Heels, after all? |
38958 | No fear that we will miss-- eh, Cade? |
38958 | No? |
38958 | No? |
38958 | No? |
38958 | Not another fat magistrate? |
38958 | Now you rage, eh?" |
38958 | Now you scare, eh? |
38958 | Now?" |
38958 | Oh Micky what have you done? |
38958 | Oh tally, man!--is there no wit in you that you freeze at a jest from an over- fond suitor? |
38958 | Oh yes, I''ve been a little mad, have n''t I, Jack?" |
38958 | Oh, do you think he can go free if I open the cell?" |
38958 | Oh, sir, he iss a grand gendleman, Sir William, ai n''t he?" |
38958 | Oh, there you are, are you? |
38958 | One plunge into that dim, sweet shadow and what cared I for King or rebel or any woman who ever lived? |
38958 | Opium--"Opium? |
38958 | Or does he think us of little consequence that he comes without attestants?" |
38958 | Or had the chaise also been stopped as I was now? |
38958 | Our friend, Mr. Sheriff Butler, will be watching for us, and we must n''t keep the gentleman on tenter- hooks too long, eh, Cade?" |
38958 | Possibly you have heard from him concerning that same chaise?" |
38958 | Pray tell me who this bad young Michael Cardigan may be, and what he has done to get his name on this valentine?" |
38958 | Presently I asked,"Is war certain?" |
38958 | Presently I said,"Who is this fool whom you love?" |
38958 | Presently Sir William rose and walked out into the hallway, saying, with affected carelessness:"Then you will start before dawn, Michael?" |
38958 | Punish? |
38958 | See here, Silver Heels, why should Sir William drive me away from you?" |
38958 | Shall I? |
38958 | Shall I?" |
38958 | Shall we have a holiday, perhaps the last for many a month? |
38958 | Shall we leave Cæsar to go marching with his impedimenta and his Tenth Legion? |
38958 | She talked of nobody but you; she treated Mr. Bevan to one of her best silk mittens--""What nonsense is this?" |
38958 | She wass waiting to see you, sir, at Lady Shelton''s in the Boundary--""Did you tell her I was here?" |
38958 | Shemmy, just borrow four new axes of Rolfe, will you? |
38958 | Should I count on his friendship for me to get me an audience with the Governor? |
38958 | Should I let him loose on the world once more? |
38958 | Should I speak to him? |
38958 | Should I take to the tangled forest again? |
38958 | Should any of these things befall me, as well they might, what in the world would become of Silver Heels? |
38958 | Silver Heels we d? |
38958 | Silver Heels? |
38958 | Silver Heels? |
38958 | Slap came the whip on the polished boot- tops, and Sir William was at it again with his gods and goddesses:"Who carried off Proserpine? |
38958 | So my father, with Wolfe''s own song on his lips:"Why, soldiers, why Should we be melancholy boys? |
38958 | So now who''s going fishing, my lord?" |
38958 | So this was Greathouse, a notorious loyalist-- this bloated lout who had been prying and picking at me to learn my sentiments? |
38958 | So you think to make me the laughing- stock o''Virginia? |
38958 | So you write letters to your buckskin lout and plan to run off with him in a post- chaise-- eh? |
38958 | Suppose I wished to?" |
38958 | Suppose that after all they had gone north, risking the war- belt for a dash through to Crown Gap? |
38958 | The King''s highway, old friend? |
38958 | The moon at the cross- roads? |
38958 | The quiet in the woods, the hermit- bird piping in the pines? |
38958 | The rank smell o''the moss, and the stench of rotting logs? |
38958 | The white hare does it when unpursued by hounds; the grouse do it when no pointer follows-- why? |
38958 | Then, in a flash, he wheeled on Butler, snarling, every tooth bared:"Damn you, sir, do you take me for your lackey or the King''s hangman? |
38958 | They also sang in a subdued chorus:"Quak''ress, Quak''ress, whither away? |
38958 | They will to do me no harm, eh? |
38958 | Through it Daniel Boone had gone some years before; now Cresap had followed; and who could doubt that the Governor of Virginia had urged him on? |
38958 | Turning his clear eyes on me, he said,"You will be with us, will you not, sir?" |
38958 | Was I, in my inexperience, treating him properly? |
38958 | Was it not a splendid sight, Cade?" |
38958 | Was it possible for old friends to turn so quickly? |
38958 | Was it true that my quality unfitted me to mate with Silver Heels? |
38958 | Was that the Governor? |
38958 | Was there some one dead in the house below? |
38958 | Was this coming strife to poison the world with its impending passions? |
38958 | We are much to each other; we shall be much more-- eh? |
38958 | We d her? |
38958 | We were speaking of tapping our fat Tory magistrate again--""Taking the road?" |
38958 | We''ll all climb them soon, wo n''t we, jailer?" |
38958 | Weasel?" |
38958 | Well, why in the name o''Virginy ca n''t you say so? |
38958 | What are you? |
38958 | What care we for a brace o''dead turnkeys? |
38958 | What club?" |
38958 | What could anybody believe after you had so coolly compromised her--""What?" |
38958 | What could my present be? |
38958 | What d''ye lack? |
38958 | What devil''s work is this? |
38958 | What did Captain Butler mean by following me through the forests? |
38958 | What did I care now? |
38958 | What did I care? |
38958 | What did I care? |
38958 | What did all this mean? |
38958 | What did an Earl want of her-- even this bloodless Dunmore with his simper and his snuff and his laces and his bird''s claws for fingers? |
38958 | What did she mean by that? |
38958 | What do you see? |
38958 | What does the sorry ass want? |
38958 | What frightful spell had this shrunken nobleman cast over my little comrade that she should confess her love for him? |
38958 | What had they meant by"lobster- back"and"Tommy Gage"and"Bully Tryon?" |
38958 | What harm are they doing?" |
38958 | What has a ferret to do in school? |
38958 | What in God''s name is in that brew?" |
38958 | What is he?" |
38958 | What is it then, my poor boy?" |
38958 | What is it, little comrade?" |
38958 | What is wrong? |
38958 | What makes the dead look so small? |
38958 | What men have fought for England on our frontiers from our grandfathers''times?" |
38958 | What miracle of miracles had set her to grow tall and turn into a woman in a single week? |
38958 | What of it? |
38958 | What of it? |
38958 | What on earth troubles you, old friend?" |
38958 | What possessed all these rakes and roués to go mad-- stark, staring, March- mad-- over my playfellow? |
38958 | What quarrel had they with the King''s soldiers? |
38958 | What reason could Walter Butler have to slay a friendly chief in Pennsylvania?" |
38958 | What say you, Michael?" |
38958 | What shall we do? |
38958 | What strange, sweet mischief is there in your lips, Michael? |
38958 | What the deuce do you want of all this powder? |
38958 | What the deuce is there about Marie Hamilton that stirs the pulse of every man who sets eyes on her? |
38958 | What the devil had enchanted him to seek her for his wife; to make her Countess of Dunmore and the first lady in Virginia? |
38958 | What the mischief did she mean, anyhow? |
38958 | What then were these tea- hating rebels that Sir William should defend them at breakfast and in the faces of half a dozen of his Majesty''s officers? |
38958 | What tribes are they?" |
38958 | What was I to do? |
38958 | What was I to do? |
38958 | What was a strange Cayuga chief doing here without escort, without blanket, yet bearing belts? |
38958 | What was that?" |
38958 | What weight would my opinion carry? |
38958 | What would it be, I wondered-- a hatchet?--a knife at the throat like the deer''s coup- de- grâce? |
38958 | What''s in it, you baggage?" |
38958 | What''s that? |
38958 | What''s the price of cat- stew in Canada? |
38958 | What''s to prove that the Cayugas be not your murderers? |
38958 | What? |
38958 | What? |
38958 | When I passed py dot Boundary again, she wass waiting under the drees--""How long since?" |
38958 | When do you speak to the Cayugas with belts?" |
38958 | When you scarcely spoke to me?" |
38958 | Where are Sir William Johnson''s wards of the Long House? |
38958 | Where are the Shawanese, the Wyandottes, the Lenape, the Senecas, who keep the western portals of the Long House? |
38958 | Where are the people who have lived in this house? |
38958 | Where are they? |
38958 | Where are those Cayugas whom you have sworn to protect from the greed of white men? |
38958 | Where had I seen him before? |
38958 | Where is Esk? |
38958 | Where is Lady Shelton''s house?" |
38958 | Where is that ferret? |
38958 | Where was Jack Mount and Cade Renard? |
38958 | Where was Silver Heels? |
38958 | Where was Silver Heels? |
38958 | Where was she, then? |
38958 | Where was she? |
38958 | Where''s her footman? |
38958 | Where''s her maid? |
38958 | Where''s your penny? |
38958 | While life lasts can I ever forget those sweet, grave words of love, spoken to a boy who stood alone on the threshold of life? |
38958 | Who cares for the expense? |
38958 | Who dares send my spirit to teach your dead that you betray their ashes?" |
38958 | Who in America was great enough to call Sir William to account? |
38958 | Who is this gentleman, Jack?" |
38958 | Who knows what Dunmore''s and Butler''s men might do to carry out their designs on my Cayugas?" |
38958 | Who knows what will come? |
38958 | Who knows; who knows?" |
38958 | Who said he meant to we d her? |
38958 | Who shall raise them?" |
38958 | Who the devil are you, to pry into my affairs and spy upon your betters?" |
38958 | Who took Louisburg? |
38958 | Who was it stood fast before Duquesne when Braddock''s British fled? |
38958 | Why did all go about so quietly, dressed in black? |
38958 | Why do n''t you call me Jack any more?" |
38958 | Why do they not kill me as I lie here if I have returned without her? |
38958 | Why do they not tell me? |
38958 | Why had she never come to me? |
38958 | Why should he forbid me to we d you?" |
38958 | Why was I alive if aught had harmed Silver Heels? |
38958 | Why was I here? |
38958 | Why was the house so silent? |
38958 | Why, soldiers, why? |
38958 | Will that free Jack? |
38958 | Will they pray, Jack?" |
38958 | Will ye have done a- pinching my arm, Captain Butler?" |
38958 | Will you come?" |
38958 | Will you come?" |
38958 | Will you fight with us?" |
38958 | Will you promise me, Felicity?" |
38958 | Will you send to the guard- house and beg him to come to me, doctor?" |
38958 | Will you use your privilege with the Governor, Bevan?" |
38958 | Will you we d me before I go to join with Cresap''s men?" |
38958 | Wo n''t we, Cardigan?" |
38958 | Would my ignorance of what was due him bring trouble and difficulty to Sir William when he returned? |
38958 | Would you we d with a pink- and- white thing whose veins run water? |
38958 | Would your lordship be pleased to see his comrade, the notorious Jack Mount?" |
38958 | Wrong? |
38958 | Yet Mistress Molly did not awake-- or was it that she knew what errand I was bound on? |
38958 | Yet, this young man is not Captain Butler, dear?" |
38958 | You ca n''t hurt my feelings, but you might hurt the Weasel''s-- eh, Cade?" |
38958 | You fetched''em? |
38958 | You have heard of the Chinese alcove, Cardigan? |
38958 | You know about ladies, do n''t you?" |
38958 | You know that every town, village, and hamlet in the province is organized, do n''t you? |
38958 | You laugh, sir? |
38958 | You may see he''s non compos-- eh, Sir Timerson? |
38958 | You remember how we drubbed them there in Pittsburg, belt and buckle and ramrod-- eh, Cade?" |
38958 | You remember? |
38958 | You say I have papers to prove the truth? |
38958 | You see the links in the chain?" |
38958 | You take me for a spy?" |
38958 | Your scalp, now, might bring five shillings at Baton Rouge, or is that but a scratch wig you wear, sir?" |
38958 | _ Now will you we d me?_"A cold fury blinded me so I could scarcely see him. |
38958 | _ Where was she?_ Dead? |
38958 | _ Where was she?_ Dead? |
38958 | a well- groomed lad; eh, Jack?" |
38958 | am I not to follow as soon as I hang this fellow Mount and his rabble o''ragged pottle- pots?" |
38958 | bawled Lord Dunmore,"d''ye think I care what the bandy- legged little beast thinks?" |
38958 | burst out an old gentleman on the Roxbury coach,"is this rebel impudence to be endured?" |
38958 | cried Mount,"are you going to let him loose on the world again?" |
38958 | cried the Roxbury officer,"are we to have quarrels among us at such a time?" |
38958 | cried the Weasel, briskly;"ca n''t you see the redskins?" |
38958 | he bawled;"who the devil are you, sir? |
38958 | he shouted, in a passion,"who carried off that slut Proserpine?" |
38958 | lad, have you forgot the tune the war- arrow sings?" |
38958 | madam; do you think to throw me over for a hind of buckskin? |
38958 | more troops?" |
38958 | said I,"do you think you hurt me?" |
38958 | thought I,"you wish to know my politics, eh? |
38958 | where''s my beer? |
44851 | ''What constitutes a State? 44851 And now, Mr. President, what, under all these circumstances, is it our duty to do? |
44851 | And what is the text in the proceedings of Virginia which this spurious doctrine of nullification claims for its patronage? 44851 Are the people of the United States prepared for this? |
44851 | But why do I waste my breath? 44851 Can it now be said that the question of a recharter of the bank was not decided at the election which ensued? |
44851 | Did they, Mr. President, said Mr. W., succeed by this artifice in benefiting the citizens who had sustained injuries? 44851 Finally, sir, the treaty itself, what is it? |
44851 | He asked if it was probable that a valuation in Liverpool could escape a constitutional objection, if a home valuation were unconstitutional? 44851 How can a result so contrary to all anticipation be explained? |
44851 | How is this to be effected? 44851 Is this the Congress to do these things? |
44851 | Let me ask, sir, on what grounds is it maintained that the United States received a valuable consideration for these claims? 44851 Now, what was the actual curtailment, during the same period? |
44851 | Sir( said Mr. W.), why has the senator from Missouri assailed the Committee on Public Lands, and himself, as its humble organ? 44851 Sir, why has this investigation been resisted? |
44851 | So then, it is come to this, that the Senate has no right to express its opinion in relation to the Executive? 44851 The inquiry remains, what ought to be the specific application of the fund under the restriction stated? |
44851 | The question is, by virtue of whose will, power, dictation, was the removal of the deposits effected? 44851 The senator from Kentucky has changed his opinion about the constitutionality of the bank; but has he changed it about the legality of the trust? |
44851 | The senator wishes to know what we are to do? 44851 The true question, therefore, is, whether there be a''constitutional''right in a single State to nullify a law of the United States? |
44851 | This, Mr. President, is the enactment; and what is such an enactment? 44851 Under these circumstances, the question presented was, whether the general government had a right to sustain those people in their pretensions? |
44851 | What are the tendencies of a great moneyed power, connected with the government, and controlling its fiscal operations? 44851 What has France gained by these measures in duties on her wines and her silks, which she would otherwise have been bound to pay? |
44851 | What have we done, continued Mr. B., to draw this squadron upon us? 44851 What have you to gain by division and dissension? |
44851 | What is the legal effect of this vast capacity to acquire, and this legal power to retain, real estate? 44851 What occasion then has the Senate, sitting as a court of impeachment, for the power of execution? |
44851 | What public, or national, or political object had we in the negotiation of 1800, which led to the treaty of the 30th September of that year? 44851 What security have the people against the lawless conduct of any President? |
44851 | What was to be learned from the action of their respective negotiators? 44851 What, sir, is the cause of Southern distress? |
44851 | Where is the distinction, in principle, as regards the reception of bank paper on public account, between the two provisions? 44851 Why have we so small an amount of specie in circulation? |
44851 | With what propriety, then, could the Senate be called on to sanction a proceeding so entirely irregular and anomalous? 44851 ''The Mameluke;''''That field covered with rice?'' 44851 ''The Mameluke;''''These gardens?'' 44851 ''The Mameluke;''''Who this country house?'' 44851 107; is it expedient to weaken the future State? 44851 191; by whom is it to be exercised? 44851 257; the bank is finished, why debate it now? 44851 403; by virtue of whose will, power, dictation, were the deposits removed? 44851 405; the instance of CÃ ¦ sar, 405; what is it our duty to do? |
44851 | After this example, can any one doubt the capacity of the United States to supply itself with specie? |
44851 | After this, after such an example, will American Senators be unwilling to obey the people? |
44851 | Again, look at the species of evidence which will be invited to appear before these commissioners; of what description will it be? |
44851 | All articles of leather, from tanned side to the finest harness or saddle, have been excluded from importation; and why? |
44851 | All we ask is, does a government actually exist? |
44851 | And are we to forestall and anticipate them? |
44851 | And can it be supposed that the British stockholders are indifferent to the issue of this election? |
44851 | And can we justify ourselves to the people by longer lending to it the money and power of the government, to be employed for such purposes? |
44851 | And did not South Carolina, in derision of that compromise, nullify the law? |
44851 | And he demanded, why hurry on this amendment before that information can come in? |
44851 | And how are we to treat the subject? |
44851 | And how has he acquired it? |
44851 | And how is this proved? |
44851 | And how was that great reform effected? |
44851 | And how will he qualify the denial of this principle? |
44851 | And how? |
44851 | And if it did, what then? |
44851 | And if not, how are the United States to enforce an act solemnly pronounced to be unconstitutional? |
44851 | And if they were so disposed, would it be the duty of this government to protect them in the attempt? |
44851 | And is he not right? |
44851 | And is the Senate to justify the directors for this contempt? |
44851 | And is there any reason why we should not prepare now? |
44851 | And let me ask, what was that principle, which now, it seems, is to be destroyed? |
44851 | And now how could this be effected, and in a country so vast and intelligent? |
44851 | And now, sir, I repeat, how is it that a State legislature acquires any power to interfere? |
44851 | And now, sir, what is the spectacle we behold? |
44851 | And now, what is the point here? |
44851 | And now, why resuscitate these buried recollections? |
44851 | And now, why this allusion? |
44851 | And now, why this mortifying exhibition of a disgusting depravity? |
44851 | And shall these two verdicts stand? |
44851 | And shall they remain in fashion here? |
44851 | And the last question to be decided will be, shall the bill pass? |
44851 | And was not the one release the necessary consideration for the other? |
44851 | And what bank is to be selected as the agent to effect this salutary change? |
44851 | And what did they get in return for this vast burden? |
44851 | And what do they see? |
44851 | And what has been his reward? |
44851 | And what have they asked in return? |
44851 | And what is it now? |
44851 | And what is the course of the honorable senator? |
44851 | And what next? |
44851 | And what other execution is now required for delinquent public men, than the force of public opinion? |
44851 | And what was the conduct of the Senate all this time? |
44851 | And what was the consequence? |
44851 | And what was the reason then assigned by the president of the bank for this postponement? |
44851 | And what was the result? |
44851 | And what was the result? |
44851 | And what were they? |
44851 | And what, sir, is the nature and tendency of the system we are discussing? |
44851 | And who are the''architects of ruin''that have resolved its downfall? |
44851 | And who can doubt it? |
44851 | And who composed that society? |
44851 | And why do you refuse to do the same with your grand system of public education? |
44851 | And why engrave it, except to multiply copies for extensive distribution? |
44851 | And why may not an American citizen do the same? |
44851 | And why none of those things? |
44851 | And why nothing? |
44851 | And why that refusal? |
44851 | And why this difference? |
44851 | And why were the specifications then dropped? |
44851 | And why? |
44851 | And why? |
44851 | And why? |
44851 | And why? |
44851 | And why? |
44851 | And why? |
44851 | And will that disposition ever be wanting to such an institution as that of the Bank of the United States? |
44851 | And with how much real capital is this banking system, so burdensome to the people of the United States, carried on? |
44851 | And with what weapons? |
44851 | And, I repeat the question, is there a senator, or intelligent man in the whole country, who entertains a solitary doubt? |
44851 | And, at the conclusion of this paper, what does he say? |
44851 | Another question, sir, occurs to me: what sum of money will this bill abstract from the treasury? |
44851 | Are gentlemen, said Mr. K., prepared for this? |
44851 | Are the directors liable for excessive issues? |
44851 | Are the enterprising, liberal, high- minded, and intelligent_ merchants_ of the Union willing to countenance such a measure? |
44851 | Are the increasing discontents, nothing? |
44851 | Are the republicans, said he, possessed of fleets and armies? |
44851 | Are there no woods, marshes or prairies, except where you dwell? |
44851 | Are they drawn in the name of the corporation? |
44851 | Are they limited to the minimum size of five dollars? |
44851 | Are they not dangerous to every interest, public and private-- political as well as pecuniary? |
44851 | Are they payable at other branches? |
44851 | Are they payable where issued? |
44851 | Are they receivable in payment of public dues? |
44851 | Are they signed by the president of the bank and his principal cashier? |
44851 | Are they subject to the double limitation of time and amount in case of credit? |
44851 | Are they subject to the supervision of the Secretary of the Treasury? |
44851 | Are they the base, the ignorant, and the unprincipled? |
44851 | Are they transferable by delivery? |
44851 | Are they under the corporate seal? |
44851 | Are we in that condition still? |
44851 | Are we legislating, or amusing ourselves with phantasmagoria? |
44851 | Are we powerless to prevent it? |
44851 | Are we prepared now? |
44851 | Are we respected, or despised abroad? |
44851 | Are we thence to infer the inferiority of the officers thus elected, and the consequent degradation of the countries over which they presided? |
44851 | Are we yet at the mercy of State discretion, and State construction? |
44851 | As a publication in New Hampshire, it was clearly forbid; as part of our congressional proceedings would it still be forbid? |
44851 | As he approached the harbor of New- York, he made inquiry of some acquaintance to know whether he could find a hack to convey him to a hotel? |
44851 | At all events, he would demand if she was not now able to cease pressing them? |
44851 | At what hour does Christmas commence? |
44851 | Baring, Brothers,& Co.? |
44851 | Because no majority could be found to agree in them? |
44851 | But does it prove either the one or the other? |
44851 | But how can we pass over the great measure of the removal of the public moneys from the Bank of the United States, in the autumn of 1833? |
44851 | But how now? |
44851 | But how stands the truth, recorded upon our own journals? |
44851 | But how? |
44851 | But how? |
44851 | But in what condition do I find this child? |
44851 | But what has been the fact? |
44851 | But what has been the result of the system which has been pursued ever since? |
44851 | But what is the example which we are now required to exhibit? |
44851 | But what was the actual state of the fact? |
44851 | But when? |
44851 | But where are the hundreds of thousands, with their descendants, who neither removed, nor were thus destroyed? |
44851 | But where is this money? |
44851 | But who shall decide this question of interference? |
44851 | But why go back, exclaimed Mr. B., to the nations of antiquity? |
44851 | But why refer it to the Committee of Ways and Means? |
44851 | But why this specification? |
44851 | But, if he has failed to discover the source of the evils he deplores, who can unfold it? |
44851 | But, sir, who knows the sentiments of that body on this question? |
44851 | But, why use this feeble pen, when the voice of Webster is at hand? |
44851 | By a few desultory exertions in the parliament itself? |
44851 | By receiving these petitions one after another, and thus tampering, trifling, sporting with the feelings of the South? |
44851 | By what authority does the President derive power from the mere result of an election? |
44851 | By whom is all this power to be exercised? |
44851 | Can any gentleman make the same pledge that no such proposition shall come from the North? |
44851 | Can any one do more than suppose, or argumentatively assume it? |
44851 | Can any thing be conceived more revolting and atrocious than to direct the funds of the treasury, the property of the people, to such iniquitous uses? |
44851 | Can he, said Mr. C, look to me, and say that he never used the language attributed to him in the placard which he refers to? |
44851 | Can it be any other than this; that it affords the only certain means of building up in a wilderness, great and prosperous communities? |
44851 | Can not the Bank of the United States, if re- chartered, act in the same way? |
44851 | Can that voice be disregarded? |
44851 | Can the gold bullion of North Carolina be circulated as currency? |
44851 | Can the vengeance of the bank never be appeased while he lives and moves on earth?" |
44851 | Can you prove, by any argumentative deduction, that it is possible to be safe without one of them? |
44851 | Can you tie their hands? |
44851 | Confinement to their separate jurisdictions is the duty of each; but if encroachments take place, which is to judge? |
44851 | Could an account of the President''s conversation with his cabinet be called for? |
44851 | Could it be necessary to take up the question of rechartering the bank at the present session? |
44851 | Could language be more explicit? |
44851 | Could measures more eminently calculated to prepare the country for a state of war have been devised or adopted? |
44851 | Could the Indians establish a separate republic on each of their reservations in Ohio? |
44851 | Could the copy of a speech made to the cabinet be called for? |
44851 | Could they expect to produce a change of mind in the Southern people? |
44851 | Did Michigan do right in thus fixing the elective franchise? |
44851 | Did any government ever pass a law of temporary non- intercourse with a public enemy? |
44851 | Did any one doubt what would be the opinion of the committee on finance? |
44851 | Did gentlemen call this backing their friends? |
44851 | Did no other part of the country owe money to the bank? |
44851 | Did the Government stop? |
44851 | Did the president of the bank himself assign this reason? |
44851 | Did the wheels of the State chariot cease to turn round in those years for want of treasury oil? |
44851 | Did they do it without any consideration at all? |
44851 | Did they not perish miserably by the knives of infuriated negroes and the desolating ravages of pestilence? |
44851 | Did they not spurn it with contempt? |
44851 | Did this declaration light up the flame of discord in this House? |
44851 | Did we not have forty millions of income in the year 1817? |
44851 | Do they think the West is to be bought? |
44851 | Do we hear of indignity, or outrage in any quarter? |
44851 | Do you, or does any one, possess any information which justifies him in asserting that it is more unfriendly than this House? |
44851 | Does he admit or deny? |
44851 | Does he mean to say that the President has recommended a measure which is to make him sole judge of the constitution? |
44851 | Does he not stand between the country and the bank? |
44851 | Does it authorize the raising of armies? |
44851 | Does it give to the President the power of declaring war? |
44851 | Does not a compromise imply an adjustment on terms of agreement? |
44851 | Does not the member from South Carolina[ Mr. McDuffie] remember that this question divided the country into federalists and republicans? |
44851 | Does the act which he has done deserve the definition which has been put upon it? |
44851 | Follow out the principle, and where will it lead you? |
44851 | For what purpose could such a picture be intended, unless to inflame the passions of slaves? |
44851 | For what purpose? |
44851 | From what cause, then, does so startling a difference arise? |
44851 | From what obligations, I would ask, were we relieved? |
44851 | Had it increased the specie in actual and general circulation? |
44851 | Had it increased the specie in the country? |
44851 | Had it no reasonable motive in the relinquishment? |
44851 | Had the bank manifested a willingness to pay out the public money in its possession for this object? |
44851 | Had they a right to annul that law? |
44851 | Has any gentleman yet ventured to designate it? |
44851 | Has any one here risen in his place, and announced his satisfaction and his determination to abide by it? |
44851 | Has he any by the constitution? |
44851 | Has the holder a right to sue at the branch which issues the order? |
44851 | Has the warning voice of Washington been forgotten? |
44851 | Have the domestic manufactories produced an adequate supply for the country? |
44851 | Have the people of the West no taste for public improvements, for the useful and the fine arts, and for literature? |
44851 | Have they no exports? |
44851 | Have those who threatened the Union accepted it? |
44851 | Have we forgotten the universal giving way of conscience, so that the senator from Missouri was left alone? |
44851 | Have we no interest in doing so? |
44851 | Have we no power? |
44851 | Have we not the right to see that our own bargain is honestly fulfilled? |
44851 | Have we peace, or war, with foreign nations? |
44851 | He asked how? |
44851 | He told us then that the power of the purse commanded that of the sword-- and would he commit both to the hands of foreigners? |
44851 | He was asked if any person were present during the conversation? |
44851 | He was asked if he could name any one who had told him so? |
44851 | He was asked if he ever threatened to shoot Mr. Clay, Mr. Webster, or Mr. Calhoun, or whether he would shoot them if he had an opportunity? |
44851 | He was then asked if he was well pleased with the speeches of Col. Benton and Judge White? |
44851 | He would ask that gentleman if they had it not in their power to retrace their steps when they have done wrong? |
44851 | He wrote thus:"Why does the army, of late years, desert more than formerly? |
44851 | How assailed? |
44851 | How came all these anomalies? |
44851 | How could Cuba, St. Domingo, or Brazil, bear the loss of their coffee trade with us? |
44851 | How could this happen? |
44851 | How did this happen? |
44851 | How far will this authority extend? |
44851 | How has it accomplished this great and essential end? |
44851 | How is a bank to be used as the means of correcting the excess of the banking system? |
44851 | How is it now, with near double as much specie, and five millions less of notes out, and twelve millions less of debt? |
44851 | How is it possible, under such circumstances, to retain specie in circulation? |
44851 | How is it received-- how received by those who called for it? |
44851 | How is this difficulty to be overcome? |
44851 | How many? |
44851 | How much better that the Committee on Manufactures heal the wound which has been inflicted? |
44851 | How much better, then, to grant redress? |
44851 | How much has the treasury received for lands sold within her limits? |
44851 | How much of this dark shadowing is ascribable to each singly, and to all in combination? |
44851 | How often have we said to each other, well, what can we do? |
44851 | How often, when acting on the case of the nominated successor, have we felt the injustice of the removal? |
44851 | How would England, France, or Germany, bear the loss of their linen, silk, or wine trade, with the United States? |
44851 | How would it stop the agitation? |
44851 | How, sir, I ask, are we to know the motives of men? |
44851 | How, then, are we to account for this cry of no money, in which so many respectable men join? |
44851 | How, then, could it be contended that the discharge of the one was not a full and adequate consideration for the discharge of the other? |
44851 | How, then, could it be said, with any justice, that we sought our release at the expense of the claimants? |
44851 | How, then, shall we be persuaded that, in virtue of this guaranty, we are bound to pay the debts and make good the spoliations of France? |
44851 | I demand, where is there a chief magistrate of whom so much evil has been predicted, and from whom so much good has come? |
44851 | I repeat, what was she, under these circumstances, to do? |
44851 | I say manufacturers-- and why do I say so? |
44851 | I see before me senators who could not swallow that resolution; and has its nature changed since then? |
44851 | I take it in the mildest supposed character of this Congress-- shall we go there to_ advise_ and_ consult_ in council about it? |
44851 | If France, who committed the wrong, could not justly be called upon to atone for it, how can the United States now be called upon for this money? |
44851 | If it had done no evil, what good had it done? |
44851 | If malignant, why create one? |
44851 | If mere reduction of deposits was to be attended with these effects at one time, why not at the other? |
44851 | If not, he would ask what it had produced? |
44851 | If not, to what could they appeal for defence and support? |
44851 | If so, why take an oath? |
44851 | If that should be against them, they must yield; if for them, did gentlemen mean to say, that public will should be assailed by force?... |
44851 | If the President and Senate invade the legislative field of Congress, which is to judge? |
44851 | If the expunging of that article discharged the United States from obligations thus onerous, did it not discharge France from the fellow obligations? |
44851 | If the first day of a year or month begins and ends at midnight, does not every other day? |
44851 | If the national legislature can pass resolutions to approve the conduct of the President, may they not also pass resolutions to censure? |
44851 | If the precise moment of actual time were to settle such a matter, it would be material to ask, who shall settle the time? |
44851 | If these banks are beneficial institutions, why not several? |
44851 | If these persons have not a right to claim, in the face of the tribe, these sums, as promised to them by their Great Father? |
44851 | If they had it not in their power to correct their own journal when asserting what was not true? |
44851 | If they had thought that a postponement would have endangered their interests, would they not have said so? |
44851 | If this is done under the first charter, what may not be expected under the second? |
44851 | If this spirit extends, who can check it? |
44851 | If you may expunge a part, you may expunge the whole; and if it is expunged, how is it kept? |
44851 | In reply to Mr. Frelinghuysen, who asked where was the gold currency? |
44851 | In the next place, how is it in point of price? |
44851 | In what did her debt consist, which it is alleged France gave up in payment for these claims? |
44851 | In what proportion have they acted? |
44851 | In what respect is the country you inhabit better than another? |
44851 | In what sense then is it a compromise? |
44851 | In what, he asked, does it violate the constitution? |
44851 | Is his declaration in his proclamation, that the burdens of the South ought to be relieved, nothing? |
44851 | Is it any more constitutional now than it was then? |
44851 | Is it as good as the foreign? |
44851 | Is it at midnight or at noon? |
44851 | Is it correct? |
44851 | Is it credible, sir? |
44851 | Is it fair? |
44851 | Is it just thus to pursue that gentleman, and to pursue him unjustly? |
44851 | Is it not the creation of a new species of mortmain? |
44851 | Is it right to treat the House thus? |
44851 | Is it said we were released from obligations? |
44851 | Is it to stand as the law of the land and the rule of the treasury, under the administration which is to ensue? |
44851 | Is it, said Mr. K., even unprecedented and unusual? |
44851 | Is not the right of petition a fundamental right? |
44851 | Is not the_ distribution_ part of the contract as well as the_ payment_? |
44851 | Is not this anarchy, as well as revolution? |
44851 | Is not this revolution? |
44851 | Is not this revolutionary? |
44851 | Is one State to sit sole arbitress? |
44851 | Is one senator the apparent object of assault, when another is designed as the real victim? |
44851 | Is the domestic article furnished as cheap as the foreign? |
44851 | Is the issue of numerous elections, including that of the highest officer of the government, nothing? |
44851 | Is the service of that axe invoked here upon''General Andrew Veto?'' |
44851 | Is the tendency of recent events to unite the whole South, nothing? |
44851 | Is the unconstitutionality of these laws of that description? |
44851 | Is this evasion? |
44851 | Is this fancy, or is it fact? |
44851 | Is this right? |
44851 | Is this the Congress to impose restrictions upon the power of their successors? |
44851 | Is this the Congress to tie the hands of all Congresses till the year 1851? |
44851 | It dispatched an agent to London, without the knowledge of the treasury, and for what? |
44851 | It has coined, and that at a large expense to the United States, 2,262,717 pieces of gold, worth$ 11,852,890; and where are these pieces now? |
44851 | It has tied up the hands of its successors; and if this can be done on one subject, and for twenty years, why not upon all subjects, and for all time? |
44851 | It is demanded of us, Do you seek to impose restrictions on Arkansas, in violation of the compromise under which Missouri entered the Union? |
44851 | It is one which can not be discussed in_ this_ chamber on_ this_ day; and shall we go to Panama to discuss it? |
44851 | It is true that the question then was, how much, and in what way, should the double duties of the war be reduced? |
44851 | It might show who was the real author of the removal of the deposits-- whether the President, or the Secretary of the Treasury? |
44851 | It puts them in military array; and for what purpose but for the use of force? |
44851 | It varies in almost all the States; and yet who ever supposed that Congress could interfere to change the rules adopted by the people in regard to it? |
44851 | It was a pretty fable, and well told; but the moral-- the application? |
44851 | It was asked, Mr. B. said, what loss has the Western People now sustained for want of gold? |
44851 | It was called the Bank of the United States, and ought it to be the bank of the nobility and gentry of Great Britain? |
44851 | It was objected that it was vague and indefinite in its character; and how is that objection got over? |
44851 | Let the lawyers bring their books, and answer us, if there is not a case here presented for the application of that ancient and most remedial writ? |
44851 | May I not, then, disable him? |
44851 | Mr. Adams, and who could be a more competent judge? |
44851 | Mr. B. demanded if that was not true? |
44851 | Mr. Calhoun, not seeing him, eagerly and loudly asked where was the Vice- President? |
44851 | Mr. Hamer, of Ohio, said, why oppose this inquiry? |
44851 | Mr. Morris also wished to know if the Senate was about to make a double distribution of the same money? |
44851 | Mr. W. asked, what one? |
44851 | Nay, must we, too, suffer ourselves to be made the conscious instruments of its consummation? |
44851 | Nay, would it not be his indispensable duty to have removed him? |
44851 | Need he refer them to the case of Wilkes? |
44851 | Need he refer those gentlemen to the course of their own reading? |
44851 | Need he say more?" |
44851 | Nominally, this_ bonus_ has been paid, but out of what moneys? |
44851 | Not a party question? |
44851 | Nothing to send abroad? |
44851 | Now for the Spanish milled dollars-- how do they stand in the United States? |
44851 | Now, could it be decided, by this description, what publications should be withheld from distribution? |
44851 | Now, had the Southern States the capacity to produce indigo? |
44851 | Now, how came that memorial to be presented at a time so inopportune? |
44851 | Now, in which of these characters did the Senate act when it adopted the resolution in question? |
44851 | Now, what became of these inhabitants?--their property? |
44851 | Now, what could be more vague and indefinite than this description? |
44851 | Now, what, let us inquire, was the reason which has induced all nations to adopt this system in the settlement of new countries? |
44851 | Now, whose fault was it that there was no time left for acting on the report of the conferees? |
44851 | On the general question, allow me to ask if the doctrine of prohibition, as a general doctrine, be not preposterous? |
44851 | On what ground was the inquiry opposed? |
44851 | On what principle is this grounded? |
44851 | On what principle was it, said he, that this discrimination ever prevailed? |
44851 | Or was there a state of peace in June, 1798? |
44851 | Ought a national institution to be the private property of aliens? |
44851 | Shall all the labor and exertions of government to extinguish the public debt be in vain? |
44851 | Shall it be done by public authority; or shall every man observe the tick of his own watch? |
44851 | Shall our journal bear the verdict of infamy, while the hearts of the people glow and palpitate with the verdict of honor? |
44851 | Shall the copy survive here, after the original has been destroyed there? |
44851 | Shall the people be denied the least repose from taxation? |
44851 | Shall the people be prevented from feeling in reality that we have no debt: shall they only know it by dinners and public rejoicings? |
44851 | Shall the young whelp triumph in America, after the old lion has been throttled and strangled in England? |
44851 | Shall we set so small a value upon the lives of the people? |
44851 | Should he give examples? |
44851 | Sir, can we forget the scene which was exhibited in this chamber when that expunging resolution was first introduced here? |
44851 | Sir, do we not see what the gentleman probably desires? |
44851 | Sir, is Congress prepared thus to pamper the effeminacy of these young gentlemen, at such an expense, too, upon the public Treasury? |
44851 | Sir, is there a senator here who will now tell me that the removal was not the measure and the act of the President? |
44851 | Sir, what are some of these results? |
44851 | Sir, what is demanded by those that threaten the integrity of the Union? |
44851 | Still our negotiators consented to put the negotiation upon the basis of continued peace, and why? |
44851 | Such an export would indicate unparalleled wealth; but what was the fact? |
44851 | Such was the state of the country when General Jackson became President: what was it when he left the Presidency? |
44851 | Suppose they should vote for the bill, what then? |
44851 | Talk of precedents? |
44851 | Talk to me of the voice of the people? |
44851 | The Roman general won an immortality of honor by one act of continence; what praise is due to Jackson, whose whole life was continent? |
44851 | The Senate, therefore, could not, at too early a period, enter on the question-- what was the actual condition of the treasury? |
44851 | The act is limited to armed vessels; but why was this, if general war existed? |
44851 | The counsel of the law, or of fear? |
44851 | The cruisers of France were preying on our commerce; if there was war, why were we restrained from general reprisals on her commerce? |
44851 | The one was,''On what ground was the government of the United States answerable to any extent for the injury done to these claimants?'' |
44851 | The other,''To what extent was the government in justice bound?'' |
44851 | The penalty of double interest for delayed payment? |
44851 | The prohibition against suspending specie payments? |
44851 | The qualification is in the question whether the treaty is confined to the business of the treaty- making power? |
44851 | The question is no longer what laws will Congress pass, but what will the Executive not veto? |
44851 | The question was put, according to the form then practised:''Shall these words stand, as part of the plan,''& c.? |
44851 | The reply would be, I think, not impertinent: who made you judge over another''s servants? |
44851 | The second is, whether the English landed upon this coast while it was so unoccupied? |
44851 | The teller, beginning to understand him, and willing to make sure, said, inquiringly,''You want silver?'' |
44851 | The year is half gone, and the season for labor largely lost; yet what is the state of the general, national, and most essential appropriations? |
44851 | Then the teller, lifting boxes to the counter, said politely:''Have you a cart, Mr. Randolph, to put it in?'' |
44851 | Then why not inquire, and find out which is right, and legislate accordingly? |
44851 | Then why speak? |
44851 | Then, why speak three hours? |
44851 | They had asked if foreigners did not hold stock in road and canal companies? |
44851 | They voted for the bill of July last, and that was a bill passed expressly to save the Union; but did they not flout at it? |
44851 | This Union consists of twenty- four States; would you have preserved the Union by striking out one of the States-- one of the old thirteen? |
44851 | This inquiry,"May I not disable him?" |
44851 | This is exactly what the Senate did; and what did it do next? |
44851 | This is the principle: what is the fact? |
44851 | This is the sum total out of which any man in debt can legally pay his debt: and what is his chance for making payment out of this brief list? |
44851 | This message brought up the question, virtually, Which was the nominating power, in the case of the government directors of the bank? |
44851 | This opens the door to boundless emissions; for what can be more unbounded than the will and pleasure of successive Congresses? |
44851 | This was the scene then; and for what object? |
44851 | To introduce slavery into the heart of the North? |
44851 | To say nothing of her gains in the participation in such a commerce, what would be her loss in the exclusion from it? |
44851 | To whom do they speak? |
44851 | To whom is all this power granted? |
44851 | To whom lies the last appeal? |
44851 | To whom, then, should they look? |
44851 | Totter, sir, I totter? |
44851 | Under what onerous stipulations did she lie? |
44851 | Was ever such a thing heard of before? |
44851 | Was expurgation the proper mode? |
44851 | Was it any thing to be valued? |
44851 | Was it extraordinary that the deposit banks should be strengthened? |
44851 | Was it right for the Senate to interpose between those bodies, while these questions were depending? |
44851 | Was it right to interfere on the part of the bank? |
44851 | Was it that it was improper? |
44851 | Was it that it was unusual? |
44851 | Was it their duty to remain silent while abuses of the most injurious and dangerous character were daily practised? |
44851 | Was not the release of the obligations on the one side the release of them on the other? |
44851 | Was not this an offer to make use of private property for public purposes? |
44851 | Was she now willing to give it up without any equivalent? |
44851 | Was the United States to depend upon foreigners in a point so material to our existence? |
44851 | Was the charge true? |
44851 | Was the constitution violated, broken down, and destroyed, under the administration of the father of his country? |
44851 | Was the intended motion to clear the journal of the resolution right in itself? |
44851 | Was the surrender wholly gratuitous? |
44851 | Was the will of the State respected? |
44851 | Was there not danger that the fourteen days would be exhausted in useless debate? |
44851 | Was this bill in accordance with the general force and temper of the constitution and its amendments? |
44851 | Was this neglecting the claims of our citizens? |
44851 | Was this the intention of those measures, on the part of the government, and was that intention carried out into action? |
44851 | We are breeding six little corporations at a birth, to issue$ 2,250,000 of paper currency: and on what terms? |
44851 | We copied our bank charter from theirs; why not imitate them in their improvements upon their own work? |
44851 | We copied their evil ways; why not their good ones? |
44851 | We could not, therefore, justly urge these claims against France; and I therefore demand, how can they be urged against us? |
44851 | We must first order each of these bills to be read a third time; the next question then will be, when shall the bill be read a third time? |
44851 | Well, then, how stands the matter of the public treasury? |
44851 | Well, what had Illinois done in this matter? |
44851 | Were the States to be less protected than individual members on that floor? |
44851 | Were the whole of the charges to be blown out of the paper by the breath of the Senate? |
44851 | Were these subsisting claims against France up to the time of the treaty? |
44851 | Were they bound to disregard the call? |
44851 | Were they to decide on the question, each senator sitting there as witness and juror in the case? |
44851 | Were we now to be told, that our failure in these efforts had created a liability against us to pay the money? |
44851 | What Congress is this? |
44851 | What are the facts? |
44851 | What are the invincible arguments by which gentlemen establish the justice and validity of these claims? |
44851 | What are they to do? |
44851 | What are those''other causes?'' |
44851 | What assurance have we of that? |
44851 | What could the federal government do, in such a case? |
44851 | What counsel? |
44851 | What do we now behold, sir? |
44851 | What do you think of Col. Benton, Mr. Van Buren, or Judge White, for President? |
44851 | What effect could be brought about by the interference of these petitioners? |
44851 | What encouragement did such treatment afford to our friends at the North to step forth in our behalf?" |
44851 | What evidence do we require to disprove the assertion? |
44851 | What evidence have we of the fact? |
44851 | What evidence of fraud, and selfishness, and treachery, has red or white malice been able to exhibit against the dead warrior? |
44851 | What excuse? |
44851 | What further investigations did gentlemen require? |
44851 | What had already been the effect throughout the country of the broadside discharged by the message at the bank? |
44851 | What had the bank done to prevent such redemption? |
44851 | What had the government done to protect the rights of these claimants? |
44851 | What has become of the screaming babes that have been held up after the ancient Roman method, to excite pity and move our sympathies? |
44851 | What has become of the widows and original claimants? |
44851 | What has not been done by the United States on behalf of these claims? |
44851 | What has the tariff led us to already? |
44851 | What have we not witnessed in this chamber? |
44851 | What honorable man, who votes for this bill, could sustain such a measure? |
44851 | What is our duty to do? |
44851 | What is revolution? |
44851 | What is that point? |
44851 | What is the consideration that the United States is to receive? |
44851 | What is the fact, sir? |
44851 | What is the inference? |
44851 | What is the meaning of the word palpable, in the sense in which it is here used? |
44851 | What is the motive of this opposition against his measures? |
44851 | What is the picture? |
44851 | What is the present situation of our commerce? |
44851 | What is the price which she pays for this consideration? |
44851 | What is the state of these markets? |
44851 | What law may it not hereafter demand, that it will not, if it pleases, be able to enforce by the same means?" |
44851 | What may not be the result? |
44851 | What name shall we give to this division of money among them? |
44851 | What necessity? |
44851 | What new bill of indictment was to be presented? |
44851 | What next? |
44851 | What objections can possibly be raised to it? |
44851 | What others were mentally intended? |
44851 | What others were suggested? |
44851 | What provisions will be necessary? |
44851 | What stronger proof could there be of mutuality of consideration? |
44851 | What then becomes of all this cry about ruined fortunes, fallen prices, and the loss of growing crops? |
44851 | What then becomes of the charge faintly shadowed forth by the committee, and publicly and directly made by the bank and its friends? |
44851 | What then rendered that court so intolerably odious to the English people? |
44851 | What then? |
44851 | What was the Executive''s complaint against the bank? |
44851 | What was the effect of this notification? |
44851 | What was the evidence upon this point? |
44851 | What was the liberty of the press? |
44851 | What was the object of the motion? |
44851 | What was the principle on which this bill was professedly founded? |
44851 | What was the value of an obligation to negotiate''at a convenient time?'' |
44851 | What was the value or the burden of such an obligation upon the United States? |
44851 | What was the whole expenditure of the government for each of those years? |
44851 | What were the losses which led to these claims? |
44851 | What were they for the latter period? |
44851 | What would be decided? |
44851 | What would it have been in victory? |
44851 | What would the Father of his country have thought if members had come to him to solicit office? |
44851 | What, he would ask, must hereafter be the condition on this floor of the senators from the slaveholding States? |
44851 | What, sir, have we no power to see that our own treaty is carried into effect? |
44851 | What, sir, is the essential characteristic of a freeman? |
44851 | What, sir, was the conduct of Napoleon, with respect to money? |
44851 | What, then, is the cause of this strange contrast? |
44851 | What, then, must be done? |
44851 | What, then, was New England to do? |
44851 | What, then, was the conduct of Virginia, in the memorable era of''98 and''99? |
44851 | When asked if any one advised him to shoot Gen. Jackson, or say that it ought to be done? |
44851 | When asked if he would shoot Mr. Van Buren? |
44851 | When did it break out? |
44851 | When did those''differences,''of which the acts of Congress speak, assume a character of general hostility? |
44851 | When does the first day of the year, or the first of January, commence? |
44851 | When the light of one of these stars shall have been extinguished, will the flag wave over us, under which our fathers fought? |
44851 | When the same memorial was presented to that House, what had been the course pursued by the friends of the bank? |
44851 | When too, this sacrifice is made at the instance of a single interest, which they verily believe will not be promoted by it? |
44851 | Where are the invincible arguments by which the public treasury is to be emptied? |
44851 | Where did they get such authority? |
44851 | Where does it go? |
44851 | Where is it to be exercised? |
44851 | Where is it to end? |
44851 | Where is the boundary to the tremendous power which he has assumed? |
44851 | Where is the difference, if the people are to be taxed by the manufacturers or by any others? |
44851 | Who are those Goths? |
44851 | Who are to advise and sit in judgment upon it? |
44851 | Who can comprehend this? |
44851 | Who could answer such a declaration? |
44851 | Who could say where the liability would end? |
44851 | Who denies it? |
44851 | Who did it? |
44851 | Who shall interpret their will, where it may be supposed they have left it doubtful? |
44851 | Who that was not a party to this arrangement, could one hour ago have credited this? |
44851 | Who then shall construe this grant of the people? |
44851 | Who told you he was a tyrant? |
44851 | Who, in your opinion, of the Senate, would make a good President? |
44851 | Why are lips unsealed now, which were silent as the grave when this act was on its passage through the Senate? |
44851 | Why debate the bank question now, he exclaimed, and not debate it before? |
44851 | Why did it not amend, by the easy, natural, obvious, and parliamentary process of disagreeing, insisting, and asking for a committee of conference? |
44851 | Why does that remain unchanged? |
44851 | Why had not the committee, who seemed to know so well what would be the opinion of the Senate, imbodied that opinion in a legislative form?" |
44851 | Why has the tariff been dropped in the Senate? |
44851 | Why look beyond the boundaries of Europe? |
44851 | Why not adopt the same course now? |
44851 | Why not reduce it at once, at least to the actual wants of the service, and dispense with your corps of supernumerary lieutenants? |
44851 | Why not then stop the curtailment, and restore the exchanges to their former footing? |
44851 | Why not? |
44851 | Why quit our own day? |
44851 | Why then attempt to control it here? |
44851 | Why then were not the North and the South included in the fancied fate of the West? |
44851 | Why this sad and ominous decline? |
44851 | Why this sudden pressure? |
44851 | Why vary the mode now? |
44851 | Why was a commission to be established to ascertain their validity, a duty in ordinary cases discharged by Congress itself? |
44851 | Why was not the naval power of the country let loose at once, if there were war, against the commerce of the enemy? |
44851 | Why were our citizens sent to capture the French, to spill their blood, and lay down their lives upon the high seas? |
44851 | Why were these claims, more than others, grouped together, and attempted to be made a matter of national importance? |
44851 | Why, then, did he speak? |
44851 | Why, then, had the senator from Missouri assailed him( Mr. W.), and permitted the author of the measure to escape unpunished? |
44851 | Why, then, has she sent this squadron, to observe us first, and to strike us eventually? |
44851 | Why, then, should Southern men now make an effort to give precedence to the bill for the admission of Arkansas into the Union? |
44851 | Why? |
44851 | Will any man, said Mr. W., call this a state of peace? |
44851 | Will members of a republican Congress be less obedient to the voice of the people than were the representatives of a monarchical House of Commons? |
44851 | Will submission render such a corporation more forbearing in its course? |
44851 | Will the Chair state the point of order? |
44851 | Will the Senate deny it? |
44851 | Will the amendment proposed by the committee reach their object? |
44851 | Will the gentleman contend that juries are to be coerced to find verdicts at the point of the bayonet? |
44851 | Will the honorable member from New- York tell us when the war commenced? |
44851 | Will they go further, and not only refuse to place it on the Journal, but refuse even to suffer it to remain in the Senate? |
44851 | Will they receive memorials, resolutions, essays, from all that choose to abuse the President, and not receive a word of defence from him? |
44851 | Will they refuse this act of sheer justice and common decency? |
44851 | Will they refuse to permit it to remain on file, but send it back, or throw it out of doors, without condescending to reply to it? |
44851 | Will they require people to teach Congress the lesson which Mr. Fox says the English people had taught their Parliament fifty years ago? |
44851 | Will you appease the angry spirit of discord by an oblation of blood? |
44851 | Will you however permit me to suggest the catastrophe that might arise by General Gaines''s compliance with the last clause of your order? |
44851 | Will you seek to preserve it by force? |
44851 | Will you take the trouble to satisfy yourself on the point?" |
44851 | Wise inquired of him whether in his own opinion, if his amendment should be adopted, the State of Arkansas would, by this bill, be admitted? |
44851 | With any documents to show that he is in error? |
44851 | With what object do they speak? |
44851 | With whom do they repose this ultimate right of deciding on the powers of the government? |
44851 | Would even an affirmative vote on the motion quiet the agitation of the subject? |
44851 | Would he have inserted two lines in the treaty to rescind them, to get rid of such claims, when he would not pay those he had acknowledged? |
44851 | Would it not be far better to gratify this moneyed aristocracy, to the whole extent at once, and renew their charter for ever? |
44851 | Would such a movement have been made, had it not been intended thereby to give strength to the course of the opposition? |
44851 | Would that prevent the presentation of others? |
44851 | Would the Senate proceed while this unfinished investigation was depending in the other end of the building? |
44851 | Would the people of Maine permit the Penobscot tribe to erect an independent government within their State? |
44851 | Would the tariff be at all felt or denounced, if these other causes were not in operation? |
44851 | Would they have been worth further negotiation? |
44851 | Would they have been worth the five millions of dollars you propose to appropriate by this bill? |
44851 | Yes, sir, and why not on the face as easily as on the back? |
44851 | Yet has the rest of the country no right to its opinions also? |
44851 | Yet, what was the conduct of the Senate with respect to this bill? |
44851 | Yet, what was the state of the country? |
44851 | You recollect, no doubt, sir, the dialogue to which I allude:''Who owns that palace?'' |
44851 | ], and say that you never used that language out of the State of Missouri? |
44851 | _ Congress_, 22d, its members, 208; their talent, 208; commencement of 24th, 568; when does the term of its session expire? |
44851 | all these violations of right, decency and propriety? |
44851 | and can he tell which mode of raising money has been most productive? |
44851 | and can you live nowhere but under your own sun? |
44851 | and did we not have an empty treasury in 1819? |
44851 | and does not encroach upon the legislative power of Congress? |
44851 | and how much in duties paid on imports purchased with the exports derived from her soil? |
44851 | and how stands this narrow limitation of vacancies to"_ ordinary casualties_?" |
44851 | and is not this the propitious time for putting it in defence? |
44851 | and other gentlemen speak a whole day? |
44851 | and permitting none to serve but those whose conduct should be subordinate to the views and policy of the bank? |
44851 | and possessions? |
44851 | and precedents drawn from a foreign country? |
44851 | and whether it was expedient so to reduce, and thus weaken the territory( and future State) of Arkansas? |
44851 | and whether the bank should have the virtual nomination of the government directors by causing those to be rejected which the government nominated? |
44851 | and which, in every particular that tries the credit, is superior to the one which is receiving so much homage and admiration? |
44851 | and why are the most able citizens to be found in one assembly rather than in the other? |
44851 | and why this so great apparent contradiction? |
44851 | and, had he not, would not he have been universally and justly held responsible?" |
44851 | and, if so, I ask again, at what time after that period, and before September, 1800, did the war break out? |
44851 | and, unless they did, would it not be the duty of the general government to support them in resisting such a measure? |
44851 | by whom? |
44851 | call for defence? |
44851 | de Tocqueville judge the importance of victories by the numbers engaged, and the quantity of blood shed, or by their consequences? |
44851 | for do we not know that this was impossible to the fleets and armies of France, under Le Clerc, the brother- in- law of Napoleon himself? |
44851 | is an adequate protection on woollens? |
44851 | of American citizens impressed into foreign service? |
44851 | of merchants robbed in foreign ports? |
44851 | of the national flag insulted any where? |
44851 | of vessels searched on the high seas? |
44851 | one, at least, and each independent of the other, to each great section of the Union? |
44851 | or because it was thought prudent to drop the name of the Bank of the United States? |
44851 | or for both these reasons together? |
44851 | or have designs already been formed to sever the Union? |
44851 | or is each to judge for itself? |
44851 | or the bank and the Senate? |
44851 | or who is to judge between them? |
44851 | repeal facts? |
44851 | that is, how will he deny it, and yet apparently maintain it? |
44851 | to get between them and the House? |
44851 | to obtain redress for these claims; and what was the consequence? |
44851 | to the subjects which fall under its jurisdiction? |
44851 | was it the President and Senate? |
44851 | what application of its moral? |
44851 | what but a determination to make its power felt and feared occasioned the pressure at that place? |
44851 | what has been the working of the government at this point? |
44851 | which have reduced exchange below the rates of the federal bank? |
44851 | whose bills of exchange are as eagerly sought for as those of the federal bank? |
44851 | whose individual deposits are greater than those of the rival branches of the Bank of the United States, seated in their neighborhood? |
44851 | whose stock upon the exchange of London and New- York, is superior to that of the United States Bank? |
44851 | would be higher at the latter place? |
37827 | ''Spirits?'' 37827 --without gloves? |
37827 | A compact? |
37827 | A few? 37827 A friend of yours?" |
37827 | A man--she made a gesture of contempt--"very careless about his linen?" |
37827 | A what? |
37827 | A what? |
37827 | Ah, and it does n''t bear being thought about? |
37827 | Ah, and when did Ethan say all that? |
37827 | Ah, but think of the dear creatures gathered there? |
37827 | Ah, you think you''ve cleared the ground-- by inflicting the duties of citizenship all in an instant upon a barbarian horde? 37827 Ai n''t they awful? |
37827 | Alarming? |
37827 | All that much more? |
37827 | Am I growing old, that a little school- girl should get hold of me after all my escapes? |
37827 | Am I secretly afraid of Julia? 37827 Am I such a gorgon in my new gown?" |
37827 | Am_ I_ in love with her, too? |
37827 | An''Jerusha,he said, one morning during a thunderstorm, when she polished the oak in persistent silence,"why do n''t you sing? |
37827 | An''dead an''_ burnt_? |
37827 | And Ethan? |
37827 | And all this happened in six weeks? |
37827 | And did n''t you see she waited on us at the table? |
37827 | And do you like him-- this Scherer? |
37827 | And how does life abroad compare on the whole with life in America? |
37827 | And in what form of religious faith? |
37827 | And never was no relation to_ any_ of us? |
37827 | And not alarming? |
37827 | And read that very un- Biblical- looking book? |
37827 | And sad? |
37827 | And she''s not my really truly aunt at all? |
37827 | And so even you believe we fulfil the end of the world? |
37827 | And the rest? |
37827 | And then? |
37827 | And then? |
37827 | And these for Venus, eh? |
37827 | And those more fortunate ones,his nephew said, in a dull, resentful voice,"who are they? |
37827 | And those who stumbled before the light came near enough? |
37827 | And what of hers? |
37827 | And you want me to believe you''ve spoken to her only three or four times in your life? |
37827 | And you wo n''t go away and write for the''Saviours''? |
37827 | And you? |
37827 | Angry? |
37827 | Another? |
37827 | Anything the matter with his jaw? |
37827 | Are n''t we going in to see him? |
37827 | Are n''t you afraid the Earth will be jealous? |
37827 | Are n''t you coming to have a swing? |
37827 | Are those apple- trees along the bottom of the terrace? |
37827 | Are we sure to be ready to leave the Fort on Thursday? |
37827 | Are you Ethan Gano? |
37827 | Are you as happy as you look? |
37827 | Are you come to say good- night? |
37827 | Are you going to promise, or do you prefer to spend the day alone? |
37827 | Are you married? |
37827 | Are you not well? |
37827 | Are you quite sure he wants to see me only for a minute? |
37827 | Are you so happy? |
37827 | Are you_ sure_? |
37827 | As Mr. Joicey does Blue Grass? 37827 Ask her to come out here when she''s finished, will you?" |
37827 | Aunt Valeria''s--"Why do you bother with them? |
37827 | Been getting it? |
37827 | Before you go? |
37827 | Begin? |
37827 | Betrothal? 37827 Blaming_ me_? |
37827 | But I do n''t recall the-- what is it? |
37827 | But I thought he was coming here for_ sure_ this time? |
37827 | But before that? |
37827 | But before you lived in Corn Alley, where did you come from? |
37827 | But ca n''t you see that I''d rather be sad with you, than be glad with any other? |
37827 | But ca n''t you stop him? 37827 But did they go on speaking of you in that horrid way?" |
37827 | But do you know why she was so nice about_ The H---- Family_? |
37827 | But do you realize that it shows a degree of class prejudice that does n''t exist in the older, the monarchical countries? |
37827 | But he never forgot? |
37827 | But how do I know I''m not one of those He meant when He said,''Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell?'' |
37827 | But how on earth have you managed it? |
37827 | But is it a notion, or is it a real feeling? |
37827 | But it''s a_ real_ wilderness? |
37827 | But suppose you have n''t got a mission? 37827 But we know we ca n''t well be married while I''m a minor, and--""You_ are n''t_ married?" |
37827 | But when you are n''t studying? |
37827 | But who can decide the problems of another soul? |
37827 | But why-- why not? |
37827 | But why? |
37827 | But you''d hate to touch them? |
37827 | But you''ve heard from him? |
37827 | Ca n''t you follow the story-- can''t you think when there''s a thunderstorm? |
37827 | Ca n''t you remember any more? |
37827 | Can it walk? |
37827 | Can you find the Scorpion, little girl? |
37827 | Can you get a candle and a piece of paper? |
37827 | Can you spare the light? |
37827 | Care about it? |
37827 | Child, child, what have I done to you? |
37827 | Child? 37827 Come, can you deny it?" |
37827 | Come, now, be honest; do n''t you realize how much more Americans laugh than other people? |
37827 | Come,he urged,"is some of the gilt worn off your particular piece of gingerbread?" |
37827 | Could you? |
37827 | Cousin Ethan, do_ you_ know''Maid of Athens?'' |
37827 | Dark? 37827 Days? |
37827 | Did grandmamma approve of this chorus- girl plan? |
37827 | Did he expect you? |
37827 | Did he give you a ring? |
37827 | Did he write you to come? |
37827 | Did my mother send you? |
37827 | Did my mother tell you that story to- night? |
37827 | Did n''t I just say this part of the room is mine? |
37827 | Did n''t I? 37827 Did n''t cousin Ethan find Henri at the Tallmadges''when he got back?" |
37827 | Did n''t you ever cross the Alleghanies in a stage- coach? |
37827 | Did n''t you ever go to visit your grandfather Calvert in the mountains of Virginia? |
37827 | Did that make it wind? 37827 Did they feel life so keen a thing as we?" |
37827 | Did they give you flannel- cakes in''Gay Paree''? |
37827 | Did you cook? |
37827 | Did you ever say that to Uncle John? |
37827 | Did you ever see one? |
37827 | Did you know my father when he was quite little? |
37827 | Did you? |
37827 | Different? 37827 Dirty?" |
37827 | Do I look as if I wanted to rest? |
37827 | Do men always need outsiders? 37827 Do n''t let us what?" |
37827 | Do n''t you do enough of that in school? |
37827 | Do n''t you hear? |
37827 | Do n''t you know that''s what I must not do? |
37827 | Do n''t you know the one about the poor man over your fireplace? |
37827 | Do n''t you love these velvety things? |
37827 | Do n''t you remember he was at play when the Roman guard came to carry him to his execution? 37827 Do n''t you see I ca n''t do that?" |
37827 | Do n''t you sometimes think this is the crossest- looking of any? |
37827 | Do n''t you think it''s very comfortable here? |
37827 | Do n''t you think so? |
37827 | Do n''t you think,he faltered, as she released him--"couldn''t_ this_ be my home?" |
37827 | Do n''t you want your hat? |
37827 | Do they come in threes? |
37827 | Do they know him? |
37827 | Do with it? 37827 Do with me?" |
37827 | Do you hate soft things? |
37827 | Do you hear, Val? 37827 Do you know, it strikes me you have no inkling of the mother- sense?" |
37827 | Do you know, you are not at all what I expected? |
37827 | Do you live in the dark? |
37827 | Do you look out on the Golden Gate? |
37827 | Do you mean this quotation? |
37827 | Do you mean you really do n''t mind? |
37827 | Do you mean you''re ready to go away? |
37827 | Do you mind? |
37827 | Do you quite like his chin? |
37827 | Do you realize that at this moment the rain is coming in floods into Uncle John''s room? |
37827 | Do you remember telling me when I was a little chap that this was my home? |
37827 | Do you remember,Julia went on,"your plan of running away to be a chorus- girl?" |
37827 | Do you see that bank of cloud? |
37827 | Do you think I need n''t study? |
37827 | Do you think I ought to sit up with him? |
37827 | Do you think he succeeded? |
37827 | Do you want something? |
37827 | Do you want to make it possible for me ever to think of myself without intolerable loathing? |
37827 | Do you want us to go? |
37827 | Do you wish me to register this woman as Yellow Sal? |
37827 | Does Julia know my cold''s worse? |
37827 | Does Mrs. Gano make you stay here? |
37827 | Does he approve? |
37827 | Does n''t anybody ever sit on these benches? |
37827 | Does n''t it leak, then? |
37827 | Does n''t it strike you you''ve postponed it a bit? |
37827 | Does she? |
37827 | Does that little record go further back than 1760? |
37827 | Don''you know, little massa, dis de day yo''fader died? |
37827 | Done? |
37827 | Eh? 37827 Eh?" |
37827 | Ethan and Val? |
37827 | Ethan came out of it famously-- didn''t you, my little man? |
37827 | Ethan? |
37827 | Exactly; and do you think if we could summon him from the shades he would own either your Jean Jacques or mine? 37827 For once?" |
37827 | For you to go away? |
37827 | For_ me_? |
37827 | Funny? 37827 Going out of it?" |
37827 | Good- evening, grandmamma; how are you? |
37827 | Gran''ma, he is n''t_ dead_? |
37827 | Grandmamma is with you? |
37827 | Guests? |
37827 | H''m-- did I? |
37827 | Ha, really? |
37827 | Had n''t Jerry heard of Lincoln''s precious Proclamation at the New- Year? |
37827 | Had to go driving with cousin Croesus, eh? |
37827 | Had you written him to send back my ring? |
37827 | Hanted? 37827 Harder than not understanding?" |
37827 | Has Tom Rockingham begun that? |
37827 | Has Wilbur ever kissed her? |
37827 | Has he asked you to marry him? |
37827 | Has n''t all the world that end in view? 37827 Has she done this before?" |
37827 | Has she? |
37827 | Has she? |
37827 | Have n''t you ever heard? 37827 Have n''t you got any place of your own, where you belong?" |
37827 | Have n''t you heard what I''ve been saying to you, dear? |
37827 | Have n''t you, my dear? |
37827 | Have you been married more than once? |
37827 | Have you got it back? |
37827 | Have you seen my Indian arrowheads and stone hatchets down- stairs in the cabinet? |
37827 | He is very ill? |
37827 | He understands that just at present I ca n''t sit up with him any more? |
37827 | He was n''t a Pisspocalian, like us? |
37827 | Help me to what? |
37827 | Here? 37827 Hey?" |
37827 | Hey? |
37827 | Honest Injun? |
37827 | How can I be sure? 37827 How can any one be sure?" |
37827 | How can you be sure of that? 37827 How can you bear to be in the house with that awful old man?" |
37827 | How can you bear to live if you''re not sure? |
37827 | How can you say that? 37827 How dare_ you_ cross- question me? |
37827 | How did it come? |
37827 | How did it happen? |
37827 | How did the accident happen? |
37827 | How did you come to know her? |
37827 | How did you do that? |
37827 | How do I fall short? |
37827 | How do I look? |
37827 | How do you do? 37827 How do you know we''re so old a family?" |
37827 | How do you know? |
37827 | How is that? |
37827 | How long before the horses will be ready? |
37827 | How long did he stay? |
37827 | How long do you think I can stay? |
37827 | How long have you been corresponding with Ethan? |
37827 | How long is he going to stay, grandma? |
37827 | How long shall you stay? |
37827 | How long was Mary here? |
37827 | How long? |
37827 | How many instances do we see of men and women who have outlived not only their usefulness, but their satisfactions? 37827 How shall I be able to go on,"she said to herself,"unless he keeps close beside me?" |
37827 | How shall any of us justify the desperate clinging to life for the mere sake of living? |
37827 | How shall it be, then, so that our friends shall continue their walks and eat their dinners? |
37827 | How so? |
37827 | How soon should you consider such a move expedient? |
37827 | How you feel, father? |
37827 | How''s the club getting on? |
37827 | How, then? |
37827 | I say, Henri, do you mind going back to Marseilles? 37827 I say, why do you bring all that truck in here?" |
37827 | I shall be very particular, or else what''s the fun of being an invalid? 37827 I should think we would be quite ready; but does it matter?" |
37827 | I suppose Julia told you her father was coming up to- morrow night? |
37827 | I suppose the change in me is a different one? |
37827 | I suppose they''ve not neglected in Boston to tell you there is such a thing as''the unpardonable sin''? |
37827 | I suppose you know that I ought to have taken you home after your flat refusal to go to church? |
37827 | I suppose you know that by heart? |
37827 | I suppose you look for them because they''re so lucky? |
37827 | I suppose you think you know me? |
37827 | I suppose,she said, incredulously--"I suppose it''s much gayer in Paris than it is here?" |
37827 | I thought cousin Ethan loved being here? |
37827 | I wo n''t what? |
37827 | I wonder what makes you like that? |
37827 | I wonder what you''ll do with your life? |
37827 | I''d begin to believe some of your libels on life if I thought there was n''t more in it than just--"Just? |
37827 | I''spose I must n''t stay? |
37827 | I-- what? |
37827 | I? 37827 If I stay at home grandma will-- But you might walk part way with me, might n''t you?" |
37827 | If he is well, you will send him to us the third week? |
37827 | If he''s been dying to go so long, why did n''t he set off in January? |
37827 | If his curly hair was n''t cropped so close, his little round head would be exactly like--"What are you reading? |
37827 | If public justice falls short, what of mine to you? |
37827 | If you could project your notion of Rousseau, uncle, and I could do the same by mine, do you suppose they would be alike? |
37827 | If you saw me, why did n''t you bow? |
37827 | In Janoowerry? 37827 In honor of what saint is that?" |
37827 | In spite of my sins, are you loving me more than you did yesterday? |
37827 | In that blue cobweb, open at the throat? |
37827 | Indeed,said Mrs. Gano,"and when is the wedding, if one may know?" |
37827 | Is he dead? |
37827 | Is he never told anything of his father or his father''s people? |
37827 | Is her acquiescence genuine, complete? |
37827 | Is it a bargain? |
37827 | Is it only when others are here that you are happy? |
37827 | Is it possible? 37827 Is it possible? |
37827 | Is it really so? |
37827 | Is it true I must n''t swing on the gate? |
37827 | Is it? |
37827 | Is it? |
37827 | Is it? |
37827 | Is n''t a comet a difficult thing to keep quite to yourselves? |
37827 | Is n''t all this very undemocratic? |
37827 | Is n''t grandma coming to breakfast? |
37827 | Is n''t heaven a nice place? |
37827 | Is n''t that like Shelley? |
37827 | Is n''t there a vine climbing up? |
37827 | Is n''t this a nice old house? |
37827 | Is that all you have to say after leaping at me like a wild- cat and taking what did n''t belong to you? |
37827 | Is that fatal? |
37827 | Is that old book under your arm what you went back for? 37827 Is that the kind of thing Ethan has been saying to you?" |
37827 | Is that true? |
37827 | Is that what you''ve been writing, Aunt Valeria? |
37827 | Is there something you care about more than about writing? |
37827 | Is this what the story- books mean? 37827 Is_ that_ why you wo n''t take a peach in your fingers?" |
37827 | It''s not true, then? |
37827 | It''s true enough that I''ve got what I want; but have n''t you? |
37827 | It''s true, then? |
37827 | Jake what? |
37827 | John,said Mrs. Gano, at the beginning of the next week,"has Ethan told you how long he means to stay?" |
37827 | Julia? 37827 Know what?" |
37827 | Las''? |
37827 | Like what? |
37827 | Like what? |
37827 | Little, insignificant- looking man? |
37827 | Looking for what? 37827 Madame Burne?" |
37827 | Mademoiselle Lucie this time,_ hein_? |
37827 | Making up for lost time? |
37827 | Marlowe? 37827 Mary?" |
37827 | May I come, too? |
37827 | May I shut the door? |
37827 | May n''t I go and sit with father? |
37827 | Mazeppa? |
37827 | Me? |
37827 | Might n''t it pass for a hymnal? |
37827 | Miss Tallmadge? |
37827 | Must I? |
37827 | Must n''t I? |
37827 | Must; or why should they take all this trouble? |
37827 | My dear one, what is it? |
37827 | My father,she whispered, coming a trace nearer,"did he ever say he did n''t believe in immortality? |
37827 | My grandson edit an Abolitionist paper? |
37827 | My word? |
37827 | Night? 37827 No good?" |
37827 | No letters? |
37827 | No need to sit up; you can sleep on the sofa, ca n''t you, or--"Or on the floor? |
37827 | No, you did n''t say--"Do I understand you to be contradicting me? |
37827 | No; was it? 37827 Nor a cow?" |
37827 | Not dead? |
37827 | Not even to write to the Saviours of America? |
37827 | Not gran''ma? |
37827 | Not now exactly, but do n''t you ever think about the future? |
37827 | Not one pretty word for all my pains? |
37827 | Not really? |
37827 | Not to collect material for''Confessions''? |
37827 | Now I ask you, Can you find nothing better than that to say to a girl? |
37827 | Now what have you been doing to this poor child? |
37827 | Now, do you understand? |
37827 | Now, what are we going to do to- day? |
37827 | Now, what are you two arranging for to- morrow? |
37827 | Now, what else did she do for you? |
37827 | Now, why is that, do you suppose? |
37827 | Now,said the President, fixing the woman through her spectacles,"where have you resided?" |
37827 | Now? |
37827 | Of course,she said,"you will stay? |
37827 | Of course; do n''t we read it in every paper? |
37827 | Oh, but I didn''t--"You did n''t pretend to me that you were going to visit Mrs. Austin Ball when you were really running after Ethan? |
37827 | Oh, but are n''t there any ballads and pretty stories? |
37827 | Oh, do you think so? |
37827 | Oh, do you think there are any more? |
37827 | Oh, does it go under the stairs? |
37827 | Oh, have I? |
37827 | Oh, is this the last of her? |
37827 | Oh, then you thought on the whole you''d like to know me? |
37827 | Oh, they do, do they? |
37827 | Oh, think so? |
37827 | Oh, w''ere I libs? 37827 Oh, well, what would you call it if you did n''t call it Yaffti?" |
37827 | Oh, what is it like? |
37827 | Oh, what is it? |
37827 | Oh, what makes you like his_ nose_? |
37827 | Oh, why did I come? |
37827 | Oh, you''re waiting here for me to apologize? |
37827 | Oh,said Gano,"have you known many?" |
37827 | Oh- h, is it? |
37827 | Oh-- a-- there''ll be a kind of lull after the ball, and I''d rather-- a--"Go out with flags flying? 37827 Oh-- what?" |
37827 | On the black benches? 37827 Perhaps you prefer spring?" |
37827 | Please, who''s going to tell my father I''m expelled? |
37827 | Poetry verses? |
37827 | Possible? 37827 Really?" |
37827 | Really? |
37827 | Really? |
37827 | Reason why--? 37827 Relation? |
37827 | Sam? 37827 Say what?" |
37827 | See this seam in the carpet? |
37827 | See? |
37827 | Sha''n''t I get you a cab? |
37827 | Sha''n''t I say''please''? |
37827 | Sha''n''t I see you to your gate? |
37827 | Shall I ask her please to come to you as soon as she''s done her work? |
37827 | Shall I carry your coat? |
37827 | Shall I get the letter and read it to you? |
37827 | Shall I light the candle again? |
37827 | Shall I read to you? |
37827 | Shall I tell him? |
37827 | Shall I tell you what it''s like, destroying these things? |
37827 | Shall it be here? |
37827 | Shall we read? |
37827 | Shall you tell your cousin you stole his letters? |
37827 | She does n''t keep a horse? |
37827 | She has n''t let you come alone? |
37827 | She painted these things, did n''t she? |
37827 | She was there every day when you passed by? |
37827 | She would have required pressing? |
37827 | Ship- builder dead? |
37827 | Sign? 37827 Snakes, too?" |
37827 | So you''ve been reading my letters? |
37827 | Some time during this year? |
37827 | Something to read, ma''am, before I go? |
37827 | Specialist?--nerves? 37827 State?" |
37827 | Tell me, America, do you have much weather as fine as this? |
37827 | That so? |
37827 | That the fellow that trains horses? |
37827 | That you, Ethan? |
37827 | That you, Val? |
37827 | That your house? |
37827 | The book marked me, why should n''t I mark the book? |
37827 | The enemy? |
37827 | The lines to Rose Chéri? |
37827 | The men who are trying to make you get up a Labor paper? |
37827 | The mizz? |
37827 | The mizz? |
37827 | The powers that be? |
37827 | The question is,she said,"What''s to be done?" |
37827 | The what? |
37827 | The_ weather_? |
37827 | The_ what_? |
37827 | Then those Tallmadges wrote, did n''t they? |
37827 | Then what relation was Shelley to_ you_? |
37827 | Then why do you have her here? |
37827 | Then you''ll come when I send-- you''ll come and take me away? |
37827 | Then, could n''t you say some more poetry or something? |
37827 | Then, what on earth are we going to learn besides common lessons? |
37827 | Then, why are n''t you-- What''s the trouble? |
37827 | Then, you never got homesick? |
37827 | There''s no reason why she should n''t go back to school? |
37827 | Through what? |
37827 | Tired of it already? |
37827 | Tired? |
37827 | To come and bring me back my ring? |
37827 | To pray, Val? |
37827 | Together, father? |
37827 | Told on me? |
37827 | Told what? |
37827 | Tooby sho'',she broke out;"did n''t I tell yo''he''d got de Gano look in his lubly face? |
37827 | Under the front stairs? |
37827 | Val, could n''t you get your father''s new- fangled lantern-- that patent incandescent contrivance-- and set it lighted at the top of the steps? |
37827 | Val,he said, one day,"how many people can we put up comfortably here?" |
37827 | Val--"Or, if you go, you''ll come back? |
37827 | Velvet? 37827 W''ich husbin?" |
37827 | Waive it? |
37827 | Was I? |
37827 | Was he getting too old for this kind of thing? |
37827 | Was she a decent woman? |
37827 | Was that Tom Rockingham_ again_? |
37827 | Well, America, what do you think of the prospect? |
37827 | Well, and you? 37827 Well, but it''s a little dull, ai n''t it?" |
37827 | Well, have you succeeded? |
37827 | Well, now, what_ have_ I said? |
37827 | Well, what shall we do? |
37827 | Well, what_ did_ you do? |
37827 | Well,said John Gano, with interest,"and the woman?" |
37827 | Well-- a-- perhaps something else;and she made a fresh start:"''Ah, what can ail thee, knight- at- arms, Alone and palely loitering? |
37827 | Well? |
37827 | Well? |
37827 | Well? |
37827 | Well? |
37827 | Well? |
37827 | Well? |
37827 | Were n''t you frightened? |
37827 | Were you the laundress? |
37827 | Wha is yo'', honey? 37827 What State?" |
37827 | What am I doin''? |
37827 | What are the signs? |
37827 | What are they? |
37827 | What are those? |
37827 | What are we going to do to- day after lessons? |
37827 | What are you doing here? |
37827 | What are you doing here? |
37827 | What are you doing there? |
37827 | What are you doing with all_ her_ things? |
37827 | What are you doing? |
37827 | What are you doing? |
37827 | What are you going to do, Mr. Gano, if you do n''t go to church? |
37827 | What are you hunting for? |
37827 | What are you thinking about? |
37827 | What are you to say, then? |
37827 | What are your views as to Ethan''s schooling? |
37827 | What burden, I''d like to know, does Val bear that you ca n''t lift? |
37827 | What can I do for you, dear-- what can I do? |
37827 | What conspiracy are you two hatching? |
37827 | What could I have done? |
37827 | What date is this? |
37827 | What did I say? |
37827 | What did You make me for? |
37827 | What did he do? |
37827 | What did they debate? |
37827 | What did they say? |
37827 | What do they mean by shutting the windows? |
37827 | What do you do, little cousin, when you want to kill time? |
37827 | What do you mean by a rhythm? |
37827 | What do you mean by that? |
37827 | What do you mean by''this old fever''? |
37827 | What do you mean, Val? |
37827 | What do you mean? 37827 What do you mean?" |
37827 | What do you mean? |
37827 | What do you mean? |
37827 | What do you propose as a substitute? |
37827 | What do you think you want, little girl? |
37827 | What do you think you''d like? |
37827 | What do you think, father? |
37827 | What do you want me to promise? |
37827 | What do you want? |
37827 | What do you want? |
37827 | What does it say here? |
37827 | What does that matter to me? |
37827 | What does the child mean? |
37827 | What for? |
37827 | What for? |
37827 | What friends are you quoting? |
37827 | What hill? |
37827 | What if he is? 37827 What if_ I_ do n''t go, either?" |
37827 | What in the world put that into your head? |
37827 | What is happening over again? |
37827 | What is it like to have hoped and longed all these months, instead of dreaded? |
37827 | What is it like? |
37827 | What is it to you? |
37827 | What is it you have there, Emmeline? |
37827 | What is it, Emmie? 37827 What is it? |
37827 | What is it? 37827 What is it?" |
37827 | What is it? |
37827 | What is it? |
37827 | What is it? |
37827 | What is it? |
37827 | What is she writing? |
37827 | What is that to you-- to any one but Ethan and me? |
37827 | What is that? |
37827 | What is that? |
37827 | What is the word? |
37827 | What is there in that to hurt me? |
37827 | What is there to do? |
37827 | What is your name? |
37827 | What is your name? |
37827 | What is? |
37827 | What kind of a club? |
37827 | What kind of a party? |
37827 | What kind of circumstances? |
37827 | What kind of ideas? |
37827 | What makes them black? |
37827 | What makes you believe I wo n''t go? |
37827 | What makes you look so solemn? |
37827 | What makes you think so? |
37827 | What man? |
37827 | What noise? |
37827 | What nonsense is that you are reading? |
37827 | What on earth made you do that? |
37827 | What other? |
37827 | What poor man? |
37827 | What promise? |
37827 | What prompts you to say such things to me? |
37827 | What relation was Shelley to me? |
37827 | What say? |
37827 | What say? |
37827 | What say? |
37827 | What should prevent you? |
37827 | What sort of mood? |
37827 | What then? |
37827 | What then? |
37827 | What then? |
37827 | What then? |
37827 | What then? |
37827 | What theories? |
37827 | What time do you usually go to bed? |
37827 | What was cultivated society? |
37827 | What was it I promised, cousin Ethan? |
37827 | What was it John said? |
37827 | What was it like? |
37827 | What was it you said once? 37827 What was it?" |
37827 | What was your husband''s name? |
37827 | What would you say? |
37827 | What you doin''? |
37827 | What you got in this? |
37827 | What you think? |
37827 | What''s Sam being saying? |
37827 | What''s down there? |
37827 | What''s for to- day? |
37827 | What''s happened? |
37827 | What''s in the pocket? |
37827 | What''s it like? |
37827 | What''s that? |
37827 | What''s that? |
37827 | What''s the matter with you to- day? |
37827 | What''s the matter? 37827 What''s the matter?" |
37827 | What''s the matter? |
37827 | What''s the matter? |
37827 | What''s the matter? |
37827 | What''s the matter? |
37827 | What''s the real matter? |
37827 | What''s the trouble? |
37827 | What''s the use of your having eyes if you do n''t use them? |
37827 | What''s the''queer feeling''? |
37827 | What''s this I hear? 37827 What''s wrong with your nice velveteen jacket?" |
37827 | What''s your objection to scenery? |
37827 | What-- what was it I promised? |
37827 | What? 37827 What?" |
37827 | What? |
37827 | What? |
37827 | What? |
37827 | What? |
37827 | What_ are_ you doing? |
37827 | What_ do_ you mean? |
37827 | What_ do_ you mean? |
37827 | When are you coming back? |
37827 | When did it happen? |
37827 | When does Jerry get back? |
37827 | When does his vacation begin? |
37827 | When he is older you will have no objection, I suppose, to his making a visit to his father''s people? |
37827 | When must you go? |
37827 | When? |
37827 | Where are those funny friends of yours? |
37827 | Where are you going? |
37827 | Where are you going? |
37827 | Where are you going? |
37827 | Where are you going? |
37827 | Where did the Jacksons live? |
37827 | Where did these other meetings take place, sir? 37827 Where does this door out here lead to?" |
37827 | Where does your Mrs. Ball live? |
37827 | Where is Ethan? |
37827 | Where is he now? |
37827 | Where is he? 37827 Where is my room?" |
37827 | Where is she living now? |
37827 | Where is the old Val gone? 37827 Where is_ my_ ring?" |
37827 | Where on earth did she find those pickaninnies? |
37827 | Where shall I begin? |
37827 | Where shall I send him? |
37827 | Where shall we go? |
37827 | Where shall we meet to- morrow? |
37827 | Where should I go? |
37827 | Where was that? |
37827 | Where''s Aunt Valeria? |
37827 | Where''s Mary? |
37827 | Where''s Val? |
37827 | Where''s grandmamma? |
37827 | Where''s that? |
37827 | Where''s your turquoise gewgaw? |
37827 | Where-- where? |
37827 | Where? 37827 Which is that?" |
37827 | Who are the men you want to ask-- relations? |
37827 | Who could I-- to marry me? |
37827 | Who could you find to marry you? |
37827 | Who is Harry Wilbur? |
37827 | Who is she? |
37827 | Who is that? |
37827 | Who is that? |
37827 | Who is to have this-- afterwards? |
37827 | Who was a servant? |
37827 | Who were your witnesses? |
37827 | Who, then? |
37827 | Who? |
37827 | Whom did you want? |
37827 | Whose is this? |
37827 | Why Thursday? |
37827 | Why are you so angry? |
37827 | Why are you two sitting in the dark? |
37827 | Why bore me more than any other girls? |
37827 | Why did he go to France? |
37827 | Why did n''t you call me? |
37827 | Why did n''t you come to the archery party yesterday? |
37827 | Why did n''t you go, child, if you wanted to so much? |
37827 | Why did n''t you put it on the front- door_ here_? |
37827 | Why do n''t you take a holiday, too? |
37827 | Why do n''t you tell her? |
37827 | Why do n''t you wave, too? |
37827 | Why do n''t you wear it? |
37827 | Why do you bow to him? |
37827 | Why do you do it, then? |
37827 | Why do you have those little squares of zinc nailed all over your kitchen floor, Aunt Jerusha? |
37827 | Why do you look like that? |
37827 | Why do you stay here? |
37827 | Why do you suppose I have such a rage for biographies? |
37827 | Why do you think always of some possible other person? 37827 Why do you think so much?" |
37827 | Why does n''t he prepare himself for some profession? |
37827 | Why have n''t they lit the gas? |
37827 | Why have you got your hair up? 37827 Why have you put these fine linen doilies on the arms of the chairs?" |
37827 | Why not? 37827 Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why should he do that? 37827 Why should we shock people?" |
37827 | Why should you? 37827 Why should you?" |
37827 | Why the delay? |
37827 | Why wait even for the summer? 37827 Why, do n''t you?" |
37827 | Why, paw,said Mrs. Ball,"how did you get in here?" |
37827 | Why, where''s your own? |
37827 | Why-- why, dear? |
37827 | Why? 37827 Why? |
37827 | Why? |
37827 | Why? |
37827 | Why? |
37827 | Why? |
37827 | Why_ did_ they keep their old and sick in the parlor? |
37827 | Will ye be goin''out? |
37827 | Will you come? |
37827 | Will you do it? |
37827 | Will you have some corn bread? |
37827 | Will you keep my watch? |
37827 | Will you let me see that letter? |
37827 | Will you tell me why, just lately, when you have greater incentive than you ever had before, you seem to have less hope, a weaker hold on life? |
37827 | With her father still? |
37827 | Without a fire on a day like this? |
37827 | Wo n''t you come to the parlor a moment and say good- bye to my mother? |
37827 | Wo n''t you feel your inferiority? |
37827 | Wot''s your name? |
37827 | Would you be content,she said,"to think of any one else wearing it?" |
37827 | Y-- your ring? |
37827 | Yellow balls, too? |
37827 | Yes, Georgia or Alabama? |
37827 | Yes, all the old, and all--"All what? |
37827 | Yes, and-- oh, are you awful busy? |
37827 | Yes, but to hang up in your bedroom, what else is there? |
37827 | Yes, it is_ all_ beautiful, is n''t it, Ethan? |
37827 | Yes, yes, yes; what''d she say? |
37827 | Yes; do you mind if there''s fireflies in it instead of camphor? |
37827 | Yes; oh, what was it? |
37827 | Yes? |
37827 | You and Mr. Scherer must stay to supper,said Val, with a deliberate cordiality, as the men rejoined them,"must n''t they, Ethan?" |
37827 | You are n''t afraid? 37827 You are n''t going to church?" |
37827 | You are suffering a great deal? |
37827 | You are sure everything''s ready? |
37827 | You are tired of being kissed? |
37827 | You are? |
37827 | You could n''t do that without--"Without? |
37827 | You did n''t think I would give that away? |
37827 | You do n''t believe? |
37827 | You do n''t know about it, do you? |
37827 | You do n''t like people to know what you read? |
37827 | You do n''t mean blacks and whites together? |
37827 | You do n''t mean down to the beach? |
37827 | You do n''t mean she''s going back to school this fall? |
37827 | You do n''t mean that about your going away from home? |
37827 | You do n''t mean-- Val? 37827 You do n''t want to get me out of the habit of thinking of the Fort as''home''?" |
37827 | You do n''t want to talk? |
37827 | You do n''t_ want_ to keep to the first compact? |
37827 | You have n''t told me yet,he said,"how you learned to play like this?" |
37827 | You have to ask? |
37827 | You know who I am? |
37827 | You mean he was n''t even born in America? |
37827 | You mean, I must never ask you to sing again? |
37827 | You mean, I''m getting to be like Aunt Valeria? |
37827 | You must be tired, Ethan? |
37827 | You must n''t mind, dear; she went away, I think, one of those days--"What days? |
37827 | You really mean--he was ignoring Val and looking down upon the happy Julia--"do you mean you''ve learned to play like this in New Plymouth?" |
37827 | You remember that man you once told me about? |
37827 | You saw her there? |
37827 | You saw me come back? |
37827 | You say you''ve been? |
37827 | You still think it possible? |
37827 | You sure you''re an honest Injun? |
37827 | You think he will? |
37827 | You think she''d come back and interfere? |
37827 | You think so? |
37827 | You think there''s something in what I say? |
37827 | You think you''ll like staying here? |
37827 | You think, if I died now, I''d go to heaven? |
37827 | You think,asked Ethan,"there is any application in the fact-- to-- a people of another class?" |
37827 | You think_ I_ make a god of Death? |
37827 | You two pious ones off to church? |
37827 | You want to get him out of Paris? |
37827 | You were sent away to study? |
37827 | You wo n''t take it away from me? |
37827 | You''ve heard her sing? |
37827 | You''ve never forgiven me,she said,"and yet I should think you''d been happy enough to--""To what?" |
37827 | You''ve noticed? |
37827 | You, madam? |
37827 | You--_you_? 37827 You? |
37827 | You_ did_ give it to Ethan? 37827 You_ like_ her standing here between us?" |
37827 | Your last name? |
37827 | Your ring? |
37827 | Zen, ought you not to belong to zis club? |
37827 | _ Before_ Ethan came? |
37827 | _ Ceremony?_"Oh, ho! 37827 _ Cook?_ No, mehm." |
37827 | _ Did_ she say that? |
37827 | _ Does_ she? |
37827 | _ Ethan?_ Preposterous! 37827 _ I_ said so?" |
37827 | _ Is_ it? |
37827 | _ Me?_ No, mehm. 37827 _ Moral Tales?_ No; I''ve only heard about''em." |
37827 | _ Much_ ground for complaint? |
37827 | _ What?_ He never left this child to the chance of--Ethan had never seen any one look so angry. |
37827 | _ What?_Her father could n''t believe his ears. |
37827 | _ Why_ ca n''t I have coffee? |
37827 | _ Writing?_she echoed, with limitless scorn. |
37827 | _ Yaffti?_"My sailboat. |
37827 | _ You?_He nodded, looking off down the ravine. |
37827 | _ You?_He nodded. |
37827 | _ You_ need comforting, too? |
37827 | _ You_ proceed in the matter? |
37827 | ''Canst thou bind the secret influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion? |
37827 | ''Maid of Athens?'' |
37827 | ''Midnight, and all''s well''?" |
37827 | ''O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt?''" |
37827 | ''What family does he belong to?'' |
37827 | ''What is his history?'' |
37827 | ''Which medicine?'' |
37827 | ''Who is that?'' |
37827 | ''Who saw it''sides John?'' |
37827 | ''Why do n''t they see there is an escape?'' |
37827 | --("I wonder how much she heard?" |
37827 | --she clutched his hand--"don''t you feel how alive she is? |
37827 | 2, to say that Miss Hornsey had heard that Miss Gano had a cousin staying with her: would she bring him? |
37827 | ; or that less easily eluded form:"Whose birthday is this?" |
37827 | A spirit?" |
37827 | Ah, how is Julia?" |
37827 | Air yo''hurt, my honey? |
37827 | Am I what''s called jealous?" |
37827 | An infinitesimal pause, and then:"How do you do, America?" |
37827 | And if so, what? |
37827 | And the money you are offering--""Well?" |
37827 | And to- day? |
37827 | And what was the use? |
37827 | And when will you have the horses-- in half an hour?" |
37827 | And where are they all?" |
37827 | And while Uncle Elijah was saying,"What-- what?--barberry leaves, fire- flies? |
37827 | And you are going to walk?" |
37827 | And you do n''t suppose I''m going to leave you here alone? |
37827 | And you?" |
37827 | Are n''t many of us glad in spite of all?" |
37827 | Are n''t the peaches nearly ripe?" |
37827 | Are you a wise woman?" |
37827 | Are you afraid of climate?" |
37827 | Are you going to get my coffee?" |
37827 | Are you ill?" |
37827 | Are you so attached, then, to this Italian image- maker?" |
37827 | As if it_ mattered_?" |
37827 | As the little boy closed the door:"Then you do admit he is delicate?" |
37827 | But are you loving me to- day?" |
37827 | But did he ever tell you he was n''t_ sure_?" |
37827 | But do n''t you know there are some things it''s hard to tell to older people? |
37827 | But do you think_ I_ ever had piano lessons? |
37827 | But even if the number who go that way should be much greater, are you so certain that a voluntary exit is such a mistake? |
37827 | But had it-- had it? |
37827 | But if You do n''t, why do You go and spoil it all for me?" |
37827 | But if there was all this besides which he cared to write to Julia, what more might there not be in a life so full and varied as his? |
37827 | But instead of any prayer, old or new, she would fling wide her arms, crying under her breath:"How long, O Lord-- how long?" |
37827 | But until that day came, how was she to endure all this injustice and oppression? |
37827 | But what if cousin Ethan was right? |
37827 | But what kind of things?" |
37827 | But what on earth--""Yaffti?" |
37827 | But when Emmie, half an hour later, asked for serious advice:"Now,_ do_ you think I''d have time to eat another apple before he comes?" |
37827 | But why had he been so afraid she should speak to him? |
37827 | But why was n''t she struggling? |
37827 | But you''ve seen him, have n''t you?" |
37827 | But-- Marlowe? |
37827 | But--""Then, what in the name of Jehoshaphat is all this damned-- what''s all this disturbance about?" |
37827 | CHAPTER XXX"Well, Val, where have you been?" |
37827 | Can we send Ethan word? |
37827 | Canst thou bring forth Mazzaroth in his season? |
37827 | Consumption? |
37827 | Could he, perhaps, be turned to account? |
37827 | Could you come to- night?" |
37827 | D''ye know that there nag is Blue Grass?" |
37827 | Dangerous to others? |
37827 | Dear Ethan, do n''t you see? |
37827 | Did John Gano say, dreamily,"The Polar star is dim to- night,"she would as likely as not answer with significance:"Is_ it_ dim, or our eyes?" |
37827 | Did Mary bring that?" |
37827 | Did he have the letter in his pocket? |
37827 | Did he understand? |
37827 | Did n''t you go to church when you were young?" |
37827 | Did n''t you hear a splash?" |
37827 | Did n''t you see she was a negress?" |
37827 | Did old Marlowe countenance them?" |
37827 | Did she mean to ask whether she was to forget the old compact, or its new annulment? |
37827 | Did you hear the last thing she said to me? |
37827 | Did you see the ragged flag, my dear?" |
37827 | Do I blame the men who drink? |
37827 | Do n''t you feel how much your own people need you?" |
37827 | Do n''t you know that one? |
37827 | Do n''t you know there are two ways of interpreting''whom the gods love die young''?" |
37827 | Do n''t you live next door?" |
37827 | Do n''t you see that I''d keep my word?" |
37827 | Do n''t you see that your improved new modes of living breed new diseases? |
37827 | Do n''t you see?" |
37827 | Do you do your own marketing?" |
37827 | Do you hear, cousin Ethan? |
37827 | Do you know that I never in all my life knew what caring meant till I knew you? |
37827 | Do you know that your invincible belief that_ you_, at least, were meant to be happy, is the most pathetic thing I''ve found in the world?" |
37827 | Do you know the most objectionable thing in the American manner is excessive cheerfulness?" |
37827 | Do you know what it means?" |
37827 | Do you know what that means to me? |
37827 | Do you realize it''s not four weeks since the ball? |
37827 | Do you think you could be glad, poor child, with such an end forever before your eyes?" |
37827 | Do you think_ I''ve_ ever had a private singing lesson in my life? |
37827 | Does God sleep while the battle rages?" |
37827 | Does anybody think my grandmother died when the breath went out of her body? |
37827 | Does even joy like ours change and pass? |
37827 | Ethan sat up in bed and asked, a little feverishly:"Did you know about Aunt Cadwallader bein''in the war?" |
37827 | For what? |
37827 | Games for grown- up children, the puerilities of country- house parties, what are they? |
37827 | Gano?" |
37827 | Had he been doing something wrong? |
37827 | Had he gone to heaven yet? |
37827 | Had he taken the calendar away himself? |
37827 | Had it been like that with her-- this dead woman at his elbow? |
37827 | Had it been the sudden effect of looking at the little drama through Val''s eyes that had made him sicken and shrink from the dénouement? |
37827 | Had n''t her mother said,"Emmie is like me; but Val-- I suppose she''s more like you"? |
37827 | Had she any faintest notion of the hunger in him that would not let him sleep? |
37827 | Had she heard aright? |
37827 | Had she heard? |
37827 | Had she not lived through moments like this before? |
37827 | Had she really thought him cold? |
37827 | Had she solved the enigma? |
37827 | Had the woman gone and he not heard her pass? |
37827 | Had they any idea how cold the baby was? |
37827 | Had this come into his life only to go and leave him stricken in poverty? |
37827 | Has she got a court?" |
37827 | Have n''t you noticed? |
37827 | Have n''t you noticed? |
37827 | Have you any notion how poor we are? |
37827 | Have you been caring about some one else more than you''ve been caring about me?" |
37827 | Have you gone on carrying it about ever since you first came to the Fort?" |
37827 | Have you?" |
37827 | He bade himself realize that success would not bring him happiness, so why join the thoughtless chorus condemning poverty, obscurity, and hard work? |
37827 | He called out sharply:"Who is that?" |
37827 | He came out of his covert, and on a sudden impulse added, hurriedly:"Aunt Valeria, do you_ care_ about your camphor- bottle?" |
37827 | He sees I''m looking for something; why does n''t he ask for what?" |
37827 | He was scarcely comfortably relaxed, when Val, who had not spoken for hours, said:"Why do you stay so far off?" |
37827 | He''s the new man, is n''t he?" |
37827 | He''s ventured to say it to you?" |
37827 | Her old sheltering mother- gentleness, where was it? |
37827 | Her_ equal_?" |
37827 | His nonchalant grace seemed to say with smiling superiority:"What''s your hurry? |
37827 | Hospitals for the hopeless, not even bread for the ambitious--""Where is Emmeline?" |
37827 | How could I tell? |
37827 | How do you''spose he wound it?" |
37827 | How had she been so blind, so easily content? |
37827 | How had she come to take it so for granted that beauty belonged to her as a right? |
37827 | How had she dared? |
37827 | How is it possible to be_ sure_? |
37827 | How is it we are cajoled to bear this aching at the heart?" |
37827 | How is my handsome cousin?" |
37827 | How long do you want to stay here, anyhow?" |
37827 | How many years should you say a fire- fly would live, Uncle Elijah, with plenty to eat and drink?" |
37827 | How old is the girl?" |
37827 | How shall your elect be known?" |
37827 | How should Aaron Tallmadge have suspected such a thing? |
37827 | How should you?" |
37827 | How was Driscoll? |
37827 | How was he to let her down from the dizzy height of her illusion without hurting her cruelly or stultifying himself? |
37827 | How was he to say good- bye? |
37827 | How will you put it?" |
37827 | I believe your father would have liked--""Do_ you_ like talking like this to me?" |
37827 | I do n''t mean holes in the kitchen and rain through the roof-- who cares about that? |
37827 | I have my plans all laid-- but now my father''s ill.""What plans?" |
37827 | I knew you were either her pet or else--""What?" |
37827 | I must know the facts of the case before I can-- You made acquaintance with her that first day?" |
37827 | I want to save my little girl from--""What does it matter if I_ do_ have a hard time? |
37827 | I was afraid you''d gone into some world where I could n''t follow--""So you came after me?" |
37827 | I wonder if you would help me to find out how a girl with a very exceptional voice can get it heard and get it trained? |
37827 | I''ve got an old fiddle somewhere about--""_ Have_ you? |
37827 | I-- want to know-- if you have any objection to releasing me from my promise?" |
37827 | If it''s as fine as this to- morrow, why not-- Do n''t I remember"--he turned to Mrs. Ball--"that you''re a very good horsewoman?" |
37827 | If she had been going to be beautiful, would not some one have mentioned it? |
37827 | If that were not distinction, where shall it be found? |
37827 | If they were meaning to go on and on, as other people did, how could they hope to escape other people''s ending? |
37827 | In honor of cousin Croesus? |
37827 | In the silence Wilbur''s voice rang out clear at the bottom of the stairs:"I say, Val, are n''t you ever coming?" |
37827 | Is a wife never enough? |
37827 | Is he_ dead_?" |
37827 | Is it true I must n''t roll down the terraces?" |
37827 | Is n''t it the great question that each man should answer for himself?" |
37827 | Is n''t it wonderful,"she remarked, with recovered cheerfulness,"to think he''s nearly ninety?" |
37827 | Is n''t she pretty?" |
37827 | Is n''t your name on the front door?" |
37827 | Is that it?" |
37827 | Is the lady right in her head?" |
37827 | It was no better later on, when, with growing freedom of speech and warmth of feeling, you would ask in an engaging way:"Why do n''t you love me?" |
37827 | It was the great scene from"Measure for Measure,"and above the buffet hung another from"The Tempest,"with"What is''t? |
37827 | It was then she realized that she was tired, run down, even a little ill."Would Mr. Gano take her in his yacht to Bar Harbor? |
37827 | It_ was_ a"regular mill,"and who could tell if the sensitive, fragile little Gano was the stuff to stand these machine- made processes? |
37827 | Jack and Jill, where you off to? |
37827 | Marlowe? |
37827 | Me, mehm? |
37827 | Mr. Ford was an experienced yachtsman; would he look after the ladies, ask whom he liked? |
37827 | Mr. Tallmadge, angrier than ever, cabled,"Is it on account of health? |
37827 | Mrs. Gano waved her off, took the shawl herself, and with some premonition, perhaps, of a coming crisis, said:"What does this mean?" |
37827 | Must n''t I say provincial?" |
37827 | Next,''Was he a victim to bad habits?''" |
37827 | Not the young Pete Hall that I recommended to Blakistons?" |
37827 | Now I''ve told you my great article of faith, what''s yours?" |
37827 | Now what shall I wear? |
37827 | Now, have you?" |
37827 | Now, the man that chose these things, was he a jaundiced kind of person, very sad and sorry?" |
37827 | Now, the man that made this anthology"--she turned sharply to her cousin--"I suppose he got together all the_ best_ things, did n''t he?" |
37827 | Now, the question is, what?" |
37827 | Now,"she resumed, as Emmie''s footsteps died away,"let us understand-- Who is mistress in this house?" |
37827 | Oh yes; but other people--""Never know when to go home?" |
37827 | Oh, have n''t you any faith in me, or in Ethan either?" |
37827 | Oh, how_ did_ you know blue was my color?" |
37827 | Oh, what shall I do? |
37827 | Oh, when shall I be seeing the world?''" |
37827 | Opium- eaters? |
37827 | Or canst thou guide Arcturus with his suns?''" |
37827 | Or was it only that Yaffti turned and strained in his rusty fetters? |
37827 | Otway''s?" |
37827 | Ought she not to know something about this woman who stood in the relation of mother to Ethan? |
37827 | Registry- office performance, eh? |
37827 | Restless under her husband''s continued scrutiny, she asked:"How long have you known Sam?" |
37827 | Shall I advise him to go in the wrong direction because the old sign- posts misled_ me_?" |
37827 | Shall I find the child?" |
37827 | Shall we arise? |
37827 | Shall we go for a walk?" |
37827 | Shall we take up the round again?'' |
37827 | Shall we turn back and go up on the Hill?" |
37827 | She did not even say"How do you do?" |
37827 | She had nearly reached the old man when the President, leaning forward, said:"Are you not the girl I sent to Mrs. Parsons''s as general servant?" |
37827 | She knew she ought to call Emmie; but why spoil it? |
37827 | She opened her lips to say"When?" |
37827 | She should never forget that day when he said:"Why ca n''t you be quiet and good like Emmie?" |
37827 | She waited an instant for what was to follow, and then,"What? |
37827 | She was in the act of putting that work into the bookcase, when her father, observing her suspiciously, asked:"What are you doing?" |
37827 | Should he go in, or should he go back? |
37827 | Should she come out now? |
37827 | Should she go and get his quilted travelling- coat? |
37827 | Should she go back? |
37827 | Should she save her reputation by running away without seeing Ethan? |
37827 | Should she tell him about the letter that had evidently got lost? |
37827 | Still, what was it that he had taken the trouble to copy? |
37827 | Suddenly she asked:"Was there not an Archery Club meeting yesterday?" |
37827 | Suppose Mary were to send word that after all she would come when that infernal club broke up, what should he do? |
37827 | Suppose nobody and nothing has any particular need of you?" |
37827 | Suppose we run away together?" |
37827 | Tallmadge?" |
37827 | Tallmadge?" |
37827 | That moment of dissolution, what had it been like? |
37827 | That poor devil over there? |
37827 | The child took hold of her gown, and said, with ingratiating, upturned, face,"Dear grandmamma,_ could n''t_ we buy it a cow?" |
37827 | The interest was so little, why not spend the capital in studying sculpture? |
37827 | The mother died, and left a boy--""That awful little ape in the pho-- I mean Henri?" |
37827 | The world is good enough for his betters, why not for him? |
37827 | Then it was_ you_?" |
37827 | Then turning to the title- page:"''An Anthology collected by--''What makes you like reading poetry?" |
37827 | Then, after a moment:"What are you standing there for?" |
37827 | Then, quite low:"This is about the last of them, is n''t it?" |
37827 | There was no doubt she felt it keenly; why do it, then? |
37827 | To Ethan''s"Why?" |
37827 | Twice he had to knock upon the blue room door before a voice said:"Who''s there?" |
37827 | Understand?" |
37827 | Understand?" |
37827 | Val demanded, darkly,"or"--with a ray of hope--"are you being a martyr?" |
37827 | Val thought of the gossip- loving town, the endless questions,"When is the wedding?" |
37827 | Was Ethan right? |
37827 | Was Val to believe that under that charming exterior he was burning with the dull rage that kept her silent and_ distraite_? |
37827 | Was anything else said? |
37827 | Was he coming? |
37827 | Was he going mad? |
37827 | Was he going to relent? |
37827 | Was he making himself so agreeable, Val began to wonder, that he might be surer of a welcome in West Walnut Street? |
37827 | Was he on the track? |
37827 | Was it a beast in there, or only a brush? |
37827 | Was it a belated firefly that flickered dejectedly in the chill air? |
37827 | Was it any use? |
37827 | Was it conceivable that the others did n''t see it-- didn''t hear it? |
37827 | Was it fancy, or had she lightly stressed the"me"? |
37827 | Was it like this people felt before fainting? |
37827 | Was it possible human beings could endure anything worse? |
37827 | Was it true_ that_ was the ghost that haunted the Fort? |
37827 | Was n''t it a little odd that he should find the notion so ghastly? |
37827 | Was n''t nearly every novel in the world a warning against believing that men remembered long the girl who was out of sight? |
37827 | Was she a miser, then? |
37827 | Was she never coming? |
37827 | Was she wearing it now? |
37827 | Was the house struck? |
37827 | Was there any pain more horrible than this? |
37827 | Was this an offer of a million in disguise? |
37827 | Well, I do n''t pretend to fathom those newfangled arrangements-- but understand one thing--""Yes?" |
37827 | Well? |
37827 | Well?" |
37827 | Were they alive as I''m alive?" |
37827 | Were you nurse?" |
37827 | What are terraces for, anyhow? |
37827 | What can be expected of poor down- trodden slaves? |
37827 | What color?" |
37827 | What did France matter? |
37827 | What did God mean by it? |
37827 | What did anything matter? |
37827 | What did you do with your voice then?" |
37827 | What do we know or practise of healthy German industry, of the thrift of the French?" |
37827 | What do you read, then?" |
37827 | What do you think?" |
37827 | What do you want to understand?" |
37827 | What does he want a valet for?" |
37827 | What does it matter if you, in common with all the laboring earth, are feeling in every fibre the force of the Duke''s bitter exhortation to Claudio? |
37827 | What for?" |
37827 | What have I to complain of?" |
37827 | What have they in reality left to their children-- a hoard of yellow gold? |
37827 | What have you ever promised me?" |
37827 | What if this shock and jar were to send Val back to the faith of her fathers? |
37827 | What interests you in that dirty little town?" |
37827 | What is he going to do?" |
37827 | What is it? |
37827 | What need? |
37827 | What nonsense are you talking?" |
37827 | What nonsense is this you''ve been learning?" |
37827 | What one surer than that which brings a good- night and no morrow at all forever any more?" |
37827 | What respect have we for the laboring man? |
37827 | What shall I do for you?" |
37827 | What strange and unsuspected enemy had that not unvaliant spirit encountered in her path? |
37827 | What strange thing had befallen his tender interest in this woman? |
37827 | What the devil is it?" |
37827 | What then?" |
37827 | What was he carrying? |
37827 | What was he thinking now of her long immobility? |
37827 | What was her life like? |
37827 | What was in this beautiful, shiny, new thing? |
37827 | What was it he was saying about"the wreck of creeds"?" |
37827 | What was it in Ethan that distinguished him so from other men, and set him for ever apart? |
37827 | What was it in its lesser effect upon himself? |
37827 | What was it working in him? |
37827 | What was that on the table? |
37827 | What was that? |
37827 | What was the date?" |
37827 | What was the relation between these two? |
37827 | What was there in the utterance that Gano should gibe at? |
37827 | What was this daring person about? |
37827 | What were her interests? |
37827 | What were their doings and their destinies to the hopeless, silent battle men are waging, without God and without hope in the world? |
37827 | What would her grandmother say? |
37827 | What would she do under such and such conditions? |
37827 | What''s happened?" |
37827 | What''s that?" |
37827 | What''s that?" |
37827 | What''s the good of a voice of gold with a grandmother like that?" |
37827 | What''s the good of it?" |
37827 | What''s the rest?" |
37827 | What''s the_ real_ matter?" |
37827 | What''s yours?" |
37827 | What-- are-- you-- thinking-- about?" |
37827 | What? |
37827 | What_ could_ Julia have said? |
37827 | What_ was_ Ethan thinking of? |
37827 | What_ was_ she going to do? |
37827 | When Val spoke again it was subdued and dreamily:"Is n''t it odd how much we sit in this huge old chair of hers whenever we''re here alone?" |
37827 | When did you speak to her?" |
37827 | When shall I sleep again? |
37827 | When they were alone--"Did you misunderstand me yesterday, that you talk again to- day of getting ready?" |
37827 | When they were alone:"Now, can you keep a famerly secret?" |
37827 | When we hear of a suicide, the first insult we offer him is to ask,''Were his accounts right?'' |
37827 | When will you be married, Val?" |
37827 | When?" |
37827 | Where could Mrs. Gano live most inexpensively, and with least annoyance to sensibilities so outraged by the issue of the war? |
37827 | Where did he go down?" |
37827 | Where is it? |
37827 | Where was everybody? |
37827 | Where was she? |
37827 | Where''s the key?" |
37827 | Where''s your ring?" |
37827 | Which was it, walking the worn and faded track on Valeria''s old blue Brussels? |
37827 | Who could you find to overlook the age question? |
37827 | Who had done this thing? |
37827 | Who is she?" |
37827 | Who knows whether I''ll_ ever_ go at all if I do n''t go now?" |
37827 | Who performed the ceremony?" |
37827 | Who that has had this window opened for him into the virginal chamber of awakening woman- life can look through it without tears? |
37827 | Who wanted to have them daily, hourly brought to mind? |
37827 | Who was this Shelley who was always being quoted, and where did he come into the family saga? |
37827 | Who_ was_ Miss Hattie Fox? |
37827 | Why are you not dressing for church?" |
37827 | Why could n''t he take things simply, naturally, as Val did? |
37827 | Why did he say nothing? |
37827 | Why did n''t Ethan come? |
37827 | Why did n''t he speak or move? |
37827 | Why did we come here, then? |
37827 | Why did we come under these wet trees? |
37827 | Why did you call it Yaffti?" |
37827 | Why do the offscourings of the earth flock to America? |
37827 | Why do you do lessons in holiday time?" |
37827 | Why do you look like that?" |
37827 | Why do you never think of_ me_?" |
37827 | Why do you stay here?" |
37827 | Why do you stay?" |
37827 | Why do you wait? |
37827 | Why does n''t he come? |
37827 | Why had he not gone away before? |
37827 | Why had she obeyed? |
37827 | Why had they shut out the air? |
37827 | Why have you poured yourself into my very blood?" |
37827 | Why is your other hand full of leaves?" |
37827 | Why not? |
37827 | Why should a layman have a doubt? |
37827 | Why should he bother with the Hornseys?" |
37827 | Why should he come to this dull, smoky town, when he can''improve his accent''under brighter skies? |
37827 | Why should he have guessed just that? |
37827 | Why should he? |
37827 | Why should they look each other in the face? |
37827 | Why should_ I_ exert myself? |
37827 | Why was he looking so black- browed and forbidding now? |
37827 | Why were you crying?" |
37827 | Why-- why was bondage so sweet? |
37827 | Why?" |
37827 | Will you accompany?" |
37827 | Wo n''t you take me up to bed? |
37827 | Wot''s de matter? |
37827 | Would he take it out presently, and bring her to confusion before the family? |
37827 | Would n''t it be better to be on the safe side? |
37827 | Would she die before seeing her only grandson again? |
37827 | Would she hear her father crying again? |
37827 | Yes, yes; it was all wrong perhaps to think about these things; but why, then, were they so interesting? |
37827 | Yo''heah dat?" |
37827 | You do n''t want to get rid of me instantly, do you?" |
37827 | You know him by reputation?" |
37827 | You know when Henri de Poincy came for you this afternoon?" |
37827 | You remember telling me how, when she heard the people were dying for want of bread, she asked,''Why do n''t they eat cake?''" |
37827 | You remember the boy who whistled in the dark? |
37827 | You surely are n''t waiting for me to go?" |
37827 | You think you love me, little girl?" |
37827 | You think yourself superior to it, and what''s the result? |
37827 | You wo n''t mind?" |
37827 | _ His_ old tenderness for the tenderness in her, where was that? |
37827 | _ Ought_ he to have kissed her? |
37827 | and-- with a long look down the road-- how was he to live afterwards? |
37827 | did you get my telegram?" |
37827 | do_ you see that man going into the red- brick house?" |
37827 | ejaculated Mrs. Gano;"when is he going to get himself something to do?" |
37827 | he said, seeing the parlor lit,"am I company this time?" |
37827 | he said, softly,"or is it the sunset dyes you redder than it did?" |
37827 | is n''t she on the stairs?" |
37827 | is she here?" |
37827 | is that the church- bell?" |
37827 | oh, was he,_ was_ he? |
37827 | or could it be--"You do n''t mean,"she said,"that you wo n''t give me any letters of introduction?" |
37827 | rocking- chair''s just the thing for_ you!_ Why do n''t you go and sit in it?" |
37827 | said Val, hysterically, beginning to laugh and to cry all at once,"do n''t you see? |
37827 | said poor Scherer, with open mouth,"not a subject for conversation?" |
37827 | say good- bye?" |
37827 | she asked, quickly, and then added, involuntarily:"But, after all, what do I care about that? |
37827 | she cried, half closing her eyes,"do you care like that?" |
37827 | she cried;"something new?" |
37827 | she said, suspiciously;"you too grand for horse- cars?" |
37827 | she screamed,''then why have n''t you in all these years?'' |
37827 | what am I doing?" |
37827 | what does it matter if you can turn life''s discords into music such as this? |
37827 | what is it, gran''ma?" |
37827 | what was becoming of her old affection for her friend? |
37827 | what''s the sign?" |
37827 | where?" |
37827 | why have you infected me? |
37827 | yo''heah dat?" |
6434 | By whose authority? |
6434 | Has he proved a coward or a traitor? |
6434 | What can you do? |
6434 | Who is so foolish as to believe that there are people on the other side of the world, walking with their heels upward, and their heads hanging down? 6434 Who run?" |
6434 | ''Do I understand you to say that you have struck?'' |
6434 | 103 What efforts were made to resist the law? |
6434 | 111. Who was"Poor Richard"? |
6434 | 112. Who were the"Green Mountain Boys"? |
6434 | 122. Who succeeded General Schuyler? |
6434 | 134. Who is said to have used the words,"A little more grape, Captain Bragg"? |
6434 | 150. Who was the"old man eloquent"? |
6434 | 154. Who was elected second President? |
6434 | 156. Who was the inventor of the cotton- gin? |
6434 | 166. Who were the"Silver Greys"? |
6434 | 177. Who are the"Mormons"? |
6434 | 183. Who were the"Filibusters"? |
6434 | 184. Who were the Presidential candidates? |
6434 | 195. Who was President in 1812--1832--1846--1850--1861? |
6434 | 196. Who was elected fifteenth President? |
6434 | 20. Who said,"I would rather be right than be President"? |
6434 | 23 Did Columbus waver? |
6434 | 270. Who was elected President? |
6434 | 281. Who became President on the death of Lincoln? |
6434 | 31. Who was President from 1787( the adoption of the Constitution) to 1789? |
6434 | 31. Who were the Huguenots? |
6434 | 33. Who said,"I am not worth purchasing, but such as I am the king of England is not rich enough to buy me"? |
6434 | 39. Who entered New York harbor next after Verrazani? |
6434 | 42. Who, in a frail canoe, on a stormy night, visited an Indian wigwam to save the lives of his enemies? |
6434 | 51. Who fired the first gun in the French and Indian war? |
6434 | 54. Who was called the"Great Pacificator"? |
6434 | 58. Who was"Rough and Ready"? |
6434 | 59. Who was the"Sage of Monticello"? |
6434 | 75. Who drafted the Declaration of Independence? |
6434 | 75. Who were the Huguenots? |
6434 | 76. Who secured its adoption in the Convention? |
6434 | 79. Who was the"bachelor President"? |
6434 | 89. Who used the expression,"We have met the enemy, and they are ours"? |
6434 | 93 Commerce? |
6434 | A bill of attainder? |
6434 | A navy? |
6434 | A rain? |
6434 | A stone wall? |
6434 | ARTICLE V. What provisions are made with regard to a trial for capital offences? |
6434 | After this fort had been taken, a British officer entering asked,"Who commands here?" |
6434 | After whom ought this continent to have been named? |
6434 | Alexander Hamilton? |
6434 | Algiers? |
6434 | Amusing story of the longevity of the Indians? |
6434 | An ex- post- facto law? |
6434 | And even if a ship could perchance get around there safely, how could it ever get back? |
6434 | And then, how can a ship get there? |
6434 | Andrew Jackson? |
6434 | Appellate jurisdiction? |
6434 | Appointment of ambassadors? |
6434 | Are earth- works permanent? |
6434 | Are there any remains of this people now existing? |
6434 | Are these stories credible? |
6434 | At the South? |
6434 | At the north? |
6434 | At what date does the history of this country begin? |
6434 | Authors and inventors? |
6434 | Bankruptcies? |
6434 | Before whom did he lay his plan? |
6434 | Bill of attainder? |
6434 | Borrowing money? |
6434 | Boston? |
6434 | By annexation? |
6434 | By conquest? |
6434 | By what battle was each invasion checked? |
6434 | By what coincidence is Georgia linked with Washington? |
6434 | By what event can you recollect it? |
6434 | By what incident or peculiarity can you recollect each one? |
6434 | By what name is it commonly known? |
6434 | By what peculiarity can you recollect it? |
6434 | By what peculiarity can you recollect it? |
6434 | By what peculiarity was it distinguished? |
6434 | By what providential circumstance did the Americans escape? |
6434 | By what route were the goods from the East obtained? |
6434 | By what two battles was the contest at the south closed? |
6434 | By whom and on what occasion were the words used,"Millions for defence, but not one cent for tribute"? |
6434 | By whom and under what circumstances was the expression used,"Give me liberty or give me death"? |
6434 | By whom was the Albemarle colony settled? |
6434 | By whom was the Carteret colony settled? |
6434 | By whose advice? |
6434 | California? |
6434 | Calling forth the militia? |
6434 | Can a Congressman hold another office at the same time?] |
6434 | Can a criminal be forced to witness against himself? |
6434 | Can a criminal or an apprentice escape by fleeing into another state? |
6434 | Can a person be tried twice for the same crime? |
6434 | Can a religious test be exacted?] |
6434 | Can a ship sail up hill?" |
6434 | Can he receive any other emolument from the national or any state government? |
6434 | Can the citizens of one state bring a suit against another state?] |
6434 | Can the salary of a President be changed during his term of office? |
6434 | Can their salary be changed during their term of office?] |
6434 | Captain Pring? |
6434 | Cause of Brook''s assault on Sumner? |
6434 | Cause of Pontiac''s war? |
6434 | Cause of Shays''s rebellion? |
6434 | Cause of it? |
6434 | Cause of the battles of Iuka and Corinth? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Cause? |
6434 | Central America? |
6434 | Champions of each party? |
6434 | Character of the settlers? |
6434 | Coinage of money? |
6434 | Coining money? |
6434 | Col. George, of the Second Minnesota, being asked,"How long can you hold this pass?" |
6434 | Columbus''s idea? |
6434 | Condition of affairs in the border States? |
6434 | Condition of agriculture? |
6434 | Condition of the State? |
6434 | Condition of the army at the south? |
6434 | Condition of the colonies? |
6434 | Condition of the country? |
6434 | Counterfeiting? |
6434 | Daniel Webster? |
6434 | Declaring war? |
6434 | Defines the duties of the President, Name these duties with regard( 1) to Congress,( 2) to ambassadors, and( 3) to United States officers? |
6434 | Did England improve them? |
6434 | Did he discover the main- land? |
6434 | Did he have any idea of God? |
6434 | Did he know that he had found a new continent? |
6434 | Did he make any valuable discoveries? |
6434 | Did he remain true to his party? |
6434 | Did his discoveries antedate those of Columbus? |
6434 | Did the English government support educational interests? |
6434 | Did the Puritans obey it? |
6434 | Did the Puritans tolerate other Churches? |
6434 | Did the king treat him fairly? |
6434 | Did they have any more privileges than the Jamestown colonists? |
6434 | Difficulty with France? |
6434 | Direct tax? |
6434 | Does the enumeration of certain rights in the Constitution have any effect upon those not enumerated?] |
6434 | Dongan? |
6434 | Duration of King William''s war? |
6434 | Duties( taxes on imported or exported articles)? |
6434 | Effect of these fights? |
6434 | Effect of these victories? |
6434 | Effect of these victories? |
6434 | Effect of this campaign? |
6434 | Effect of this event? |
6434 | Effect upon New England? |
6434 | Effect upon the federalist party? |
6434 | Effect? |
6434 | Effects of the French and Indian war? |
6434 | Eight clauses now follow, enumerating the_ powers denied to Congress._ What prohibition was made concerning the slave trade? |
6434 | Ex- post- facto law? |
6434 | Excises( taxes on articles produced in the country)? |
6434 | Exports from any state? |
6434 | Extent of the public lands granted? |
6434 | Fate of Jumonville? |
6434 | Fate of Pontiac? |
6434 | Fate of the colony? |
6434 | Fate of the colony? |
6434 | Feeling at the North? |
6434 | Filling vacancies?] |
6434 | Florida? |
6434 | For how many years have the United States been involved in war? |
6434 | For how many years was the Revolutionary War carried on mainly at the North? |
6434 | For what crimes and in what way may any United States officer be removed from office?] |
6434 | For what did he search? |
6434 | For what did the nation wait? |
6434 | For what incident is it noted? |
6434 | For what is Ethan Allen noted? |
6434 | For what is Faneuil Hall noted? |
6434 | For what is John Brown noted? |
6434 | Freedom of speech and the press? |
6434 | From what States have Presidents been elected? |
6434 | From what continent did the first inhabitants of America probably come? |
6434 | George Washington? |
6434 | Georgia? |
6434 | Give an account of the life of Polk, What war now broke out? |
6434 | Give an account of the principal parties which have arisen since the Constitutional Convention of 1787? |
6434 | Government of the land and naval forces? |
6434 | Had these nations any idea of the extent of the country? |
6434 | His fate? |
6434 | His fate? |
6434 | How are representatives and direct taxes to be apportioned among the states? |
6434 | How are representatives apportioned among the several states? |
6434 | How are vacancies filled? |
6434 | How are vacancies in the House to be filled? |
6434 | How came Carolina to be divided? |
6434 | How came Delaware to be separated from Pennsylvania? |
6434 | How could he, I thought, with so large a family, and in such narrow circumstances, think of incurring so great an expense for me? |
6434 | How could the soldiers endure such misery? |
6434 | How did Clay pacify? |
6434 | How did England treat the colonies? |
6434 | How did General Fraser die? |
6434 | How did General Jackson avenge the massacre of Fort Minims? |
6434 | How did General Joseph E. Johnston thwart General McClellan''s plan? |
6434 | How did Gosnold shorten the voyage across the Atlantic? |
6434 | How did Governor Bradford reply to Canonicus''s threat? |
6434 | How did Harrison gain his popularity? |
6434 | How did Jackson act? |
6434 | How did Jackson receive the name of"Stonewall"? |
6434 | How did New Jersey come to be united to New York? |
6434 | How did Penn come to obtain a grant of this region? |
6434 | How did Penn settle the territory? |
6434 | How did Pennsylvania secure the title to its soil? |
6434 | How did Sherman capture Atlanta? |
6434 | How did Sherman drive him from these positions? |
6434 | How did a half- witted boy once save a fort from capture? |
6434 | How did he escape? |
6434 | How did he find things at Hochelaga? |
6434 | How did he overcome them? |
6434 | How did he pacify the army? |
6434 | How did he settle the boundary lines? |
6434 | How did it compare with English enterprise? |
6434 | How did it end? |
6434 | How did it happen that raw militia defeated English veterans? |
6434 | How did it turn out? |
6434 | How did relief come? |
6434 | How did religious toleration vary in the colonies? |
6434 | How did speculation become rife? |
6434 | How did that happen? |
6434 | How did the British officers treat the colonial officers? |
6434 | How did the French difficulty look during this administration? |
6434 | How did the Indians compare with them? |
6434 | How did the Navigation Act affect Massachusetts? |
6434 | How did the battle of Brandywine occur? |
6434 | How did the battle of Bull Run take place? |
6434 | How did the battle of Camden occur? |
6434 | How did the battle turn on the second day? |
6434 | How did the campaign in Pennsylvania close? |
6434 | How did the campaign open? |
6434 | How did the colonists protect themselves? |
6434 | How did the contest arise in Kansas? |
6434 | How did the naval and the land warfare compare? |
6434 | How did the people travel? |
6434 | How did the plan of working in common succeed? |
6434 | How did the style of living at the south differ from that at the north? |
6434 | How did the war in Virginia open? |
6434 | How did they get here? |
6434 | How did they regard labor? |
6434 | How divided? |
6434 | How had they treated the Boston people? |
6434 | How long did the war last? |
6434 | How long do the judges hold office? |
6434 | How long is the President''s term of office? |
6434 | How long is the term of a representative? |
6434 | How long was he President? |
6434 | How many Presidents have served two terms? |
6434 | How many States were named from their principal rivers? |
6434 | How many States were necessary? |
6434 | How many amendments have been made to the Constitution? |
6434 | How many are there from each state? |
6434 | How many attacks have been made on Quebec? |
6434 | How many colleges? |
6434 | How many colonies voted for it? |
6434 | How many expeditions have been made into Canada? |
6434 | How many inter- colonial wars were there? |
6434 | How many invasions of Kentucky did Bragg make? |
6434 | How many invasions of the North did Lee make? |
6434 | How many kinds of government? |
6434 | How many members were there in the first House of Representatives? |
6434 | How many of our Presidents have been military men? |
6434 | How many of our Presidents were Virginians? |
6434 | How many of our Presidents were poor boys? |
6434 | How many prizes were captured by privateers? |
6434 | How many rebellions have occurred in our history? |
6434 | How many subsequent voyages did Columbus make? |
6434 | How many times did the rain save him? |
6434 | How many times has Fort Ticonderoga been captured? |
6434 | How may this disability be removed?] |
6434 | How much land was granted? |
6434 | How much territory did he claim? |
6434 | How must a fact tried by a jury be re- examined?] |
6434 | How often must the Census be taken? |
6434 | How often, and when, must Congress meet? |
6434 | How soon was the Constitution ratified? |
6434 | How was Bragg''s second expedition stopped? |
6434 | How was Corinth captured? |
6434 | How was Fortress Monroe protected from capture? |
6434 | How was a charter secured? |
6434 | How was each stopped? |
6434 | How was he regarded? |
6434 | How was he relieved of this difficulty? |
6434 | How was it met? |
6434 | How was it received by the colonists? |
6434 | How was it received? |
6434 | How was it received? |
6434 | How was it settled? |
6434 | How was it settled? |
6434 | How was it settled? |
6434 | How was it terminated? |
6434 | How was it terminated? |
6434 | How was it unfitted for a new country? |
6434 | How was the Union advance on Richmond checked? |
6434 | How was the continent named? |
6434 | How was the news of Cornwallis''s surrender received? |
6434 | How was the northwestern boundary question settled? |
6434 | How was the protective tariff received? |
6434 | How was the representative population of the different states to be determined? |
6434 | How was the siege of Fort Schuyler( Stanwix) raised? |
6434 | How was the treaty received in this country? |
6434 | How was the war finally ended? |
6434 | How was this regarded at the North and at the South? |
6434 | How were the British forced to leave Boston? |
6434 | How were the Narraganset Indians kept from joining the Pequods against the whites? |
6434 | How were the difficulties ended? |
6434 | How were the ministers''salaries met? |
6434 | How were they combined into one colony? |
6434 | How were they received? |
6434 | How? |
6434 | I, Sec 2, Clause 3?] |
6434 | If a President should not be chosen by March 4, who would act as President?] |
6434 | If you include the Spanish war? |
6434 | Imports( taxes on imported articles)? |
6434 | Imposts? |
6434 | In Pennsylvania? |
6434 | In case of a vacancy, who would become President? |
6434 | In case there is no choice by the electors, how is the President elected? |
6434 | In what battle did Washington bitterly rebuke the commanding- general, and himself rally the troops to battle? |
6434 | In what battle did Washington show the most brilliant generalship? |
6434 | In what battle did both generals mass their strength on the left wing, expecting to crush the enemy''s right? |
6434 | In what battle did the Continentals gain the victory by falling back and then suddenly facing about upon the enemy? |
6434 | In what battle did the defeated general leave his wooden leg? |
6434 | In what battle was Molly Stark the watchword? |
6434 | In what battle was the left wing, when separated from the main body by a river, attacked by an overwhelming force of the enemy? |
6434 | In what battles had the opposing generals formed the same plan? |
6434 | In what cases does the Supreme Court have original jurisdiction? |
6434 | In what colony was New Jersey formerly embraced? |
6434 | In what does treason consist? |
6434 | In what estimation was he held? |
6434 | In what is the judicial power of the United States vested? |
6434 | In what spirit did Penn treat the colony? |
6434 | In what war was Lincoln a captain and Davis a lieutenant? |
6434 | In what way was the retreat conducted? |
6434 | In what were they skilled? |
6434 | In what year did these successes occur? |
6434 | In what year was it adopted?] |
6434 | In which administrations were none? |
6434 | In which was he successful? |
6434 | In whom is the executive power vested? |
6434 | In whose administration was the largest number of States admitted to the Union? |
6434 | Inferior courts? |
6434 | Is a foreign- born person eligible to the office of representative? |
6434 | Is a person so convicted liable to a trial- at- law for the same offence?] |
6434 | Is every state entitled to representation? |
6434 | Is the"union"one of states or of people? |
6434 | Issuing bills of credit( bills to circulate as money)? |
6434 | Its characteristic idea? |
6434 | Its date? |
6434 | Its effect? |
6434 | Its effect? |
6434 | Its principles? |
6434 | Its result? |
6434 | Its result? |
6434 | Its result? |
6434 | Its result? |
6434 | J. Q. Adams? |
6434 | Jackson''s? |
6434 | John C. Calhoun? |
6434 | Judges of the Supreme Court, etc.? |
6434 | Keeping troops? |
6434 | Laws with regard to drinking? |
6434 | Length of King George''s war? |
6434 | Length of Queen Anne''s war? |
6434 | Length of the French and Indian war? |
6434 | Letters of marque and reprisal? |
6434 | Limits of this epoch? |
6434 | Louisiana? |
6434 | Making any other legal tender than gold or silver? |
6434 | Making peace or war? |
6434 | Manufactures? |
6434 | Maryland? |
6434 | Massachusetts? |
6434 | Meaning of the name? |
6434 | Meaning of the word California in the sixteenth century? |
6434 | Mexico? |
6434 | Michigan? |
6434 | Monroe''s? |
6434 | Naturalization? |
6434 | New Jersey? |
6434 | New Mexico? |
6434 | New York? |
6434 | North Virginia? |
6434 | Number of vessels in the Union navy? |
6434 | Object of the war in the East? |
6434 | Occasions of quarrel? |
6434 | Of Clay''s patriotism? |
6434 | Of General Grant? |
6434 | Of how many members does the Senate of the United States consist? |
6434 | Of the luxurious living? |
6434 | Of their charge on Fort Wagner? |
6434 | Of what President was it said that"if his soul were turned inside out, not a spot could be found upon it"? |
6434 | Of what does Congress consist? |
6434 | Of what general was this said to be always true? |
6434 | Of what statesman was it said that"he was in the public service fifty years, and never attempted to deceive his countrymen"? |
6434 | Of what value were these charters? |
6434 | Of what value were they? |
6434 | Of what value? |
6434 | Of whom was it said that"he touched the dead corpse of public credit, and it sprang upon its feet"? |
6434 | On what conditions were the seceded States finally readmitted to their former position in the Union? |
6434 | On what expedition was Jackson sent? |
6434 | On what issue was Polk elected President? |
6434 | On what mountains have battles been fought? |
6434 | On what plundering tours did Arnold go? |
6434 | Oregon? |
6434 | Organizing the militia? |
6434 | Over what places has Congress exclusive legislation? |
6434 | Payments from the Treasury? |
6434 | Peaceable assembly and petition? |
6434 | Pennsylvania? |
6434 | Peru? |
6434 | Piracies? |
6434 | Post- offices and post- roads? |
6434 | Principal event? |
6434 | Principles of the democratic party? |
6434 | Provision made for public worship? |
6434 | Raising and supporting armies? |
6434 | Rapidity of its growth? |
6434 | Regulating commerce? |
6434 | Reprieves and pardons? |
6434 | Restrictions of the trustees? |
6434 | Result of the war? |
6434 | Result of the war? |
6434 | Result of this clashing between Congress and the President? |
6434 | Result? |
6434 | Result? |
6434 | Result? |
6434 | Results of these explorations? |
6434 | Results of this war? |
6434 | Since these lands became the property of the general government, a most perplexing question has been, Shall they be free? |
6434 | South Carolina? |
6434 | State militia? |
6434 | State of education in New England? |
6434 | State of party feeling? |
6434 | Stephen A. Douglas? |
6434 | Stories told of Taylor? |
6434 | Story told of Governor Nelson? |
6434 | Story told of Jackson? |
6434 | Story told of Raleigh''s smoking? |
6434 | Story told of Washington by Mr. Potts? |
6434 | Successful candidates? |
6434 | Taylor? |
6434 | Tell the story of the old"liberty bell,"How did the campaign near New York occur? |
6434 | The Boston boys? |
6434 | The Indians, feeling this, sent to the agent of the Ohio Company the pertinent query,"Where is the Indian''s land? |
6434 | The Pacific Railroad? |
6434 | The Rocky Mountains? |
6434 | The South? |
6434 | The Stamp Act? |
6434 | The Vice President''s? |
6434 | The Virginia troops under Washington? |
6434 | The chief officers of the different executive departments? |
6434 | The conditions of peace? |
6434 | The consequence of his trip? |
6434 | The democrats? |
6434 | The effect? |
6434 | The first magnetic telegraph? |
6434 | The first steamboat? |
6434 | The impairing of contracts? |
6434 | The making of treaties? |
6434 | The officer asked him"what he was waiting for?" |
6434 | The right wing? |
6434 | The second expedition? |
6434 | The"Anti- Renters"? |
6434 | The"Barnburners"? |
6434 | The"Compromise of 1850"? |
6434 | The"Free Soilers"? |
6434 | The"Hunkers"? |
6434 | The"Know- Nothings"? |
6434 | The"Unionists"? |
6434 | The"Woolly- Heads"? |
6434 | Their views? |
6434 | This, they were sure, was carrying them to destruction, for how could they ever return against it? |
6434 | Thomas Jefferson? |
6434 | Titles of nobility? |
6434 | Titles of nobility? |
6434 | To be made a separate royal province? |
6434 | To what offices are members of Congress ineligible? |
6434 | To what party did Henry Clay belong? |
6434 | To whom did Columbus apply next? |
6434 | Trade between the United States? |
6434 | Union plan of attack? |
6434 | United States office- holder receiving presents from a foreign power? |
6434 | Using tobacco? |
6434 | Views of the federalists? |
6434 | Was Bacon a patriot or a rebel? |
6434 | Was Hudson a Dutchman? |
6434 | Was Monroe a popular man? |
6434 | Was Tyler''s administration successful? |
6434 | Was Washington ever wounded in battle? |
6434 | Was all peril to our liberties over? |
6434 | Was any attempt made by the United States authorities to relieve it? |
6434 | Was civil liberty secured under Andros? |
6434 | Was it based on the principle of self- government? |
6434 | Was it popular? |
6434 | Was it successful? |
6434 | Was it successful? |
6434 | Was money plenty? |
6434 | Was religious toleration granted? |
6434 | Was the English occupation permanent? |
6434 | Was the French aid of great value? |
6434 | Was the country recovering from the effects of the war? |
6434 | Was the discovery of gold profitable? |
6434 | Was the impressment of seamen general? |
6434 | Was this delusion common at that time? |
6434 | Was this permanent? |
6434 | Was this separation total? |
6434 | Was war a necessity? |
6434 | Webster? |
6434 | Were her jewels sold? |
6434 | Were the English or Americans victorious? |
6434 | Were the people pleased with the English rule? |
6434 | Were their discoveries of any value? |
6434 | Were there any blacksmiths, carpenters, etc., among them? |
6434 | Were there many books or papers? |
6434 | Were they a progressive people? |
6434 | Were they successful? |
6434 | Were they united during this epoch? |
6434 | What French navigator was the next to ascend the St. Lawrence? |
6434 | What Indian chiefs befriended Massachusetts and Virginia in their early history? |
6434 | What Indian chiefs formed leagues against the whites? |
6434 | What Indian conflict at the West? |
6434 | What Indian difficulties occurred? |
6434 | What Indian war now arose? |
6434 | What Indians visited them in the spring? |
6434 | What President elect came to Washington in disguise? |
6434 | What President followed Washington-- Taylor-- Jefferson-- Lincoln-- J. Q. Adams-- Pierce? |
6434 | What President had not voted for forty years? |
6434 | What President introduced"rotation in office"? |
6434 | What President vetoed the measures of the party which elected him to office? |
6434 | What President was impeached? |
6434 | What President was once a tailor''s apprentice? |
6434 | What Presidents died in office? |
6434 | What Presidents were not elected to that office by the people? |
6434 | What State was added during this epoch? |
6434 | What State was admitted soon after the close of the Civil War? |
6434 | What State was admitted to the Union first after the original thirteen? |
6434 | What States were named from mountain ranges? |
6434 | What Union general was now sent to this region? |
6434 | What Union general who afterward became celebrated? |
6434 | What Vice- Presidents were afterward elected Presidents? |
6434 | What action did Jackson take concerning the United States bank? |
6434 | What action did it take? |
6434 | What action did the North take? |
6434 | What action did the colonists take? |
6434 | What action did the colonists take? |
6434 | What action was taken? |
6434 | What administrations have been most popular? |
6434 | What advantage did the Maryland charter confer? |
6434 | What are privateers? |
6434 | What are the necessary qualifications for the office of President? |
6434 | What are the necessary qualifications of an elector( or voter) for a representative? |
6434 | What are"State rights"? |
6434 | What army retreated at the moment of victory because the fog was so dense that it did not see how successful it was? |
6434 | What attack by the colonists at the south? |
6434 | What attacks were made by the colonists in return? |
6434 | What attempt was made on Louisburg? |
6434 | What authority has the President over the United States army and navy? |
6434 | What authority is given the Senate with regard to such bills? |
6434 | What authority was granted to the Council of New England? |
6434 | What base offer was made to Washington? |
6434 | What battle did General Gates win? |
6434 | What battle did he lose? |
6434 | What battle ensued? |
6434 | What battle occurred when both armies were marching to make a night attack upon each other? |
6434 | What battle took place in New York State? |
6434 | What battle was fought after peace was declared? |
6434 | What battle was fought and gained without a commanding officer? |
6434 | What battle was fought in Missouri? |
6434 | What battle was preceded by prayer? |
6434 | What battles did Washington win? |
6434 | What battles did he lose? |
6434 | What battles ensued? |
6434 | What battles had Taylor fought? |
6434 | What battles have been decided by an attack in the rear? |
6434 | What battles have been fought in Virginia? |
6434 | What battles have resulted in the destruction or surrender of an entire army? |
6434 | What battles occurred while Washington was falling back? |
6434 | What battles were fought? |
6434 | What became of Burr? |
6434 | What became of General Lee? |
6434 | What became of his companions? |
6434 | What became of the Plymouth Company? |
6434 | What became of the colony sent out the same year by the Plymouth company? |
6434 | What became of them? |
6434 | What beneficial influence did they have on the colony? |
6434 | What bills must originate in the House of Representatives? |
6434 | What body has the sole power of impeachment?] |
6434 | What body has the"power of legislation"? |
6434 | What branches of government are established under the first three articles of the Constitution? |
6434 | What business can a minority transact? |
6434 | What campaign was now planned by the aid of the French? |
6434 | What campaign was undertaken? |
6434 | What candidates for the presidency were nominated in 1873? |
6434 | What caused the battle of Monmouth to happen? |
6434 | What celebrated Indian was killed? |
6434 | What celebrated debate took place? |
6434 | What celebrated philosopher, when a boy, went without meat to buy books? |
6434 | What celebrated statesman was killed in a duel? |
6434 | What change in the government of the colony was made by the second charter? |
6434 | What change now took place in the government? |
6434 | What change was made by the third charter? |
6434 | What characterized the campaign at the north? |
6434 | What checked McClellan''s advance? |
6434 | What cities have undergone a siege? |
6434 | What city did he found? |
6434 | What city now occupies its site? |
6434 | What city now surrendered? |
6434 | What city was now captured? |
6434 | What claim did the Dutch found on this discovery? |
6434 | What class of people generally settled this country? |
6434 | What coincidence between this event and the Revolution? |
6434 | What coincidence? |
6434 | What colonel, when asked if he could take a battery, replied,"I''ll try, sir"? |
6434 | What colonies are named after a king or a queen? |
6434 | What colony was conquered by the British during this year? |
6434 | What colony was established the same year that Hooker went to Hartford? |
6434 | What colony was founded as a home for the poor? |
6434 | What course did Clay take? |
6434 | What course did Washington take? |
6434 | What course did he take with regard to the United States Bank? |
6434 | What course did the Duke of York take when he became King of England? |
6434 | What course did the proprietors take? |
6434 | What cruel act disgraced their victory? |
6434 | What curious fact illustrates the ruling sentiment of Massachusetts and of Virginia at that time? |
6434 | What customs familiar to us are of Dutch origin? |
6434 | What decided it in favor of the English? |
6434 | What decided it in favor of the English? |
6434 | What declaration is made concerning the powers neither delegated to Congress nor forbidden the states?] |
6434 | What departments were established? |
6434 | What did Columbus''s friends do for him? |
6434 | What did Webster say of Hamilton? |
6434 | What did it propose? |
6434 | What did the British do? |
6434 | What did the English now do? |
6434 | What did the French do in the spring? |
6434 | What did the United States gain by the war? |
6434 | What did the armies of the centre and north do? |
6434 | What did the colonists introduce into England on their return? |
6434 | What did their peaceful discharge prove? |
6434 | What difficulties beset the government? |
6434 | What difficulty arose with England? |
6434 | What difficulty arose with England? |
6434 | What difficulty now arose with England and France? |
6434 | What difficulty occurred with Cuba? |
6434 | What disastrous attempt was made by the British at the north? |
6434 | What discoveries did Gosnold make? |
6434 | What discoveries did Sebastian Cabot make? |
6434 | What discoveries did he make? |
6434 | What discoveries? |
6434 | What discovery did Balboa make? |
6434 | What discovery did Sir Francis Drake make? |
6434 | What distinguished generals have been unsuccessful candidates for the Presidency? |
6434 | What division arose among the people? |
6434 | What do the French names in the Mississippi valley indicate? |
6434 | What do the names New York, New England, New Hampshire, Georgia, Carolina, etc., indicate? |
6434 | What do the names San Salvador, Santa Cruz, Vera Cruz, La Trinidad, etc., indicate? |
6434 | What do you mean by"reconstruction"? |
6434 | What do you say of the naval successes? |
6434 | What do you say of the negro troops? |
6434 | What do you say of the number of the Indians? |
6434 | What do you say of the rapidity of its growth? |
6434 | What effect did they have on the English government? |
6434 | What effect was produced? |
6434 | What event closed the Mississippi campaign? |
6434 | What events attended General Burgoyne''s march south? |
6434 | What events deranged Burgoyne''s plans? |
6434 | What ex- Vice- President was tried for treason? |
6434 | What exiles settled Rhode Island? |
6434 | What expedition was undertaken against Canada? |
6434 | What fact illustrates Williams''s generosity? |
6434 | What facts strengthened his view? |
6434 | What famous despatch did Grant send? |
6434 | What famous doctrine advanced by Monroe? |
6434 | What father and son were Presidents? |
6434 | What financial measures were adopted? |
6434 | What five ex- Presidents died in the decade between 1860 and 1870? |
6434 | What followed? |
6434 | What followed? |
6434 | What form of government was finally imposed upon them? |
6434 | What fort was carried by a midnight assault? |
6434 | What four nations explored the territory of the future United States? |
6434 | What four restrictions upon the Congressional powers are made in this section? |
6434 | What gallant exploit was performed by Perry? |
6434 | What general arose from a sick- bed to lead his troops into a battle in which he was killed? |
6434 | What general died at the moment of victory? |
6434 | What general escaped by riding down a steep precipice? |
6434 | What general led the advance? |
6434 | What general rushed into battle without orders and won it? |
6434 | What general was captured by the enemy? |
6434 | What general was captured through his carelessness, and exchanged for another taken in a similar way? |
6434 | What great fires happened in''71 and''72? |
6434 | What guarantee is given with regard to excessive bail or fine and unusual punishment?] |
6434 | What guarantee is given with regard to the right of bearing arms? |
6434 | What guarantees are provided concerning religious freedom? |
6434 | What held the colonies together? |
6434 | What historical memories cluster around Santo Domingo? |
6434 | What important contemporaneous events can you name? |
6434 | What important rights are secured to the accused in case of a criminal prosecution?] |
6434 | What is a charter? |
6434 | What is a senator''s term of office? |
6434 | What is a"protective tariff"? |
6434 | What is a"witch"? |
6434 | What is meant by"Reconstruction"? |
6434 | What is provided with regard to quartering soldiers upon citizens? |
6434 | What is provided with regard to unreasonable searches and warrants? |
6434 | What is said of Calhoun? |
6434 | What is said of Mount Vernon flour? |
6434 | What is said of Osceola? |
6434 | What is said of the claims made upon the land by the heirs of these proprietors? |
6434 | What is squatter sovereignty? |
6434 | What is the American doctrine? |
6434 | What is the Fifteenth Amendment? |
6434 | What is the Fourteenth Amendment? |
6434 | What is the Thirteenth Amendment? |
6434 | What is the climate in the far north along the Mississippi Valley and the Pacific coast? |
6434 | What is the law with regard to keeping and publishing a journal of the proceedings? |
6434 | What is the law with regard to state records, judicial proceedings, etc.?] |
6434 | What is the law with regard to trial by jury? |
6434 | What is the object of this provision? |
6434 | What is"Plymouth Rock"? |
6434 | What is"squatter sovereignty"? |
6434 | What issues depended on this fight? |
6434 | What journey did Champlain make? |
6434 | What kept the interest in America alive? |
6434 | What kind of war did he wage in Virginia? |
6434 | What land did he discover? |
6434 | What leaders on each side? |
6434 | What limit is assigned?] |
6434 | What limit is there to the number of representatives? |
6434 | What line was now held by the Union army? |
6434 | What location did they select? |
6434 | What massacre occurred in Kansas? |
6434 | What measures were taken to check his advance? |
6434 | What movement did Grant make against Vicksburg? |
6434 | What movement was made by General Brown? |
6434 | What movements did they make to break through the Union lines? |
6434 | What mutiny occurred? |
6434 | What name did he give it? |
6434 | What name did they give to the region? |
6434 | What nations settled the different States? |
6434 | What naval commander captured his antagonist as his own vessel was sinking? |
6434 | What naval expeditions were made? |
6434 | What navigator shortened the voyage across the Atlantic? |
6434 | What need was felt? |
6434 | What new change was made in the government? |
6434 | What new railroad is building? |
6434 | What new trouble assailed Columbus? |
6434 | What news came in the spring? |
6434 | What noted events occurred on April 19th? |
6434 | What noted expressions of General Taylor became favorite mottoes? |
6434 | What number is needed to convict? |
6434 | What number of the members is necessary for a quorum( needed to do business)? |
6434 | What object did Penn, Lord Baltimore, and Oglethorpe each have in founding a colony in the new world? |
6434 | What offer did Queen Isabella make? |
6434 | What officer lost his life because he neglected to open a note? |
6434 | What other islands did he discover? |
6434 | What parties arose? |
6434 | What parties now arose? |
6434 | What parties were formed? |
6434 | What party adopted the views of the old federalists on the United States Bank, etc.? |
6434 | What party was arising? |
6434 | What peculiarities in the government of each? |
6434 | What penalties can be inflicted in case of conviction? |
6434 | What persecuted people settled the different colonies? |
6434 | What persons are prohibited from holding any office under the United States? |
6434 | What places captured? |
6434 | What places in Florida were captured? |
6434 | What plan did Lee now adopt? |
6434 | What plan did McClellan form? |
6434 | What plan did Washington now adopt? |
6434 | What poem has been written upon this event? |
6434 | What policy should be pursued toward the Indian? |
6434 | What political changes now took place? |
6434 | What political parties now arose? |
6434 | What portion of the continent did each explore? |
6434 | What power has Congress over the electors? |
6434 | What power has Congress over the state regulations? |
6434 | What power has Congress over the territory and propeity of the United States?] |
6434 | What power has Congress with regard to taxes? |
6434 | What power is finally given to Congress to enable it to enforce its authority? |
6434 | What power is given each House of Congress of making and enforcing rules? |
6434 | What precipitated this issue? |
6434 | What prevented Sherman''s advance into Georgia? |
6434 | What previous battle did it resemble? |
6434 | What principle did he introduce? |
6434 | What privileges has the citizen of one state in all the others? |
6434 | What prohibition was made with regard to treaties? |
6434 | What proof is required? |
6434 | What proof is there of their antiquity? |
6434 | What providential circumstance favored the attack? |
6434 | What provision for the benefit of the smaller states is attached to this article?] |
6434 | What put an end to these fears? |
6434 | What questions agitated the country at that time? |
6434 | What questions agitated the people? |
6434 | What ravages were committed by Admiral Cockburn? |
6434 | What region did Columbus think he had reached? |
6434 | What region did De Soto traverse? |
6434 | What relics of them remain? |
6434 | What religious toleration was granted in the different colonies? |
6434 | What remains of these people are found? |
6434 | What rendered Valley Forge memorable? |
6434 | What reply did Pinckney make to the base offer of the French Directory? |
6434 | What reply was made him? |
6434 | What restriction in this article has now lost all force? |
6434 | What restriction is there upon the time and place of adjournment?] |
6434 | What restrictions are laid upon the states with regard to abridging the rights of citizens?] |
6434 | What reverse happened to a part of General Harrison''s command? |
6434 | What river did he discover? |
6434 | What river was his burial place? |
6434 | What settlement did he found? |
6434 | What settlement did he make? |
6434 | What special privileges are granted to members of Congress? |
6434 | What step did Davis take? |
6434 | What story is told of Andros''s visit? |
6434 | What story is told of Colonel Miller? |
6434 | What story is told of General Reed? |
6434 | What story is told to illustrate their piety? |
6434 | What stratagems did the Indians use? |
6434 | What success did he have? |
6434 | What success did he meet? |
6434 | What success did the English meet in Acadia? |
6434 | What tea party is celebrated in our history? |
6434 | What territory has the United States acquired by purchase? |
6434 | What territory was added to the United States? |
6434 | What territory was gained by treaty? |
6434 | What territory was granted to Lord Clarendon? |
6434 | What three colonies were formed in Connecticut? |
6434 | What three ex- Presidents died on the 4th of July? |
6434 | What town and army were surrendered without firing a shot? |
6434 | What traditions about their having discovered and settled America? |
6434 | What treaties are celebrated in our history? |
6434 | What treaty was made with Spain? |
6434 | What trees are celebrated in our history? |
6434 | What two battles were fought in the"Wilderness"? |
6434 | What two colonies were intimately united to Massachusetts? |
6434 | What two contemporaneous events? |
6434 | What two distinguished generals of the same name served in the Confederate army? |
6434 | What union of the colonies was now formed? |
6434 | What valuable stores were seized? |
6434 | What vessels composed his fleet? |
6434 | What victories induced him to attempt each of these invasions? |
6434 | What was Coligny''s plan? |
6434 | What was Delaware styled? |
6434 | What was Grant''s plan for an expedition against Vicksburg? |
6434 | What was Laconia? |
6434 | What was Schuyler''s conduct? |
6434 | What was South Virginia? |
6434 | What was his favorite idea? |
6434 | What was his theory of founding a colony? |
6434 | What was its character? |
6434 | What was its effect on the colony? |
6434 | What was its effect? |
6434 | What was its object? |
6434 | What was its result? |
6434 | What was meant by saying that"Clay was in the succession"? |
6434 | What was necessary for the adoption of this Constitution? |
6434 | What was now the expectation of the Union army? |
6434 | What was the Ashburton treaty? |
6434 | What was the Compromise of 1850? |
6434 | What was the Confederate line of defence at the West? |
6434 | What was the Credit Mobilier? |
6434 | What was the Gadsden purchase? |
6434 | What was the High Commission? |
6434 | What was the Joint Electoral Commission? |
6434 | What was the Missouri Compromise? |
6434 | What was the Mutiny Act? |
6434 | What was the Navigation Act? |
6434 | What was the Secretary of State formerly called? |
6434 | What was the Wilmot proviso? |
6434 | What was the cause of his sudden death? |
6434 | What was the cause of the"Panic of''73"? |
6434 | What was the character of the Virginia colonists? |
6434 | What was the character of the history of New York under its four Dutch governors? |
6434 | What was the characteristic of his administration? |
6434 | What was the condition of the army? |
6434 | What was the condition of the country? |
6434 | What was the condition of the country? |
6434 | What was the condition of the public finances? |
6434 | What was the conduct of Berkeley? |
6434 | What was the conduct of the assembly? |
6434 | What was the difference between the Puritans and the Pilgrims? |
6434 | What was the direct cause of war? |
6434 | What was the extent of the Spanish possessions in the new world? |
6434 | What was the feeling in Spain? |
6434 | What was the great wish of maritime nations? |
6434 | What was the importance of Roanoke Island? |
6434 | What was the important event of Jefferson''s administration? |
6434 | What was the issue of the next political campaign? |
6434 | What was the most prominent event of Jefferson''s administration? |
6434 | What was the next movement? |
6434 | What was the northeast boundary question? |
6434 | What was the nullification ordinance? |
6434 | What was the object of the"American party"? |
6434 | What was the object? |
6434 | What was the opening event of the war of 1812? |
6434 | What was the peculiarity of the attack on the Port Royal forts? |
6434 | What was the plan of John Cabot? |
6434 | What was the plan of the campaign? |
6434 | What was the popular feeling toward France? |
6434 | What was the popular feeling toward Washington? |
6434 | What was the population of the United States in 1870? |
6434 | What was the principal cause of the easy capture of the fort? |
6434 | What was the problem of that day? |
6434 | What was the question of the elections? |
6434 | What was the reconstruction policy of Congress? |
6434 | What was the reconstruction policy of Johnson? |
6434 | What was the result of the battle? |
6434 | What was the result of the war? |
6434 | What was the result? |
6434 | What was the result? |
6434 | What was the situation at Richmond? |
6434 | What was the situation at the beginning of the year 1863? |
6434 | What was the size of the two armies at the close of the war? |
6434 | What was the state of education in the southern colonies? |
6434 | What was the state of geographical knowledge in Europe in the fifteenth century? |
6434 | What was the tendency of this course of conduct? |
6434 | What was the view of Sir Humphrey Gilbert? |
6434 | What was the"Dred Scott decision"? |
6434 | What was the"Fugitive Slave Law"? |
6434 | What was the"Gadsden purchase"? |
6434 | What was the"Grand Model"? |
6434 | What was the"Great Code"? |
6434 | What was the"Hartford Convention"? |
6434 | What was the"Kansas- Nebraska Bill"? |
6434 | What was the"Missouri Compromise"? |
6434 | What was the"Nullification Act"? |
6434 | What was the"O grab me Act"? |
6434 | What was the"Toleration Act"? |
6434 | What was the"Trent affair"? |
6434 | What was the"Wilmot Proviso"? |
6434 | What was the"swamp angel"? |
6434 | What was their character? |
6434 | What was their success? |
6434 | What were Lawrence''s dying words? |
6434 | What were Personal Liberty bills? |
6434 | What were Writs of Assistance? |
6434 | What were common people called? |
6434 | What were the alien and sedition laws? |
6434 | What were the effects of the Shiloh battle? |
6434 | What were the principles of the whigs? |
6434 | What were the prison ships? |
6434 | What were the relations between the proprietors and settlers? |
6434 | What were the results of French enterprise? |
6434 | What were the"alien and sedition laws"? |
6434 | What were their principles? |
6434 | What"is the Monroe Doctrine"? |
6434 | What"orders, resolutions and votes"must be submitted to the President? |
6434 | What"sole power"does the Senate possess? |
6434 | When and by whom founded? |
6434 | When and how was slavery introduced? |
6434 | When and where was he inaugurated? |
6434 | When and where was the Confederate government formed? |
6434 | When and where was the first blood shed? |
6434 | When and where was the first blood spilled? |
6434 | When and where was the"First Continental Congress"held? |
6434 | When and where was this? |
6434 | When can private property be taken for the public use?] |
6434 | When can the Senate choose a president_ pro tempore_( for the time being)? |
6434 | When did a fog save our army? |
6434 | When did a stone house largely decide a battle? |
6434 | When did the English awake to the importance of American discovery? |
6434 | When did the new government go into operation? |
6434 | When has an unnecessary delay cost a general a victory? |
6434 | When has the question of the public lands threatened the Union? |
6434 | When is the right of jury trial guaranteed? |
6434 | When must Congress protect the states?] |
6434 | When must the yeas and nays be entered on the journal? |
6434 | When only can he vote? |
6434 | When was a general blown up by a magazine, in the moment of victory? |
6434 | When was peace concluded? |
6434 | When was peace signed? |
6434 | When was the Constitution adopted? |
6434 | When was the Declaration of Independence adopted? |
6434 | When was the Erie Canal opened? |
6434 | When was the Mississippi River the western boundary of the United States? |
6434 | When was the first constitution given? |
6434 | When was the first gun of the Civil War fired? |
6434 | When was the first railroad constructed? |
6434 | When was the first settlement made? |
6434 | When was war declared? |
6434 | When were both forts captured? |
6434 | When were slaves introduced into this country? |
6434 | When, to whom, and by whom was the land granted? |
6434 | When, where, and by whom was the first permanent French settlement made in America? |
6434 | When, where, and by whom was the first permanent French settlement made in Canada? |
6434 | When, where, and by whom was the first town in the United States founded? |
6434 | When? |
6434 | When? |
6434 | When? |
6434 | When? |
6434 | Where and by whom was the first English settlement made? |
6434 | Where and by whom was the first settlement in Delaware made? |
6434 | Where and when is it probable the American continent was discovered? |
6434 | Where did Cornwallis go after the failure of his southern campaign? |
6434 | Where did Hood go? |
6434 | Where did Raleigh plant his first colony? |
6434 | Where did he go? |
6434 | Where do they occur? |
6434 | Where does our land lie?"] |
6434 | Where is Columbus''s tomb? |
6434 | Where is Labrador? |
6434 | Where is the"Cradle of Liberty"? |
6434 | Where may a crime be committed"not within a state"? |
6434 | Where most numerous? |
6434 | Where must such a trial be held? |
6434 | Where was the capital? |
6434 | Where was the first attack? |
6434 | Where was the first legislative body held? |
6434 | Where was the war mainly fought? |
6434 | Where were the Confederates located? |
6434 | Where, when, and by whom was the first English settlement made in the United States? |
6434 | Which centuries were characterized by explorations, and which century by settlements? |
6434 | Which colonies early enjoyed the greatest liberty? |
6434 | Which colony took the Bible as its guide? |
6434 | Which is the longer, the Atlantic Cable or the Pacific Railroad? |
6434 | Which is the second oldest town in the United States? |
6434 | Which nation ultimately secured the whole region? |
6434 | Which party absorbed most of the old federalists? |
6434 | Who adopted his plan? |
6434 | Who are ineligible to the office? |
6434 | Who are required to take an oath or affirmation to support the Constitution of the United States? |
6434 | Who are the presidential electors? |
6434 | Who assumed command of the army of the Potomac? |
6434 | Who choose the representatives? |
6434 | Who chooses the other officers of the Senate? |
6434 | Who claimed this region? |
6434 | Who decides upon the"elections, returns and qualifications"of the representatives and of the senators? |
6434 | Who discovered the River St. Lawrence? |
6434 | Who earned the glory of this victory and who got it? |
6434 | Who elect the officers of the House? |
6434 | Who elect the senators? |
6434 | Who explored the Mississippi valley? |
6434 | Who finally captured it? |
6434 | Who finally captured the fort? |
6434 | Who fired the first gun of this war? |
6434 | Who first settled it? |
6434 | Who fixes and pays the salaries of members of Congress? |
6434 | Who fixes the punishment? |
6434 | Who forced it to surrender? |
6434 | Who founded Salem? |
6434 | Who gained great credit? |
6434 | Who is the president of the Senate? |
6434 | Who led the first expedition? |
6434 | Who made the first attempt to carry out Cabot''s plan? |
6434 | Who made the first voyage along the Pacific coast? |
6434 | Who now took command of the Confederate army? |
6434 | Who now took command of the Union troops? |
6434 | Who now took command? |
6434 | Who obtained a grant of the territory now embraced in Connecticut? |
6434 | Who presides when the President of the United States is impeached? |
6434 | Who settled about Massachusetts Bay? |
6434 | Who settled the different parts? |
6434 | Who succeeded Johnston in command? |
6434 | Who succeeded him? |
6434 | Who succeeded him? |
6434 | Who succeeded them? |
6434 | Who took command of the Union army before Washington? |
6434 | Who used them in battle? |
6434 | Who was chosen? |
6434 | Who was elected eighteenth President? |
6434 | Who was elected eighth President? |
6434 | Who was elected eleventh President? |
6434 | Who was elected fifth President? |
6434 | Who was elected fourteenth President? |
6434 | Who was elected fourth President? |
6434 | Who was elected ninth President? |
6434 | Who was elected seventh President? |
6434 | Who was elected sixteenth President? |
6434 | Who was elected sixth President? |
6434 | Who was elected third President? |
6434 | Who was elected twelfth President? |
6434 | Who was entitled to the prefix Mr.? |
6434 | Who was his opponent? |
6434 | Who was its author? |
6434 | Who was the ablest of them? |
6434 | Who was the commanding general? |
6434 | Who was the first French navigator to reach the continent? |
6434 | Who was the first President of the United States? |
6434 | Who was the founder of Pennsylvania? |
6434 | Who was the hero of the fight? |
6434 | Who was the hero of this exploit? |
6434 | Who were elected President and Vice- President? |
6434 | Who were killed? |
6434 | Who were nominated for the Presidency? |
6434 | Who were nominated for the presidency in''77? |
6434 | Who were the Hessians? |
6434 | Who were the Northmen? |
6434 | Who were the Presidential candidates? |
6434 | Who were the Presidential candidates? |
6434 | Who were the Puritans? |
6434 | Who were the leaders of each? |
6434 | Who were the mound- builders? |
6434 | Who were the"patroons"? |
6434 | Who"ordained and established"this Constitution? |
6434 | Whose dying words were,"Do n''t give up the ship"? |
6434 | Why are these States so named? |
6434 | Why could not sailors have crossed the ocean before as well as then? |
6434 | Why did Cortez explore that region? |
6434 | Why did Lee now march North? |
6434 | Why did Lee send Early into the Shenandoah Valley? |
6434 | Why did Mrs. Hutchinson become obnoxious? |
6434 | Why did Ponce de Leon come to the new world? |
6434 | Why did Smith leave? |
6434 | Why did he retire to Yorktown? |
6434 | Why did he seek assistance? |
6434 | Why did he so name it? |
6434 | Why did he so name it? |
6434 | Why did not Webster and Clay become Presidents? |
6434 | Why did not the Indians disturb them? |
6434 | Why did the Americans fail? |
6434 | Why did the French in Canada extend their explorations westward to the Mississippi rather than southward into New York? |
6434 | Why did the Indians now become hostile? |
6434 | Why did the Pilgrims come to this country? |
6434 | Why did this fail? |
6434 | Why not? |
6434 | Why so called? |
6434 | Why so eagerly read? |
6434 | Why was Genet recalled? |
6434 | Why was Johnson impeached? |
6434 | Why was Maryland so named? |
6434 | Why was Montreal so named? |
6434 | Why was New England spared? |
6434 | Why was Virginia so named? |
6434 | Why was it made? |
6434 | Why was it oppressive? |
6434 | Why was it passed? |
6434 | Why was it so named? |
6434 | Why was not Adams re- elected? |
6434 | Why was not the colony allowed to join the New England Union? |
6434 | Why was the Fugitive Slave law obnoxious? |
6434 | Why was the battle of New Orleans unnecessary? |
6434 | Why was the charter so highly prized? |
6434 | Why was the colony named New York? |
6434 | Why was the island so called? |
6434 | Why was the tea thrown overboard? |
6434 | Why was the war now transferred to the south? |
6434 | Why was this colony popular? |
6434 | Why was this measure warmly opposed? |
6434 | Why was"Stonewall"Jackson so called? |
6434 | Why were Davis''s Strait, Baffin''s Bay, Hudson River, Frobisher''s Strait, etc., so named? |
6434 | Why were books of travel more abundant then? |
6434 | Why were the New Hampshire Grants so called? |
6434 | Why were the River St. Lawrence, Florida, St. Augustine, etc., so named? |
6434 | Why were these claims conflicting? |
6434 | Why were these now awakened? |
6434 | Why were they passed? |
6434 | Why were they so obstinately attacked and defended? |
6434 | Why, in the Missouri Compromise, was 36 degrees 30 minutes taken as the boundary between the slave and the free States? |
6434 | Why? |
6434 | Why? |
6434 | Why? |
6434 | Why? |
6434 | With what battle did it close? |
6434 | With what intent did Lord Baltimore secure a grant of land in America? |
6434 | With what intention was this colony planned? |
6434 | Writ of habeas corpus? |
6434 | Yet, how was he to aid it? |
6434 | [ Footnote: Section 4. Who prescribes the"time, place and manner"of electing representatives and senators? |
6434 | [ Footnote: What debts did the United States assume when the Constitution was adopted?] |
6434 | [ Footnote: What is the supreme law of the land? |
6434 | [ Footnote: What must Congress guarantee to every state? |
6434 | _ Section_ 1. Who are citizens of the United States? |
6434 | _ Section_ 2. Who compose the House of Representatives? |
6434 | and Dec. 21, N.S.? |
6434 | in Tennessee? |
6434 | said Gage,"have your fathers sent you here to exhibit the rebellion they have been teaching you?" |
35587 | A brain fever upon him-- delirious? |
35587 | A brother, I suppose? 35587 A coquette, I suppose?" |
35587 | A glass of whisky and water, if you please? |
35587 | A hossback? |
35587 | A letter carrier, you think? 35587 A mustang trap?" |
35587 | A mustanger? |
35587 | A separation? |
35587 | A shot? |
35587 | A slight service, you call it? 35587 A troop of their_ rangers_ scouring the country for Comanches, I suppose? |
35587 | A young lady? |
35587 | About Loo? 35587 About what?" |
35587 | Accepted, do you suppose? |
35587 | Admire them? 35587 After that?" |
35587 | After what, Mr Stump? |
35587 | Ah-- why? 35587 Ai n''t thar though?" |
35587 | Ai n''t ye riddy, surgint? |
35587 | Ai n''t yur master inside, too? 35587 Alone? |
35587 | Alone? |
35587 | Am I dead, or living? |
35587 | Am I too old? 35587 Among trees, and picturesque?" |
35587 | An American lady!--out here? 35587 An American lady?" |
35587 | An Indian trick? |
35587 | An''what shed I mean? |
35587 | An''yur young Master Henry-- air he gone too? |
35587 | And Wild Cat himself-- what of him? |
35587 | And could you have done it sooner? |
35587 | And has been very kind to Mr Maurice Gerald? |
35587 | And has n''t he done murder? |
35587 | And if I had, what would it have mattered? 35587 And if there_ was_ a quarrel,"argued the officer of infantry,"what then? |
35587 | And the body, too; where can_ it_ be? |
35587 | And the money with which you paid him? |
35587 | And the woman? |
35587 | And to stay there? |
35587 | And what for a signal? |
35587 | And what of that? 35587 And who do you suppose_ he_ is?" |
35587 | And why not now, uncle? |
35587 | And why not, Mr Stump? 35587 And why not? |
35587 | And why not? |
35587 | And why, major? |
35587 | And you are now the most skilled in all Texas? |
35587 | And you have? |
35587 | And you, sir? 35587 And you, sir?" |
35587 | And-- and-- Henry? |
35587 | Anyhow; who the devil could find his way out of an ashpit like this? 35587 Are you speaking the truth, sir? |
35587 | Are you sure, Mr Gerald, that your modesty is not prompting_ you_ to overrate your rivals? 35587 Are you sure?" |
35587 | Are your mules doing their best? |
35587 | Aristocracy? |
35587 | Arrah, now, how could I be mistaken? |
35587 | Asleep? |
35587 | At your orders, s''norita? |
35587 | At your orders, s''norita? |
35587 | Beside himself? |
35587 | Besides, his own shindy with the same man is suggestive of suspicion-- is it not? |
35587 | Besides, why had the head been cut off? 35587 Bitten you, you say-- where?" |
35587 | Burn my throat, ye say? 35587 But are you sure you can sit her over it?" |
35587 | But before your brother came upon the ground, was there not some one else in your company? |
35587 | But fwhat diz it all mane? |
35587 | But how, and why? 35587 But how-- when-- you''ve not told me?" |
35587 | But how? |
35587 | But much prettier, of course? 35587 But the mowstanger? |
35587 | But to- day-- when you left-- was there any fresh news in the Settlement? 35587 But whar''s he now? |
35587 | But what did they have a difficulty about? |
35587 | But what is it? |
35587 | But what then? 35587 But what''s cut the hole in the door, an why''s the tother broken out at the back? |
35587 | But what_ does_ it mean? 35587 But where did you see this, Mr O''Neal?" |
35587 | But where is he? |
35587 | But which woman, I wonder? 35587 But who could have betrayed us? |
35587 | But who could have fired it? 35587 But who?--what others?" |
35587 | But whom? |
35587 | But why should the stranger have deceived us? |
35587 | But why, senor? 35587 But why, sir?" |
35587 | But you are sure, sir, he is not badly injured? 35587 But your father? |
35587 | But, Captain Calhoun,protested the overseer, in response to the gentleman who had reproached him in such chaste terms;"how air we to find the way?" |
35587 | But, Cassius: if we should lose our way? |
35587 | But, Miss Poindexter,stammered the guide, still doubting the powers of the spotted mustang,"suppose she can not? |
35587 | But, Misther Stump, did n''t yez till me to do it? 35587 But, Mr Gerald; why should we not ride off at once, in the opposite direction?" |
35587 | But, senor; surely I can see him? |
35587 | But,said he, after a speechless pause,"you do n''t mean to say that you could have controlled-- that the mustang was not running away with you? |
35587 | But-- but, how came_ you_ to be here? |
35587 | By what authority do you command me? 35587 By whom fired, do you think?" |
35587 | By whom? |
35587 | Can you speak French, mademoiselle? |
35587 | Can_ you_ tell us, miss? |
35587 | Come, Zeb; what''s the use of talking about my going back by myself? 35587 Cyan_ you_ give them, Misther Cashius Calhoun?" |
35587 | Dan Marryshow, yez say? 35587 Dead?" |
35587 | Did n''t I see Masther Maurice, as plain as I see yourself at this minnit? 35587 Did n''t yez heear somethin''? |
35587 | Did you follow us any farther? |
35587 | Did you know the man? |
35587 | Did you notice Calhoun as he came back? |
35587 | Did you notice whether repeated strokes had been given? 35587 Did_ you_ leap it?" |
35587 | Div yez think they waren''t Indyins, afther all? |
35587 | Div yez? 35587 Do n''t ye see that the shod tracks air kivered by them o''the maars? |
35587 | Do you intend us to start now? |
35587 | Do you mean this, Maurice Gerald? 35587 Do you remember her name?" |
35587 | Do you suppose it likely that there''s one of them would condescend to speak to the person you''ve named? |
35587 | Do you think it''s an Indian in disguise? |
35587 | Do you think she can do it? |
35587 | Do you wish me, Maurice? |
35587 | Does n''t that bate Banagher? |
35587 | Dreaming, or awake? 35587 Durn it, then, who ked a tuk him out? |
35587 | Durn you, nigger, do n''t ye remember me? 35587 Except the mansion?" |
35587 | Except the-- the--"Exceptin''the man- wuman, ye mane? |
35587 | Fwhare''s the tother-- the young chap, or lady, or wuman-- whichsomiver she art? 35587 Fwhat is it, Gertrude?" |
35587 | Fwhat rayzun? 35587 Going out for a ride, Louise?" |
35587 | Good day, Miss Poindexter? |
35587 | Had we not better silence_ him_? |
35587 | Had you any suspicion why, or by whom, the foul deed had been done? |
35587 | Hain''t I, though? |
35587 | Have I done so? |
35587 | Have they any other weapons? |
35587 | Have you come direct from there? |
35587 | Have you met, or seen, any one, miss-- out here, I mean? |
35587 | He did look rather unhappy,replied the major;"but surely, Captain Sloman, you do n''t attribute it to--?" |
35587 | He has been here, then? |
35587 | He has recovered from his wounds? |
35587 | He is ill? 35587 He may be dangerously wounded-- perhaps even to death?" |
35587 | He moutn''t have the mateerils riddy? 35587 He must be dead not to have heard us?" |
35587 | He''s coming this way, is he not? |
35587 | His horse at the gate? 35587 His name?" |
35587 | How are we to get him back? 35587 How can you tell that?" |
35587 | How could I help it? |
35587 | How do you know they have escaped it? |
35587 | How is Phaylum Onale to know that? 35587 How long ago was that?" |
35587 | How long have I been lying here? 35587 How long? |
35587 | How long? |
35587 | How should I know, cousin Cash? 35587 How should I know?" |
35587 | How was that? |
35587 | How, sir? |
35587 | I hope, sir, you will favour us with your name? |
35587 | I ought to have asked him his name? |
35587 | I suppose you are determined upon fighting? |
35587 | I wonder if I could ever learn to fling it? |
35587 | I wonder if coaxing would do any good? |
35587 | I wonder what puts such nonsense into my head? |
35587 | I wonder who''s brought the beast here? |
35587 | I wonder,muttered he, on re- entering the_ patio_,"whether the blubbering baby be in earnest? |
35587 | I? 35587 If I killed her, what would it avail? |
35587 | If a contrivance, why and to what end? 35587 If the lady be as attractive as you say, I suppose we''ll have Captain Cassius out here also, before long?" |
35587 | Impossible? |
35587 | In that case, ye know whar ye air? |
35587 | In what way can it concern you, Don Miguel Diaz? |
35587 | In what way? |
35587 | In your opinion, was the shot sufficient to have caused death, without the mutilation that, you think, must have been done afterwards? |
35587 | Is he asleep? |
35587 | Is he at home? 35587 Is it modesty?" |
35587 | Is that renegade Indian to be trusted, who appears to be as much an enemy to the whites as to the people of his own race? |
35587 | Is that the danger of which you have been speaking? |
35587 | Is that why the guards have been doubled? 35587 Is the major sure of the Indians being up? |
35587 | Is there a danger? |
35587 | Is there no chance of escape? |
35587 | Is there no chance of shaking him off? 35587 Isidora?" |
35587 | It appears to be a man? 35587 It frightened the others off, you think, and they followed no further?" |
35587 | It might be somebody I would n''t care to encounter? 35587 It might be-- who knows?" |
35587 | It mout be a man? |
35587 | It was the same, then, who visited the jacale at night-- the same Phalim saw? |
35587 | It will kill me, if I stay here? |
35587 | It_ should_ be somethin''of that kind: for what else_ can_ it be? 35587 Judging by your frankness, Miss Poindexter, you will not refuse to inform the Court who that person was?" |
35587 | Kicked? |
35587 | Let me hear it? 35587 Let me look at that card, Henry?" |
35587 | Like?--like? |
35587 | Louises what means this? 35587 Mass Poindex''er, sar? |
35587 | Mass''Tump, you it hab mix wif water? |
35587 | May I ask if this meeting was accidental, or by appointment? |
35587 | May I ask the name of the individual? |
35587 | May I ask where you live? |
35587 | May I ask, if on that night you went into the garden? |
35587 | Maybe the sound of a man''s voice would bring the animal to a stand? 35587 Me pay?" |
35587 | Monongahela? 35587 Mr Poindexter, you mean?" |
35587 | My horse? |
35587 | Na, now; you know what dis chile mean? |
35587 | Name? 35587 Need I tell you that I took that hand? |
35587 | Neither of you can object? |
35587 | No use waiting for that beauty to go to bed? 35587 No, kan''t ye? |
35587 | Now dear old Zeb, you will take this to Mr Gerald? 35587 O''what night air ye palaverin'', Plute?" |
35587 | Odd he should always make back there? |
35587 | Of her, and him? 35587 Of what young fellow do you speak?" |
35587 | Of what, sir? |
35587 | Of whom are you speaking? |
35587 | Of whom do you speak? 35587 Oh, Mr Zebulon Stump, is it you?" |
35587 | Oh; some vaqueros have seen it? |
35587 | On foot, Mr Stump, as usual? |
35587 | On horseback, then? |
35587 | On second thoughts-- perhaps-- better not have him taken? 35587 On the Rio Grande, senor?" |
35587 | On what charge? |
35587 | On your hospitality, perhaps? 35587 Only Phelim you expect to meet? |
35587 | Or is this man mocking me? 35587 Part of it there was some one with you?" |
35587 | Perhaps he is not well waited upon? 35587 Perhaps you are anxious to get back to your party?" |
35587 | Perhaps you will be good enough to inform the Court at what hour? |
35587 | Perhaps,said he,"I might manage to hobble a bit, if I only had a crutch? |
35587 | Poindexter? |
35587 | Prandy und pitters, you calls for, Mishter Calhoun? |
35587 | Prom whom? |
35587 | Ready for what? |
35587 | Save you from what? |
35587 | She''s outside, you say? 35587 Should we not be trespassing on the patience of your people?" |
35587 | Sign? |
35587 | Size? |
35587 | So soon? 35587 Some decoy to draw us into an ambuscade?" |
35587 | Some other danger? 35587 Standing solitary?" |
35587 | Surely I can see him? |
35587 | Surely he is not abed till this hour? 35587 Surely it ca n''t be that? |
35587 | Surely you are jesting, Mr Stump? |
35587 | Surely,said Poindexter, after making an examination of the captured mustang,"this must be the animal of which old Zeb Stump has been telling me?" |
35587 | Tell me, dear Zeb,said she, after directing her maid to withdraw,"why have they arrested this Mexican-- Miguel Diaz I mean? |
35587 | The Lafourche ball? 35587 The aristocratic father, then? |
35587 | The colour? |
35587 | The other? |
35587 | The other? |
35587 | The others? |
35587 | The same? 35587 Then you think the fellow may have killed Poindexter in a fair fight?" |
35587 | Then you''ve come from his place, direct? 35587 Then, no doubt, you have heard that there has been a-- murder-- committed?" |
35587 | There can be no harm in our seeing how the_ Irlandes_ has housed himself out here? |
35587 | There have been Indians, then? |
35587 | There was a reconciliation, then? |
35587 | There''s too many of them fellows coming after-- some that can track, too? 35587 They appear to have made a circuit, and come round again?" |
35587 | They may have crossed at some other place, and continued the pursuit? |
35587 | Three or four mile? 35587 Thur air sommeat amiss? |
35587 | Thur''s jest a posserbillity the skunk mout sneak out i''the night? |
35587 | To whom does it belong-- this_ jacale_? |
35587 | To whom? |
35587 | Trath, yez may;--but how Misther Stump? 35587 Two-- who were they?" |
35587 | Unpleasant news, papa? |
35587 | Upon what? |
35587 | Wal, ye see thet ere prickly cacktis plant growin''cloast to the edge o''the openin''? |
35587 | Wal-- don''t ye see they air kivered wi''them o''the mowstanger''s hoss? |
35587 | Wal; do you remember ever to hev seed it afore? 35587 Was he still in the same temper? |
35587 | Was it a clean out-- as if done by a sharp- edged weapon? |
35587 | Was it she who has done this? |
35587 | Was there a snake at all? |
35587 | Waterspouts? |
35587 | We had better go inside, and make sure? |
35587 | We keep our distance, do n''t we? |
35587 | Well, Spangler, my good fellow; what do you make of it? |
35587 | Well, that-- some of the boys here think there''s been a struggle between him and--"Atween him an who? |
35587 | Well; since you think me so worthless, it wo n''t, I suppose, better your opinion of me, when I tell you what I''m going to do with you? |
35587 | Were you alone? |
35587 | Wha night? 35587 Whar?" |
35587 | What am I to do? 35587 What are we to do?" |
35587 | What are we to do? |
35587 | What are we to do? |
35587 | What can it mean? |
35587 | What can papa have heard? 35587 What can the major have written to him? |
35587 | What can the man be after? |
35587 | What can the masther mane? 35587 What d''ye call this?" |
35587 | What did you do, after making the observations you have described? |
35587 | What did you hear, Mr Calhoun? |
35587 | What div I mane? 35587 What do the fellows mean by their gibberish?" |
35587 | What do ye call this? |
35587 | What do you mean by that? |
35587 | What do you mean, Mr Stump? |
35587 | What do you mean, girl? |
35587 | What do you want, Pluto? |
35587 | What does it all mean? |
35587 | What dress? |
35587 | What durned tom- foolery''s this, boys? |
35587 | What evidence of the generosity you are so good as to ascribe to me? |
35587 | What facts? |
35587 | What fear of them? 35587 What fellur air ye talkin''o''? |
35587 | What game? |
35587 | What have I done? 35587 What have you done with it, sirrah?" |
35587 | What have you seen, that you talk so loudly? |
35587 | What hev ye been hearin''? |
35587 | What hoss? |
35587 | What if I lose sight of her? 35587 What insinuation, sir?" |
35587 | What is causing the commotion? |
35587 | What is it for? |
35587 | What is it, Cash? |
35587 | What is it, Crespino? |
35587 | What is it, Loo? |
35587 | What is it, Mr Sansom? |
35587 | What is it, Pheelum? 35587 What is it, anyhow?" |
35587 | What is it, father? |
35587 | What is it, you confounded fellow? |
35587 | What is it? |
35587 | What is it? |
35587 | What is it? |
35587 | What is it? |
35587 | What is it? |
35587 | What is that? 35587 What is the woman going to do?" |
35587 | What is to be done? |
35587 | What makes her a_ maar_? 35587 What makes ye think he travelled two hunder mile?" |
35587 | What man? 35587 What mattered that? |
35587 | What matters it, if we know he''s guilty? 35587 What matters that? |
35587 | What mean you, Cash? |
35587 | What means this, Don Miguel Diaz? |
35587 | What means this? |
35587 | What means those things I''ve heard-- myself seen? 35587 What news?" |
35587 | What of all that? |
35587 | What of yourself? |
35587 | What proof have you of what you say? 35587 What proof?" |
35587 | What reason did he give for saying that I should pay? 35587 What reason have you to think they were Mexicans?" |
35587 | What sort of a lady? |
35587 | What sort of weapon would you say? |
35587 | What sum? |
35587 | What the deuce is the matter with your heels-- to- day of all others? 35587 What the devil are you talking about? |
35587 | What the devil can that mean? |
35587 | What the devil has got into you, Phelim? 35587 What then?" |
35587 | What varmints, Misther Stump? 35587 What war it?" |
35587 | What would you do for_ him_? |
35587 | What young fellow? |
35587 | What''s a pity? |
35587 | What''s been a doin''hyur? 35587 What''s that you''ve been saying? |
35587 | What''s the use, Sam Manly? 35587 What''s to be did? |
35587 | What''s to be done? 35587 What''s up anyhow? |
35587 | What''s your explanation, Mr Stump? |
35587 | What, then? |
35587 | What? |
35587 | What_ do_ you make of it, gentlemen? |
35587 | What_ kin_ it be? |
35587 | When is it to take place? |
35587 | Where are you going? |
35587 | Where can the boy be? |
35587 | Where did it take place? |
35587 | Where did you meet the lady you speak of? |
35587 | Where is he? |
35587 | Where is it? 35587 Where is my horse?" |
35587 | Where is she? |
35587 | Where is the horse? 35587 Where were you, Miss Poindexter, on the night when your brother was last seen?" |
35587 | Where, Henry-- where? |
35587 | Where? 35587 Where?" |
35587 | Where? |
35587 | Whet sort o''a mustang? |
35587 | Which on''em shed I foller fust? 35587 Which way was she going? |
35587 | Which? 35587 Who can that woman be?" |
35587 | Who cares whether Mr Cassius Calhoun be a dangerous man, or a harmless one? 35587 Who could have helped liking him? |
35587 | Who did you then think it might be? |
35587 | Who does the shoein''o''yur cattle? 35587 Who ever heard of Comanches playing cards?" |
35587 | Who had him out thet night? |
35587 | Who has been heeur? |
35587 | Who has been here since then? |
35587 | Who knows but the cause of quarrel-- if there''s been one-- might not be this splendid senorita so much talked about? 35587 Who knows?" |
35587 | Who then ked it be; unless it war the owner o''the hoss hisself? 35587 Who wants me?" |
35587 | Who war it, then? 35587 Who''s inside the shanty?" |
35587 | Who''s insoide? 35587 Who, then, is the black beast, or what is it-- if not a human?" |
35587 | Who? 35587 Who? |
35587 | Who? |
35587 | Who? |
35587 | Who? |
35587 | Who_ can_ she be? |
35587 | Whose do you think it is, Spangler? |
35587 | Why can I not? |
35587 | Why cyant yez not? 35587 Why do n''t ye stan''still? |
35587 | Why do ye weesh that? 35587 Why do you ask that, Loo? |
35587 | Why do you ask the question, Louise? |
35587 | Why do you think so, papa? 35587 Why do you think that?" |
35587 | Why have you brought it forth? |
35587 | Why have you thus armed yourself? |
35587 | Why not? |
35587 | Why should I not do the same with the body of Henry Poindexter? 35587 Why should I? |
35587 | Why should I? 35587 Why the hell do n''t you haul?" |
35587 | Why you be go''way in dat big hurry? 35587 Why, Major Ringwood? |
35587 | Why, wan''t it himself that tuk the anymal out? |
35587 | Why? |
35587 | Why? |
35587 | Will yez take it nate, or with a little wather? 35587 Will you step this way, Mr Stump?" |
35587 | Wind, sir? 35587 With you on her back?" |
35587 | Without seeing his face? |
35587 | Wo n''t yez wait betther afther tastin''a dhrap av the crayther? |
35587 | Wonder now what thet''s for? |
35587 | Wonder what sort it air, slickerin''aboout hyur at this time o''the night? 35587 Worse than a snake?" |
35587 | Worse, yez say, Misther Stump? 35587 Ye ai n''t got sech a thing as a gun in the shanty? |
35587 | Ye do n''t mean hangin'', do ye? |
35587 | Ye mean who grupped the maar? |
35587 | Ye remimber the shot I fired from the door o''the shanty? |
35587 | Ye say they war on a trail? 35587 Yes-- he must be coming on? |
35587 | Yes-- yes-- who? |
35587 | Yes; how was she dressed? |
35587 | Yez be goin''there, masther Maurice? 35587 Yez do n''t? |
35587 | You admire these wild scenes, Miss Poindexter? |
35587 | You appear impatient to go forward? 35587 You are jesting, Don Miguel?" |
35587 | You are perhaps not aware, Mr Stump,rejoins the Regulator Chief, in a calm voice,"of what we''ve just been hearing?" |
35587 | You are sure he is dead, then? |
35587 | You are sure of it? |
35587 | You changed your mind about its being Indians? |
35587 | You do n''t know her? 35587 You do n''t suppose they leaped it?" |
35587 | You do n''t tink, Pluto, he been gone kill Massa Henry? |
35587 | You expect to be pursued? |
35587 | You hain''t seed nuthin''o''the young lady, hev ye, Mister Calhoun? |
35587 | You have been to his room? |
35587 | You have one? |
35587 | You know my reasons, nephew? |
35587 | You know the old hacienda has a flat roof, I suppose? 35587 You know the spot of open ground at the top of the hill-- where the three roads meet?" |
35587 | You mean the place where some blood was found? |
35587 | You mean the storm of that name? |
35587 | You mean to say my daughter has been here? |
35587 | You meant--? |
35587 | You must ha''been dreemin? |
35587 | You never hunt on horseback, I believe? |
35587 | You promise it? |
35587 | You said you could easily do it, if there was any Indian trouble going on? |
35587 | You saw me, then? |
35587 | You saw the body? |
35587 | You saw the chase then? |
35587 | You say none ob dem gen''l''m you care for? 35587 You see that, major?" |
35587 | You see, gentlemen, the ball is still in the animal''s body? 35587 You think that he and my cousin crossed here together?" |
35587 | You think you might discover some traces? |
35587 | You think, with my hair upon your head, you would be invincible among the men? |
35587 | You use it with great skill? 35587 You wanted to be alone?" |
35587 | You will not marry me then? |
35587 | You will not refuse me now? |
35587 | You wish me to speak further? |
35587 | You''ll admit,rejoined Crossman, of the Rifles,"that the circumstances are strong against him? |
35587 | You''ll have something to eat? 35587 You''re not afraid, ai n''t you?" |
35587 | You''ve lost the way, Cash? |
35587 | You''ve lost the way, nephew? |
35587 | You, major? |
35587 | You,_ alannah_? 35587 You?" |
35587 | You? |
35587 | You_ air_ in a hurry? 35587 Your father may be alarmed by your long absence? |
35587 | Your fellow tenant of the jacale might not like being intruded upon by visitors-- more especially a stranger? |
35587 | Your foster- brother? |
35587 | Yur good to keep a seecret, Maje? 35587 _ Have you anything to say why sentence of death should not be pronounced upon you_?" |
35587 | _ Is_ it the masther? 35587 _ Quien sabe_?" |
35587 | _ Quien sabe_? |
35587 | _ Quien sale_? 35587 _ Si, senor-- si_--yes, of Don Mauricio Zyerral, this the-- house?" |
35587 | ` Yis''again? 35587 ''Tain''t so durnation eezy to kill turkey gobbler arter sun- up, wi''a clamjamferry like this comin''clost upon a fellur''s heels? 35587 ''Tis the third time I''ve seen her passing within this week? 35587 ''Twas a trick got up to try us!--perhaps himself in sight, a witness of our disgraceful flight? 35587 ''tain''t Mass''Tump--''t use to fotch de ven''son an de turkey gobbla to de ole plantashun? 35587 A real rude hut, you say? |
35587 | A simple promise would scarce be sufficient in a crisis like that? |
35587 | A solicitude like that shown for him by the Mexican senora, could scarce spring from simple friendship? |
35587 | A thief?" |
35587 | After all he might have been misinformed? |
35587 | After all, what can Zeb Stump say, or do? |
35587 | After that, where should the assassins be sought for? |
35587 | Ah, then; what would life be to me? |
35587 | Air ye in airnest, nigger?" |
35587 | Alone?" |
35587 | Am I right, senora? |
35587 | Am I to be turned adrift upon the prairie, or shut up in a convent? |
35587 | Am I to take it as a type of this still untraced destiny?" |
35587 | Am I to tell the old gentleman what I think o''t?" |
35587 | Am I to tell_ him_?" |
35587 | An fwhat''s afther them? |
35587 | An fwhere is she now?" |
35587 | An unexpected sight: who could have looked for human being in such a place? |
35587 | An''fwhat div yez think I''ve heerd Owld Duffer talkin''about below?" |
35587 | An''now, as ye know it, what air to hinder you from ridin''past it agin; and follering the trail o''the maars back''ard? |
35587 | An''supposin''I wuz to say yis, fwhat ud yez be afther wantin''wid him?" |
35587 | An''where cyan the masther be, if it was n''t him? |
35587 | An''why air the big gate shet an barred-- in the middle o''breakfist time? |
35587 | An''why shed he have dud it? |
35587 | An''yit, who knows? |
35587 | And after all, there may be nothing to be known? |
35587 | And did n''t he forget to take it? |
35587 | And the woman-- this Mexican-- Isidora? |
35587 | And then what must follow? |
35587 | And then-- what then? |
35587 | And this you call justice? |
35587 | And were you able to tell by that?" |
35587 | And where, and when, did you hear it?" |
35587 | And where, may I ask?" |
35587 | And who could this man be? |
35587 | And why not?" |
35587 | And why should she have interposed to save him-- him, the murderer of my son-- her own brother? |
35587 | And why this?" |
35587 | And why was she riding at such a perilous pace? |
35587 | And why, pray, do you grieve about that?" |
35587 | And why? |
35587 | And will God permit this red- handed ruffian to escape? |
35587 | Another letter?" |
35587 | Anywhere near where we''ve been to- day?" |
35587 | Are his wounds of a dangerous nature?" |
35587 | Are not the Comanches_ en paz_ at present? |
35587 | Are they still continuing on? |
35587 | Are they to be pursued? |
35587 | Are ye ready?" |
35587 | Are ye riddy?" |
35587 | Are you desirous of hearing them?" |
35587 | Arrah now me honey; fwhat ud be the use av consalin''it? |
35587 | Arrah, now, fhwat''s the use av yer stayin''here, wastin''the best part av yer days in doin''nothin''? |
35587 | Arrah, now;_ you_ would n''t be afther havin''a little flask upon yer sweet silf? |
35587 | At this hour? |
35587 | At this season they herd together, and keep apart from the horses; unless when--""When what?" |
35587 | Av coorse they hav, else fwhy is it not in its place? |
35587 | Being up there, how could I avoid seeing you as you passed-- that is, so long as you were not under_ the shade of the acacias_?" |
35587 | Besides fwhat ud be the use? |
35587 | Besides, it wudn''t be raal honest av me to take it widout lave-- wud it, Tara?" |
35587 | Besides, what can I say myself-- the only witness? |
35587 | But did you follow them to-- to-- how far did you follow them?" |
35587 | But did you say you have heard of the animal-- I mean since you left us?" |
35587 | But how did you know of this place? |
35587 | But if he_ should_ come at that time,_ you_ detain him-- won''t you?" |
35587 | But tell me what has caused it? |
35587 | But the man-- the rider? |
35587 | But the man-- what was he doing? |
35587 | But the mare? |
35587 | But to what end? |
35587 | But to what purpose? |
35587 | But true: I think I''ve heard you say you prefer that sort of thing?" |
35587 | But what could that thing have meant? |
35587 | But what of that? |
35587 | But what signify ten miles? |
35587 | But what were you going to say? |
35587 | But what would you have me do?" |
35587 | But when? |
35587 | But who air the young gen''leman yur speakin''o''? |
35587 | But who could have done it? |
35587 | But who do ye_ think_ it war? |
35587 | But who is the lucky individual who accomplished the capture?" |
35587 | But why is Louise Poindexter there-- alone-- unaccompanied by white or black, by relative or slave? |
35587 | But why is he still absent? |
35587 | But why shed it temp him to the killin''o''her brother? |
35587 | But why should Henry Poindexter have been excited too? |
35587 | But your mount? |
35587 | But, Miss Poindexter, may I ask how you knew that I have been this way at all?" |
35587 | By keeping to the former, he might find out much; but by changing to the latter he might learn more? |
35587 | By my faith, I''m in a serious scrape? |
35587 | By whom?" |
35587 | Can I?" |
35587 | Can any one have told him? |
35587 | Can any one suggest what it is to be?" |
35587 | Can it be that she is taken? |
35587 | Can it be the red- skinned marauders? |
35587 | Can it be, that she has been overtaken and captured? |
35587 | Can the charge be true? |
35587 | Can we do nothing to avoid it?" |
35587 | Can we do so?" |
35587 | Can you explain, Louise?" |
35587 | Clinging to her tail? |
35587 | Could it be Louise Poindexter? |
35587 | Could it be the young Creole-- the cousin of his direst enemy as well as his reputed sweetheart? |
35587 | Could the lady have ridden out to meet him, or Maurice gone in? |
35587 | Could there be a doubt of it? |
35587 | D''you s''pose any man o''sense believes in sech varmint as them? |
35587 | Dan Marryshow? |
35587 | Daylight? |
35587 | De ole massr, or de young''un?" |
35587 | Dear Zeb, you promise me?" |
35587 | Did I not tell you to go home? |
35587 | Did any one know where the horse- hunter had his home? |
35587 | Did he tell ye o''nothin''else he seed hyur?" |
35587 | Did he wish to show his zeal by going alone? |
35587 | Did n''t I cut the pisen out, soon''s I killed the critter, by cuttin''off o''its head?" |
35587 | Did n''t I fill it for Masther Maurice to take wid him the last time he went to the sittlements? |
35587 | Did n''t I tell yez there was another snake? |
35587 | Did n''t yez save her life into the bargain?" |
35587 | Did n''t yez see nothin''av a wuman, Miss Pointdixther?" |
35587 | Did some one say, name? |
35587 | Did you ever see anything so beautiful as she is, Phelim-- I mean in the way of horseflesh?" |
35587 | Did you hear him state any?" |
35587 | Did you?" |
35587 | Did your vaqueros get close enough to know what it was?" |
35587 | Div yez mane a rattle- snake?" |
35587 | Div yez mane is for the same now? |
35587 | Div yez mane that it''s dangerous?" |
35587 | Do n''t I till ye that the masther''s in bid?" |
35587 | Do n''t ye see them thur bruises on the grass?" |
35587 | Do n''t ye see thur toe- marks, both on this side an the t''other? |
35587 | Do n''t yez think so, Tara?" |
35587 | Do n''t yez, misthress?" |
35587 | Do n''t you see a coal- black cloud spreading over the sky? |
35587 | Do n''t you think so, Miss Poindexter?" |
35587 | Do not tell me that he is ill?" |
35587 | Do you expect to meet any one there?" |
35587 | Do you know if she has often visited him?" |
35587 | Do you know that we''ve been chased by a drove of wild steeds, and had actually to ride for our lives?" |
35587 | Do you mean it?" |
35587 | Do you mean to say that the despatch- rider-- if he be one-- is leading us into-- into an ambuscade?" |
35587 | Do you not know me? |
35587 | Do you see anything there?" |
35587 | Do you speak the truth,_ nor capitan_?" |
35587 | Do you think she can carry you over--""Over what, sir?" |
35587 | Do you wish me to intercede, and make up your quarrel with Pluto?" |
35587 | Do you?" |
35587 | Does he knew that we have met?" |
35587 | Drunk, or dreaming? |
35587 | Entiende, V_?" |
35587 | Even if going in the direction of the doubtful streamlet, he might never succeed in reaching it? |
35587 | Even if he should not succeed in concealing himself within the thicket, who is there to overtake him? |
35587 | Father of fifty years old, why reason in this foolish fashion? |
35587 | Fetch them to your feet? |
35587 | Fetch whom?" |
35587 | Fo what you ask, Mass Tump?" |
35587 | For the latter, who ever really loved that cared a straw for class, or caste? |
35587 | For what div yez want me to do that?" |
35587 | For what do you ask forgiveness?" |
35587 | For what purpose? |
35587 | For what reason should the young fellow be leading us astray?" |
35587 | For what reason?" |
35587 | For what reezun? |
35587 | For what, nephew?" |
35587 | For what?" |
35587 | For what?" |
35587 | Freshly killed, he appears? |
35587 | Further proofs?" |
35587 | Fust place what do ye make o''the young fellur bein''wownded hisself? |
35587 | Ghost it could not be; flesh and bones I grasped myself; so did Vicente on the other side? |
35587 | Go to slape agane? |
35587 | Gone, yez say? |
35587 | Gratitude do n''t get out of its bed in the middle of the night-- to keep appointments at the bottom of a garden? |
35587 | Grief-- fear-- jealousy-- what must be the state of the soul in which these emotions are co- existent? |
35587 | Had he been only restrained by the presence of his sister from attacking me? |
35587 | Had she grown fonder of the society of her Texan relatives-- fonder as they grew older? |
35587 | Had they killed one another? |
35587 | Hain''t ye seed thet afore, ye greenhorn? |
35587 | Hain''t yo forgot to fetch yur head wi ye?" |
35587 | Has any one else been to this place?" |
35587 | Has he taken advantage of your-- your-- unfortunate passion?" |
35587 | Has it bitten him?" |
35587 | Has it left any, I wonder?" |
35587 | Has met with some misfortune? |
35587 | Has she who addressed it succumbed to the pursuer? |
35587 | Has some other had the offer, and earned the thousand dollars? |
35587 | Has the whole day been a dream? |
35587 | Has there been a quarrel with any one?" |
35587 | Have I spoken like one who jests?" |
35587 | Have a little sugar, or honey, along with it?" |
35587 | Have n''t you met a woman astride a grey horse?" |
35587 | Have you any names here? |
35587 | Have you ever been in a hunting- field, at home, with riding habits trailing the sward, and plumed hats proudly nodding around you? |
35587 | Have you got any?" |
35587 | Have you heard anything of the pretty creature?" |
35587 | Have you heard anything, miss?" |
35587 | Have you made any discovery in this queer affair? |
35587 | Have you nothing more to communicate?" |
35587 | Have you seen a ghost?" |
35587 | Have_ you_ a house?" |
35587 | He could not be sure of their not burning his fingers-- those queer cards? |
35587 | He is riding at the rate of twenty to the hour; and in half an hour he may find shelter in the chapparal? |
35587 | He looks as if you had been riding a long race-- like ourselves?" |
35587 | He may be in some poor place-- perhaps uncourteously treated-- perhaps neglected? |
35587 | He may have ridden out again? |
35587 | He may not come? |
35587 | He may not have any delicacies-- such as an invalid stands in need of? |
35587 | He might capture the Headless Horseman, and ascertain from_ him_ the why and wherefore of his wild wanderings? |
35587 | He might not be going in the right direction? |
35587 | He rud out somewhar, and the hoss kim back''ithout him? |
35587 | He s a snake bit ye?" |
35587 | He saw me in company with-- Can it be that? |
35587 | He sed, that his life moight depend upon it? |
35587 | He sees them; but what of that? |
35587 | He''s at home, ai n''t he?" |
35587 | He''s near enough for your_ escopette_, is he not?" |
35587 | He''s only the girl''s cousin, you say?" |
35587 | He_ is_ in earnest, else why that row in the stable? |
35587 | He_ may_ be in his room? |
35587 | Henry thrown from his horse? |
35587 | Her beauty may have lost some of its bloom?" |
35587 | Her father-- can he? |
35587 | Her name is--""Is?" |
35587 | Here goes?" |
35587 | Hev they gone that way agin?" |
35587 | His case might not be so hopeless? |
35587 | His fingers were fearfully lacerated in the act; but what mattered that, when weighed against the life of his beloved master? |
35587 | His head cut off?" |
35587 | His rival will soon be no more; but what matters it? |
35587 | His wounds-- they are not dangerous?" |
35587 | His''n I serpose? |
35587 | Hiv yez any about ye?" |
35587 | How air it to be done? |
35587 | How am I to git his feet up?" |
35587 | How am I to lit yez know, if you''re beyant hearin''av me voice? |
35587 | How are they to find their way? |
35587 | How are we to live, if the gun goes?" |
35587 | How came I into it? |
35587 | How came the cousin of Louise Poindexter to be astir at that late hour of the night, or, as it was now, the earliest of the morning? |
35587 | How come you to be here? |
35587 | How could I have remained in ignorance of it? |
35587 | How could it be otherwise, with such a sorrow at her heart? |
35587 | How do you live? |
35587 | How fur d''ye reck''n?" |
35587 | How had El Coyote got hold of it? |
35587 | How is he? |
35587 | How is she to know that their intent is not hostile? |
35587 | How long do it take him to put on a kupple?" |
35587 | How long since I saw it first? |
35587 | How long was it to continue? |
35587 | How long''s it since he shod any o''yourn?" |
35587 | How much did Don Miguel pay you for your treason?" |
35587 | How on earth can you know all that?" |
35587 | How shall I explain it? |
35587 | How the hell could they have come into the possession of the other?" |
35587 | How then should he have prepared such an infernal surprise? |
35587 | How thin?" |
35587 | How was it to terminate? |
35587 | How was the engagement to be given? |
35587 | How, Zeb?" |
35587 | How, Zeb?" |
35587 | How? |
35587 | How?" |
35587 | I can speak to you in Spanish, if you prefer it; but I dare say you will understand me better in English: which, I presume, is your native tongue?" |
35587 | I do n''t see him nowhar''beout the premises; an I reck''n he ai n''t rud out, seein''as the sorrel''s hyur?" |
35587 | I fear you are taking leave of your senses, or have left them behind you in Louisiana? |
35587 | I have no longer a son?" |
35587 | I hope there''s nothing--""The matther wid him, yez wur goin''to say? |
35587 | I hope they hain''t--""Have n''t what?" |
35587 | I hope thur hain''t nuthin''gone astray?" |
35587 | I know not how I shall ever be able to reciprocate your kindness?" |
35587 | I know the worthless wretch that''s driven you to this denial--""Who?" |
35587 | I liked him from the first-- you know I did? |
35587 | I mean it-- before this time_ to- morrow_, you shall stand in the witness- box?" |
35587 | I must have been aslape, an dhramin? |
35587 | I never told you I did-- did I?" |
35587 | I presume I have guessed aright: you meant the Indians?" |
35587 | I reckon we can cross a piece of scorched prairie, without wheel- marks to guide us? |
35587 | I said brown sherry, did n''t I?" |
35587 | I suppose a man must n''t fight, however much aggrieved, without first obtaining a licence from Major Ringwood? |
35587 | I suppose the horse has his head upon him? |
35587 | I suppose there is a question about that?" |
35587 | I suppose we can travel over a black prairie, as safely as a green one? |
35587 | I suppose you understand me?" |
35587 | I think I saw a jar inside, that''s intended to go?" |
35587 | I think you said you would prefer whisky?" |
35587 | I was beginning to be alarmed about--""About what, sir?" |
35587 | I wonder if he hev left any o''the licker? |
35587 | I wonder what has become of Zeb Stump?" |
35587 | I wondher now if them Indyins has come acrass av the dimmyjan? |
35587 | I''ve been told that the Mexicans commence almost in childhood; that that is why they attain to such wonderful skill?" |
35587 | If I kill him? |
35587 | If he could but overhear what they were saying? |
35587 | If it be he, why should he be going that way?" |
35587 | If not she, who else could it be? |
35587 | If not, what was her motive? |
35587 | If not, what was it? |
35587 | If she has caused humiliation to the woman she hates, along with it she may have brought ruin upon the man whom she loves? |
35587 | If the former, was Don Silvio aware of it? |
35587 | If the latter, was he at home-- an approving party to the assignation? |
35587 | If there has, owld dog, fwhat''ud become av you an me? |
35587 | If there was that--""You have not heard the news, then?" |
35587 | If there''s anything asthray wid me imaginashun, fhwat is it that''s gone wrong wid your own? |
35587 | If these_ men_--_Los Reguladores_--the dreaded judges I''ve heard of-- if they should find him guilty, where may it end? |
35587 | If you have any doubts, had you not better abandon her? |
35587 | In all likelihood it stayed not where it was sent, but was lost in the secret recesses of the chapparal? |
35587 | In coorse he hated yur cousin Cash-- an who does n''t, I shed like to know? |
35587 | In doubt she advanced to address him:"I may have made a mistake?" |
35587 | In either case, it might be days before he could use the limb; and what, meanwhile, was he to do? |
35587 | In fact I did so: you saw it?" |
35587 | In other words, was he an eavesdropper by accident, or a spy acting upon information previously communicated to him? |
35587 | In the strife, whose sounds had indistinctly reached her, there may have been a third party-- Maurice Gerald? |
35587 | In what direction? |
35587 | In what way?" |
35587 | Indians? |
35587 | Into the corral, wid the others?" |
35587 | Is he about to unburden his conscience of the weight that must be on it? |
35587 | Is he at home? |
35587 | Is he dead, or is it a_ ruse_ to get me near? |
35587 | Is he inside?" |
35587 | Is it a Mexican word? |
35587 | Is it but his suspicions? |
35587 | Is it fear? |
35587 | Is it from training; or does a horse run faster when ridden? |
35587 | Is it he-- Henry?" |
35587 | Is it imperative you should go?" |
35587 | Is it man, or demon, that mocks me? |
35587 | Is it mockery, this seeming contempt of court? |
35587 | Is it on fire_ now_?" |
35587 | Is it so, Mr Gerald?" |
35587 | Is it so?" |
35587 | Is it something to be alarmed about?" |
35587 | Is it surprising that in such a land women should be found, endowed with those qualities that have been ascribed to Isidora? |
35587 | Is it the hand of God that directs this enemy on his track? |
35587 | Is it the mere instinct of the animal, giving way to a blind unreasoning effort at impossible escape? |
35587 | Is it the way he is wanted to go? |
35587 | Is it to be an acknowledgment of guilt? |
35587 | Is it to prove so again? |
35587 | Is it true that your brother parted in anger with the prisoner at the bar?" |
35587 | Is it true, Gerald? |
35587 | Is it yours? |
35587 | Is n''t there the smell av swate fingers about it? |
35587 | Is she straying? |
35587 | Is she there of her own accord-- by her own free will? |
35587 | Is she willing to have you? |
35587 | Is that all you know about it? |
35587 | Is that beauteous form in the embrace of a paint- bedaubed savage? |
35587 | Is that so, girl?" |
35587 | Is that so? |
35587 | Is that to be the law of the land?" |
35587 | Is the macho coming on?" |
35587 | Is the old maje really afraid of his getting out of the guard- house?" |
35587 | Is the trial to be further postponed? |
35587 | Is there a boding in the behaviour of the birds? |
35587 | Is there a dead body?" |
35587 | Is there any house on the other side?" |
35587 | Is this the thought that sustains him? |
35587 | It accounts for his cold indifference to me? |
35587 | It air the hoss''s throat ye mean, I s''pose?" |
35587 | It could not be a man? |
35587 | It could not be anything relating to young Poindexter''s sister?" |
35587 | It could scarce be caused by the absence of her brother from the breakfast- table? |
35587 | It cyan''t be smothered up in the blankyet? |
35587 | It cyant be yersilf, Miss Pointdixther? |
35587 | It is broken by the formalised interrogatory of the judge? |
35587 | It is his? |
35587 | It might be the individual whose form had just faded out of sight? |
35587 | It might be there again? |
35587 | It seemed a most unpropitious place for playing eavesdropper; and yet there might be a chance? |
35587 | It ud do it no good; nayther cyan it do him any harm to spake about it? |
35587 | Kin ye promise me three days?" |
35587 | Know ye not that some must suffer-- must work and starve-- that others may enjoy the luxury of idleness? |
35587 | Know you where you are, sir? |
35587 | Lazoed in his saddle and dragged to the earth? |
35587 | Let me enter, and watch over him? |
35587 | Let me see? |
35587 | Like themselves, it could only be going towards the Leona: perhaps some government convoy on its way to Fort Inge? |
35587 | Listened she to the voices of the birds, from garden and grove swelling harmoniously around her? |
35587 | Masther Maurice? |
35587 | Maurice Gerald never--""Did the deed, you are going to say? |
35587 | May I ask what it was, Mr Gerald?" |
35587 | May I have your permission to introduce this Hibernian fashion into the settlements of Texas?" |
35587 | May be it''ll be comin''this way in purshoot av them?" |
35587 | Maybe he was about to commit_ murder_? |
35587 | Maybe the overseer? |
35587 | Maybe yez do n''t know that the whisky''s on the idge of bein''out? |
35587 | Mexicano_?" |
35587 | Might there not remain some trace of that clandestine correspondence in the place where it had been carried on? |
35587 | Miss Looey, you so''peak?" |
35587 | Mout it be thet ere individooal yur inquirin''abeout?" |
35587 | Much more might the thief? |
35587 | My cousin, a young lady, betrayed by a common scamp-- a horse, trader-- who would have said a word against it? |
35587 | No doubt you can identify it at some distance?" |
35587 | No, they are not near? |
35587 | Not at the tavern, I hope?" |
35587 | Not in his sleeping- room, I suppose?" |
35587 | Not me, I hope?" |
35587 | Nothin''happened to yur young mistress, I hope? |
35587 | Now, sir, I hope you are satisfied?" |
35587 | Now, sir, will that be agreeable to you?" |
35587 | O blissed Mother, what will become av me? |
35587 | O, sir, tell me, what is the nature of his illness-- what has caused it?" |
35587 | One o''two things it air boun''to be: eyther a bunnel o''rags, or ole Harry from hell?" |
35587 | One who can keep my secret-- who? |
35587 | Only a mile you say?" |
35587 | Only him?" |
35587 | Only say ye''ll streetch a pint, an gi''me three days?" |
35587 | Only the Comanches could have been so cruel? |
35587 | Only the hoss comin''home wi''some rid spots on the seddle?" |
35587 | Or am I mad-- mad-- mad?" |
35587 | Or go on and brave the dark storm that is fast gathering around him? |
35587 | Or had Diaz met him on the way, and forced the letter from him? |
35587 | Or had she become conscious of playing a part open to the suspicion of being unfeminine? |
35587 | Or had the severance been effected by a single cut?" |
35587 | Or how heartily I pressed it? |
35587 | Or is it his tail that is missing?" |
35587 | Or is it the breathing of the horse? |
35587 | Or it may have been the bud of a young love, blighted ere it reached blooming-- by absence, oft fatal to such tender plants of passion? |
35587 | Or was it another chapter of incongruous impossibilities, like that still fresh before his mind? |
35587 | Or, is it only me imaginayshin that''s desavin''me? |
35587 | Or, perhaps, it was but a casual thing-- the encounter of which he had been told, between his daughter and Maurice the mustanger? |
35587 | Or, was it the whisky that did it? |
35587 | Perceiving it, the planter approached, and accosted him with the inquiry:"Is there still a danger?" |
35587 | Perhaps Phelim along with him? |
35587 | Perhaps a second day and night-- or longer-- who can tell how long? |
35587 | Perhaps he''ll repeat his visit, when he thinks I''m in a proper state to receive him? |
35587 | Perhaps it can only be answered by God and himself?" |
35587 | Perhaps it may be a prison?" |
35587 | Perhaps they may have been successful? |
35587 | Perhaps you are yourself interested in Miss Poindexter, notwithstanding your pretensions to be considered a Joseph? |
35587 | Perhaps you do not live_ alone_? |
35587 | Perhaps you will still further assist me by helping me into the saddle? |
35587 | Perhaps you''d like to ride off along with that swaggering fellow? |
35587 | Poindexter to one of the party, who understands Spanish:"_ A jacale_?" |
35587 | Preehaps ye want to see the master o''t?" |
35587 | Pwhat wud the blue- eyed colleen say, if she knew yez were in such danger heeur?" |
35587 | Relieved of this, had he come after me to demand satisfaction for the injury he supposed her to have sustained? |
35587 | S''norita_, who''d have expected to find your ladyship in this lonely place-- wasting your sweetness on the thorny chapparal?" |
35587 | Saint Patrick presarve us, whare is it? |
35587 | Sant Pathrick and all the others to boot, fwhat am I talkin''about? |
35587 | Sant Pathrick protict me, but fwhat was it thin? |
35587 | Sartin the lead struck agin somethin''solid; an I reck''n thur''s nothin''solid in the karkidge o''a ghost?" |
35587 | Senor, what name?" |
35587 | Shall I go back, and dare her to deadly strife?" |
35587 | Shall he plunge back into the thicket, and hide himself from the eyes of men? |
35587 | Shall we move forr''ad, major?" |
35587 | She may yet kick against the traces, if she find the harness not to her liking; and then what am I to do-- poor I?" |
35587 | She was here scarce two weeks ago, was she not? |
35587 | Should he continue along the trail he was already deciphering; or forsake it for that of the steed that had just swept by? |
35587 | Should she make a retreat through that, undignified as it might be? |
35587 | Shure now it cyant?" |
35587 | Shure now, it is n''t wan av them Mixikin girls--_mowchachas_, as they call them? |
35587 | Shure now, yez wudn''t till upon me, if I gave yez a thrifle av a kiss? |
35587 | Shure thare''s somethin''detainin''him? |
35587 | Shure yez do n''t make more than a bare livin''by the horse- catchin''; an if yez did, what mathers it? |
35587 | Shure yez wo n''t object to my doin''that?" |
35587 | Shurly ye know what a maar is?" |
35587 | Snakes, div yez mane?" |
35587 | So-- you''ve let him off?" |
35587 | Some closer tie must have been established between them? |
35587 | Some grand senora, I suppose? |
35587 | Some other shares your-- jacale-- as you call it?" |
35587 | Somebody''s promised him his costs? |
35587 | Something passed between them?" |
35587 | Surely he is breathing?" |
35587 | Surely he would n''t object to a quartering with the Hancocks?" |
35587 | Surely it ca n''t be? |
35587 | Surely it can not be human_?" |
35587 | Surely it could not be human? |
35587 | Surely it could not be human? |
35587 | Surely it could not be human? |
35587 | Surely it is sufficient if he be allowed to proceed with his_ very plausible tale_?" |
35587 | Surely it was? |
35587 | Surely the crisis had come? |
35587 | Surely there''s no danger of his making an attempt to steal out of his prison?" |
35587 | Surely they would n''t have molested me, gallant fellows as they are? |
35587 | Surely to God he do n''t intend making his way across into the garden? |
35587 | Surely you are joking?" |
35587 | Surely you can_ convince_ her?" |
35587 | Surely you have n''t allowed them to get away? |
35587 | Surely you know her-- Louise? |
35587 | Surely you will allow me to give you something better?" |
35587 | Surely''tis as much so as archery, or skating? |
35587 | Surely, gentlemen, this ca n''t be the man we''re in search of?" |
35587 | Surely_ she_ should know-- she who had penned the appointment, and spoken so confidently of his keeping it? |
35587 | Taken with his stylish dress, I suppose? |
35587 | Tara had returned? |
35587 | Tell me, miss; have you seen anybody out here-- that is-- have you met any one, riding about, or camped, or halted anywhere?" |
35587 | Tell me-- is he in great danger?" |
35587 | Texan justice? |
35587 | Thar do n''t''pear to be anythin''arter him? |
35587 | Thar''s none under the blanket, is thar?" |
35587 | Thars some o''the hands air a smith, I reck''n?" |
35587 | That some must be slaves, that others may be free?" |
35587 | That uncourteous start could scarce be an intention-- except on the part of the spotted mustang? |
35587 | That was the danger to be dreaded?" |
35587 | That''s it, ai n''t it?" |
35587 | That''s it, is it? |
35587 | The Comanches have done it?" |
35587 | The Dona Isidora here?--on the Leona, I mean?" |
35587 | The Indians are not here? |
35587 | The Indians? |
35587 | The cause? |
35587 | The cyabin div yez mane?" |
35587 | The dress-- but why need we describe it? |
35587 | The faithful creature could not transport him from the spot; and to stay there would be to die of hunger-- perhaps of the wounds he had received? |
35587 | The head? |
35587 | The horses you mean?" |
35587 | The invalid that lay below, almost under her feet, in a chamber of the hacienda-- her cousin Cassius Calhoun? |
35587 | The mare, standing saddled by his side, might still have betrayed him? |
35587 | The mustanger must be mad? |
35587 | The neighing of her steed has betrayed it? |
35587 | The prisoner is asked, according to the usual formality,--"_Guilty, or not guilty_?" |
35587 | The river must be on the other side? |
35587 | The tongue of scandal takes delight in torturing; and he may have been chosen as one of its victims? |
35587 | There can be little harm in it: since he has gone astray in good company?" |
35587 | There can not be?" |
35587 | There is no certainty that the backwoodsman knows anything of the circumstance that is troubling him? |
35587 | There might have been nothing in it, beyond the simple acknowledgment of her gratitude? |
35587 | There was an interruption to the nocturnal chorus; but that might have been caused by the howling of the hound? |
35587 | There''s but a patch of this, I suppose? |
35587 | Therefore, I move we postpone the trial, till--""What''s the use of postponing it?" |
35587 | They all belong to that cuss arready; an why shed he want to get shot o''the cousin? |
35587 | They are changed, and why? |
35587 | They may be riding to get round her-- in order to advance from different sides, and make sure of her capture? |
35587 | They may be the rear- guard of four hundred? |
35587 | They may have discovered her position? |
35587 | They may have met by accident in the chapparal? |
35587 | They might belong to the devil? |
35587 | They must engage not to begin firing till we have got out of their way?" |
35587 | They''d find his carcase, sure,--maybe hear the shot? |
35587 | Thim I saw too, but was n''t shure about eyedintifycashin; for who kud till a face all covered over wid rid blood? |
35587 | Three long hours, and then what would be the use of him? |
35587 | Thus did they speak to each other, the lady taking the initiative:--"To- morrow night you will meet me again-- to- morrow night, dearest Maurice?" |
35587 | To the question,"Who has done this?" |
35587 | To what was he indebted for his strange deliverance? |
35587 | To whom did he belong? |
35587 | To you, however, it is not so solitary, I presume?" |
35587 | Too well dressed for those ragged_ vagabundos_? |
35587 | Trath have I. Besoides, if I had been the worse for the liquor, why am I not so still? |
35587 | Traveller through the Southern States of America you; can not fail to remember him? |
35587 | Unless that little tell- tale be discovered, he has nothing to fear; and what chance of its being discovered? |
35587 | Upon the instant? |
35587 | Urged by affection, was he going forth to trace the mystery of the murder, by finding the body of the murdered man? |
35587 | Wal, air ye riddy to take the back track?" |
35587 | War it him d''ye think?" |
35587 | Was I really so?" |
35587 | Was he dead? |
35587 | Was her servant a traitor? |
35587 | Was it a change for the better upon the estate of Casa del Corvo? |
35587 | Was it a phantom? |
35587 | Was it a phantom? |
35587 | Was it a phantom? |
35587 | Was it an accident? |
35587 | Was it in correspondence with the form? |
35587 | Was it quite severed from the body?" |
35587 | Was it seen by human eyes in this fresh phase-- with the wolves below, and the vultures above? |
35587 | Was it such as to secure the love of a man so much master of his passions, as the mustanger appeared to be? |
35587 | Was it the Irlandes himself, dead, decapitated, carrying his head in his hand? |
35587 | Was it the sight of the disabled arm, or the pallid face: for the glass had enabled her to distinguish both? |
35587 | Was it the thought that she had been acting wrongly in keeping her father, her brother, and friends in suspense about her safety? |
35587 | Was it this that was stirring them to such excited action-- apparently making them mad? |
35587 | Was it this? |
35587 | Was it, that he feared humiliation by disclosing the part he had himself played? |
35587 | Was she herself happy? |
35587 | Was she looking at a landscape, that could scarce fail to challenge admiration? |
35587 | Was the man dead? |
35587 | Was the scene real? |
35587 | Was the sleeping, or awake? |
35587 | Was there another, who has gone away with the woman? |
35587 | Was this, too, a fancy? |
35587 | We have n''t lost it-- have we?" |
35587 | We may have been seen, and our purpose suspected? |
35587 | We rode close past it while in pursuit of the wild mares?" |
35587 | We''d better keep on arter them?" |
35587 | We''ve come more than five miles-- six, I should say-- and where''s the tree? |
35587 | Well, taking this for granted, you would n''t hang a man without first hearing what he''s got to say for himself? |
35587 | Well; who else was likely to have done it? |
35587 | Well?" |
35587 | Were both dead? |
35587 | Were they at that moment in the woods, or within the walls of the house? |
35587 | Were they listening for that fatal formulary:--One-- two-- fire? |
35587 | Wha power on earth can be appealed to after this? |
35587 | Whar air he?" |
35587 | Whar kin I find Miss Lewaze?" |
35587 | Whar''s he boun''for now? |
35587 | Whar''s_ she_ comin''from?" |
35587 | What air any dung- hill fowl to compare wi''a wild turkey o''the purayra; an how am I to shoot one, arter the sun hev clomb ten mile up the sky? |
35587 | What am I thinkin''o''? |
35587 | What am I to do?" |
35587 | What are them divvils afther? |
35587 | What are they?" |
35587 | What are you now? |
35587 | What are you raving about? |
35587 | What because? |
35587 | What can four Comanche Indians want with Maurice the mustanger? |
35587 | What could be the interpretation of such a tableau? |
35587 | What could be the motive? |
35587 | What could be the purpose of the strange proceeding? |
35587 | What could have caused their scampering? |
35587 | What could have frightened them off? |
35587 | What could have taken her there-- twenty miles across the country-- alone-- in the hut of a common horse- trader-- standing by his bedside? |
35587 | What could it be but Indian jargon? |
35587 | What could it be? |
35587 | What could it be? |
35587 | What could they have quarrelled about?" |
35587 | What did you hear? |
35587 | What do I put the rope roun''me for? |
35587 | What do it say for hisself?" |
35587 | What do yez think it is?" |
35587 | What do you mean, Phelim?" |
35587 | What do_ you_ make o''it, Mister Cash Calhoun?" |
35587 | What do_ you_ make o''it, Sam Manly?" |
35587 | What does he say, uncle?" |
35587 | What does it mane, Tara?" |
35587 | What does it mean, Captain Sloman-- you who know so much of this fellow and his affairs? |
35587 | What does that prove?" |
35587 | What else but keep straight on? |
35587 | What else could he be after? |
35587 | What else could it be? |
35587 | What had all this to do with the question before the council? |
35587 | What had caused_ it_? |
35587 | What had he carried off? |
35587 | What happened this mornin''to change yur tune?" |
35587 | What has challenged the stag to such protracted scrutiny? |
35587 | What have I to fear?" |
35587 | What have you got in the larder?" |
35587 | What have you heard me say?" |
35587 | What have you learnt?" |
35587 | What he did say was:--"You''re not in earnest, Loo?" |
35587 | What if I were to take to it myself? |
35587 | What if he be hunting it? |
35587 | What if he should catch it? |
35587 | What if we stop here a while, and let her have a little rest? |
35587 | What is it he has been saying?" |
35587 | What is it you have to say?" |
35587 | What is it your business, we''d like to know? |
35587 | What is it, sir? |
35587 | What is it? |
35587 | What is it? |
35587 | What is that, Mr Stump? |
35587 | What is this purpose? |
35587 | What is this shadow hanging over him?" |
35587 | What is to be my destiny? |
35587 | What is''t to you what I''m speakin''beout? |
35587 | What is''t, nigger? |
35587 | What it may be,_ quien sabe_?" |
35587 | What ked that mean? |
35587 | What kin he ha''been doin''wi''them? |
35587 | What kin they be? |
35587 | What makes this mustang a ma- a- r?" |
35587 | What makes you think there is?" |
35587 | What man? |
35587 | What matters-- so long as it is innocent, and gives one a gratification?" |
35587 | What mean you, Cassius? |
35587 | What more do you want to show that the skunk''s guilty? |
35587 | What name?" |
35587 | What next? |
35587 | What of her?" |
35587 | What of that? |
35587 | What on earth can he be after?" |
35587 | What proof hez been found? |
35587 | What protection could there be in a shut door, barred and bolted besides, against that which was not earthly? |
35587 | What say ye to examinin''_ him_?" |
35587 | What say you, Miss Poindexter?" |
35587 | What say you?" |
35587 | What signified his shape, so long as it wanted that portion most essential to existence? |
35587 | What sort of person? |
35587 | What the old Scratch can be his intention? |
35587 | What then?" |
35587 | What time air he expected hum? |
35587 | What was bringing her back? |
35587 | What was it you saw?" |
35587 | What was it? |
35587 | What was she like?" |
35587 | What was she to think of that sudden desertion? |
35587 | What was the meaning of that? |
35587 | What was the next step to be taken? |
35587 | What will Florinda say? |
35587 | What will you eat, Mr Stump?" |
35587 | What woman? |
35587 | What would you prefer-- port, sherry, claret? |
35587 | What''s kim over ye now?" |
35587 | What''s to be done? |
35587 | What''s to be dud now?" |
35587 | What''s tuk him thur? |
35587 | What''s wrong? |
35587 | What''s your opinion of it, Spangler?" |
35587 | What, then, hinders him from sinking under despair, and at once resigning himself to what must be his ultimate destiny? |
35587 | What, then, was the_ punctilio_ that restrained him? |
35587 | When? |
35587 | When?" |
35587 | Whence came that horse? |
35587 | Whence come they? |
35587 | Where air_ he_?" |
35587 | Where am I?" |
35587 | Where can he have gone? |
35587 | Where did the girl gallop to?" |
35587 | Where is Zeb Stump? |
35587 | Where is she now? |
35587 | Where is the niece of Don Silvio Mortimez? |
35587 | Where is this? |
35587 | Where was he to find it? |
35587 | Where was the body to be found? |
35587 | Where went Cassius Calhoun? |
35587 | Where will yez hiv her phut, masther? |
35587 | Where would you expect me to have been? |
35587 | Where''s father, and Harry, and the rest of the people?" |
35587 | Where?" |
35587 | Which him, Miss Lewaze?" |
35587 | Which is it? |
35587 | Which o''the brutes kicked ye?" |
35587 | Which of the two was entitled to the credit of the successful shot? |
35587 | Whither go they? |
35587 | Whither next? |
35587 | Whither was he bound? |
35587 | Whither, but to visit Dona Isidora Covarubio de los Llanos? |
35587 | Whither, if not to meet Dona Isidora Covarubio de los Llanos? |
35587 | Whither? |
35587 | Who air the individooal that objecks?" |
35587 | Who are they? |
35587 | Who believes it?" |
35587 | Who but Indians could have spilled such innocent blood? |
35587 | Who but Maurice the mustanger? |
35587 | Who but she could protect him? |
35587 | Who can describe the sweetness of such embrace-- strange to say, sweeter from being stolen? |
35587 | Who can he be? |
35587 | Who can paint the delicious emotions experienced at such a moment-- too sacred to be touched by the pen? |
35587 | Who can say that this is not something of the same sort?" |
35587 | Who can show this, to satisfy the jury? |
35587 | Who can unravel it?" |
35587 | Who care fo''dat? |
35587 | Who cares to play carnival on the prairies-- except myself, and my camarados? |
35587 | Who could blame him if he has? |
35587 | Who could have foretold such an interruption as that occasioned by the encounter between Cassius Calhoun and Isidora Covarubio de los Llanos? |
35587 | Who could help noticing it?" |
35587 | Who could it be? |
35587 | Who div yez think he was, masther?" |
35587 | Who do you say she is?" |
35587 | Who do you suppose she is?" |
35587 | Who else shed I? |
35587 | Who guided you? |
35587 | Who had ever heard of a phenomenon so unnatural? |
35587 | Who has done this?" |
35587 | Who in ole Nick''s name kin be huntin''out thur-- whar theer ai n''t game enuf to pay for the powder an shet? |
35587 | Who is to gainsay them? |
35587 | Who is? |
35587 | Who last saw Henry Poindexter? |
35587 | Who on earth had ever witnessed such a spectacle-- a man mounted upon horseback, and carrying his head in his hand? |
35587 | Who the hell kin_ he_ be? |
35587 | Who was it? |
35587 | Who was the object of this solicitude so hypothetically expressed? |
35587 | Who would not have felt fear at the approach of a destroyer so declaring itself? |
35587 | Who''d a surposed that the cowardly varmints would a had the owdacity to attakt a human critter? |
35587 | Who''d have expected to see you? |
35587 | Who''s along wi''him?" |
35587 | Who''s goin''to hurt ye? |
35587 | Who, Gertrude?" |
35587 | Who, or what is it? |
35587 | Who, then, can come up with him? |
35587 | Why are you not free to say it?" |
35587 | Why did I not ask him the name? |
35587 | Why did he refrain from giving a narration of that garden scene to which he had been witness? |
35587 | Why did n''t they go thar? |
35587 | Why did you fill me with false hopes? |
35587 | Why did you not use them as I told you? |
35587 | Why did you not write?" |
35587 | Why do you talk thus? |
35587 | Why has she thus deviated from her route? |
35587 | Why have I missed it? |
35587 | Why hev ye stopped hyur?" |
35587 | Why is it not carried out? |
35587 | Why moutn''t I git cloaster to_ it_? |
35587 | Why not address yourself to them?" |
35587 | Why not the imperious confidence, that should spring from a knowledge of possession? |
35587 | Why should Cassius Calhoun have killed his own cousin? |
35587 | Why should I be angry with you, child? |
35587 | Why should I conceal it from you-- you up here, who know everything that''s down there? |
35587 | Why should I fear_ you_? |
35587 | Why should his fair companion wish to linger there with him? |
35587 | Why should she? |
35587 | Why should they? |
35587 | Why should_ he_ skulk from a visionary danger, that did not deter a man in Mexican garb? |
35587 | Why that anguished utterance? |
35587 | Why that hanging back, as if the thong of horse- hide was a venomous snake, that none dares to touch? |
35587 | Why that took of spiteful hatred? |
35587 | Why was Calhoun concealing what had really occurred? |
35587 | Why wish to watch the_ iodons_, engaged in their aquatic cotillon-- amorous at that time of the year? |
35587 | Why you no let her fill her belly wif de corn? |
35587 | Why, then, had he done the"deal?" |
35587 | Why, then, this antipathy against the respited prisoner, for the second time surging up? |
35587 | Why? |
35587 | Why? |
35587 | Why?" |
35587 | Will God permit the red- handed ruffian to escape? |
35587 | Will He not stretch forth His almighty arm, and stay the assassin in his flight? |
35587 | Will He not stretch forth His almighty arm, and stay the assassin in his flight? |
35587 | Will she take Benito? |
35587 | Will ye listen to it now, or arter--?" |
35587 | Without companions? |
35587 | Without even a roof to shelter you?" |
35587 | Wo n''t you? |
35587 | Won it? |
35587 | Wonder how the varmint could ha''crossed thet? |
35587 | Wonder where he has gone? |
35587 | Wonder who and what''s brought him? |
35587 | Would it be for the benefit of the accused to leave them untold? |
35587 | Wud yez belave it, Miss Pointdixther; she prisinted a pistol widin six inches av me nose?" |
35587 | Wudn''t I?" |
35587 | Wudn''t it, Tara?" |
35587 | Ye call me an ole fool? |
35587 | Ye call that a fair trial, do ye?" |
35587 | Ye do n''t serpose I meened weemen, did ye?" |
35587 | Ye hain''t lost yur way, hev ye?" |
35587 | Ye kin_ habla_ a bit o''Amerikin, kin ye? |
35587 | Ye mean Irish Pheelum? |
35587 | Ye must hev_ been_ misbehavin''yurself, nigger?" |
35587 | Ye say thur ai n''t nuthin to eet?" |
35587 | Ye say ye''ve got new facks? |
35587 | Ye see my ole maar, tethered out thur on the grass?" |
35587 | Ye see that tree stannin''up agin the sky- line-- the tall poplar yonner?" |
35587 | Ye wo n''t? |
35587 | Ye wudn''t be the thraiter to bethray me? |
35587 | Ye''d hang a fellur- citizen''ithout trial, wud ye?" |
35587 | Ye''re out for a putty lateish ride, ai n''t ye? |
35587 | Ye''ve got a straighter idee o''thet, I hope?" |
35587 | Ye''ve made yur fut marks too deep to deceive_ me_; an by the Eturnal I''ll foller them, though they shed conduck me into the fires o''hell?" |
35587 | Yez have n''t given her the schoolin''lesson, have yez?" |
35587 | Yez want to pay it? |
35587 | You are a mustanger? |
35587 | You are convinced that his son is the man who has been murdered?" |
35587 | You are dusty-- you''ve been travelling? |
35587 | You are going to undergo some great danger?" |
35587 | You are not going to stay here?" |
35587 | You are recovering, sir?" |
35587 | You are sure you can control the mustang?" |
35587 | You consent?" |
35587 | You do n''t want me to give up that? |
35587 | You forget the errand we''re upon; and that we are riding shod horses? |
35587 | You found some difficulty-- did you not?" |
35587 | You have called me so? |
35587 | You have lost your way?" |
35587 | You have no warrant?" |
35587 | You have not seen her since-- she is gone away from the house of her uncle?" |
35587 | You have: and then what? |
35587 | You heard nothing more?" |
35587 | You know I ca n''t find my way?" |
35587 | You know that on the Rio Grande one of your horses equals in value at least three, sometimes six, of ours?" |
35587 | You know the contents? |
35587 | You know the other two?" |
35587 | You know thur war bad blood atween''em? |
35587 | You know what I mean, dear Mr Stump?" |
35587 | You know what I mean?" |
35587 | You know, Mass''Zeb?" |
35587 | You no be angry wif me?" |
35587 | You read it?" |
35587 | You say that''s the value of the skin? |
35587 | You see the critter''s tracks yonner on t''other side?" |
35587 | You see them now?" |
35587 | You see those black pillars?" |
35587 | You see those tree- tops to the west? |
35587 | You seed the quarrel ye speak o''?" |
35587 | You spoke of second- hand hospitality?" |
35587 | You sure, missa, tain''t one ob dem dat you make sigh?" |
35587 | You think there is no longer any fear from that quarter?" |
35587 | You told us so?" |
35587 | You understand? |
35587 | You understand?" |
35587 | You understand?" |
35587 | You unnerstan''? |
35587 | You vant your pig coord fill mit ze Mexican spirits-- ag-- ag-- vat you call it?" |
35587 | You were inquiring for papa? |
35587 | You will not refuse to help me?" |
35587 | You will tell me, so that I may be more cautious for the future?" |
35587 | You will-- you will?" |
35587 | You wo n''t? |
35587 | You''ll stay all night?" |
35587 | You''m jokin'', Mass''Tump?" |
35587 | You''re jesting, Cash?" |
35587 | You''ve seed him afore, I reck''n? |
35587 | Your mistress has met him?" |
35587 | Your party, senor?" |
35587 | Yours, S''nor? |
35587 | Yur jokin''? |
35587 | _ Where_ had it been done? |
35587 | _ Why_ cut off his head? |
35587 | _ you_ say so?" |
35587 | am I forestalled? |
35587 | an''t you glad? |
35587 | and-- and--?" |
35587 | are you a Mexican?) |
35587 | asks the State prosecutor,"where did you get--?" |
35587 | by the Indians, of course? |
35587 | can I be his nurse till then? |
35587 | can it be true that he has become-- a-- a_ salteador_? |
35587 | can it be true? |
35587 | cried his master, without waiting for him to speak,"is he there?" |
35587 | cried she, removing her hands, and confronting the stalwart hunter with an air of earnest entreaty,"promise me, you will keep my secret? |
35587 | cried the lady, betraying more of pique than surprise;"you there? |
35587 | d''ye call me, Mass''Woodley? |
35587 | do n''t I? |
35587 | do n''t you see them?" |
35587 | echoed Calhoun, chagrined at the slight effect his speeches had produced;"I suppose you understand me?" |
35587 | exclaimed he in the corduroys, fraternally interrogating the hound;"had n''t yez weesh now to be back in Ballyballagh? |
35587 | exclaimed the black,"what am de matter wif de ole hoss? |
35587 | exclaimed the half- drunken horse- hunter, cutting short the explanation,"why waste words upon that? |
35587 | exclaimed the latter,"shoo dat de name ob de brave young white gen''l''m-- he dat us save from being smodered on de brack prairee?" |
35587 | fwhat am I to do now? |
35587 | fwhat cyan it mane anyhow? |
35587 | fwhat''s that?" |
35587 | fwhat''s that?" |
35587 | gasps the planter;"what is it? |
35587 | have I killed him?" |
35587 | have n''t you come out to meet us? |
35587 | have you any suspicion as to who the other may be?" |
35587 | he continued, turning to the mare,"ye thort ye wur a goin''hum, did ye? |
35587 | he continued, with his eye measuring the mustanger from head to foot,"you an Irishman? |
35587 | he cried out in a tone of surprise in which pleasure was perceptible--"you here?" |
35587 | he cried, in a quivering voice,"what can it mean? |
35587 | he exclaimed, dropping both snake and tomahawk, and opening his eyes as wide as the lids would allow them;"Shure I must be dhramin? |
35587 | he was with you? |
35587 | hear that? |
35587 | how came you in possession of this?" |
35587 | how is he to prove it? |
35587 | is it yerself to ask the quistyun? |
35587 | is it you I sees so early ashtir? |
35587 | is the danger so great? |
35587 | it looks quare, does n''t it? |
35587 | muttered Zeb;"thur_ hev_ been somethin''? |
35587 | muttered the Galwegian;"fwhat can be the manin''av the owld chap''s surroundin''himself wid the rope?" |
35587 | my daughter; do you mean to disobey me? |
35587 | name? |
35587 | not the Indiana, I hope?" |
35587 | of Maurice the mustanger? |
35587 | protests the young lady,"why should I no wait for you? |
35587 | rejoined Louise, her colour going and coming as she spoke,"how could I help knowing it? |
35587 | says she, pointing over the plain;"you see that black spot on the horizon? |
35587 | she continued,"what is this threat? |
35587 | surely you ca n''t drink it that way? |
35587 | that wud be a misforthune; an thwat wud she say-- the purty colleen wid the goodlen hair an blue eyes, that lives not twinty miles from Ballyballagh?" |
35587 | wa''n''t it cunnin''o''the mowstanger to throw the stud in his tracks, jest in the very gap?" |
35587 | was n''t he real fancy man, dat''ere? |
35587 | we must now be near the place? |
35587 | whar''s yur master?" |
35587 | what am I thinking of? |
35587 | what can have caused it? |
35587 | what can it have been? |
35587 | what chance for me? |
35587 | what could it have been?" |
35587 | what could it mean? |
35587 | what cyan it be anyhow? |
35587 | what cyan it mane? |
35587 | what cyan_ it_ be? |
35587 | what does it mean? |
35587 | what happen dis mornin''? |
35587 | what kin the durned thing be?" |
35587 | what of that? |
35587 | what of that? |
35587 | what was that-- that sound of different import? |
35587 | what we boaf do if dat young white gen''l''m on de red hoss no come ridin''dat way?" |
35587 | what''s in a name? |
35587 | what''s that out yonder?" |
35587 | what''s there to fear-- now that he''s safe in limbo? |
35587 | what''s thet? |
35587 | what''s this?" |
35587 | whatsomdiver air the matter wi''ye? |
35587 | where?" |
35587 | who are you?" |
35587 | who are you?" |
35587 | who''s inside?" |
35587 | why did I mount, without making sure of the rein? |
35587 | why did you insult him?" |
35587 | why do ye clamour against it? |
35587 | why do you say that, Spangler?" |
35587 | why you no holla too: you no friend ob de massr?" |
35587 | wudn''t I loike to shake a shaylaylah about Duffer''s head for the matther of two minutes? |
35587 | wudn''t it poison yez?" |
35587 | yez be owin''him somethin? |
35587 | yez hiv seen somethin''there that kapes ye awake? |
35587 | you do n''t mean that?" |
35587 | you do not wish me to take up your time with the conversation that occurred between us? |
35587 | you''re not going to be scared from your duty by such swagger as this? |
35587 | you''re not going to sleep outside?" |
35587 | you, cousin Cash? |
3136 | ''But how am I to do it?'' 3136 ''Fear not,''said the student,''I have in my eye the very priest and damsel you describe; but how am I to regain admission to this tower? |
3136 | A career? |
3136 | A hanging garden on the roof? |
3136 | A place for McDonald? 3136 About her career?" |
3136 | About what? |
3136 | About what? |
3136 | Afraid of? |
3136 | Against it? 3136 Ah, did they send for me? |
3136 | Ah, do n''t you see it would be the same? 3136 Ah, so that is what you are sorry for?" |
3136 | Ai n''t you ashamed to have your granther turn the grindstone? |
3136 | Ai n''t your name Smith? |
3136 | An offer for me? |
3136 | And Evelyn? 3136 And Father Damon, is he as active as ever?" |
3136 | And Henderson? |
3136 | And I''ve been thinking that McDonald--"So you want to get rid of her? |
3136 | And Margaret? |
3136 | And McDonald? |
3136 | And Mr. Henderson? 3136 And Vicky?" |
3136 | And all the people who first invested lose their money, or the most of it? |
3136 | And busy? |
3136 | And do n''t you fear a little for our own girls, launching out that way? |
3136 | And do n''t you think American women adapt themselves happily to English life? |
3136 | And do n''t you want to see that life for yourself? 3136 And do you not wish to go?" |
3136 | And do you think it would be any better if all were poor alike? |
3136 | And does it seem a little difficult to do so? |
3136 | And give up education? |
3136 | And gold? |
3136 | And has n''t your wife some relations who are in business? |
3136 | And have you written to any one at home about my niece? |
3136 | And he did not say where he was going? |
3136 | And he will not return? 3136 And he, was he happy?" |
3136 | And here you only have to live up to mine? |
3136 | And how does it look to men? |
3136 | And how does the house get on? |
3136 | And how far do you think we could get, my dear, in the crusade you propose? |
3136 | And how goes it? |
3136 | And how many pairs can you finish in a day? |
3136 | And how much money do you want for this modest scheme of yours? |
3136 | And how was it with the Northern women who married South, as you say? |
3136 | And is n''t it a good piece of road? |
3136 | And leave Mr. Lyon without any protection here? |
3136 | And my account? |
3136 | And no such will has been found? |
3136 | And not for the sake of doing anything-- just winning? 3136 And nothing else, Margaret?" |
3136 | And now I do? |
3136 | And sell out at auction? |
3136 | And so I have your permission? |
3136 | And so you do not find it dull? |
3136 | And so you think the theatres have a moral influence? |
3136 | And so you were glad to land? |
3136 | And that daughter of his, about whom such a fuss was made, I suppose you never met her? |
3136 | And that is the reason you read here? |
3136 | And that is the use of brokers in grain and stocks? |
3136 | And the Missouri? |
3136 | And the city appears narrow and provincial? |
3136 | And the other one? |
3136 | And the story? 3136 And the teak?" |
3136 | And the vine said unto them,''Should I leave my wine, which cheereth God and man, and go to be promoted over the trees?'' 3136 And then?" |
3136 | And they are done here? |
3136 | And was your religion founded on Plymouth Rock? |
3136 | And we will put it off a year? |
3136 | And were you trying, Mr. Delancy, to persuade Miss Tavish into that sort of charity? |
3136 | And what do you do? |
3136 | And what do you want, Margaret? |
3136 | And what has changed it? |
3136 | And what time does he usually come home in the evening? |
3136 | And what will they do with him? |
3136 | And what would you do? |
3136 | And where? |
3136 | And which would have to yield? |
3136 | And who else? |
3136 | And why did n''t you come by Niagara? |
3136 | And why do n''t you writers do something about it? 3136 And why not? |
3136 | And why not? |
3136 | And why,Miss Tavish asked,"will the serpentine dances and the London topical songs do any more harm to women than to men?" |
3136 | And would n''t you help them? |
3136 | And you are going soon? 3136 And you did n''t buy an orange plantation, or a town?" |
3136 | And you do not belong to the Church? |
3136 | And you do not read much in the city? |
3136 | And you find they have no time to be agreeable? |
3136 | And you get it in Newport? |
3136 | And you have no acquaintances here? |
3136 | And you have not looked on the register? |
3136 | And you have nothing else to say, Rodney? |
3136 | And you have told her this? |
3136 | And you like it better than Newport? |
3136 | And you prefer to be that, a lawyer, rather than an author? |
3136 | And you remember Portia? |
3136 | And you think that fitted them for the seriousness of life? |
3136 | And you think that science is an aid to art? |
3136 | And you think this is different from a train out of New York? |
3136 | And you think this is enough, without any sort of religion-- that this East Side can go on without any spiritual life? |
3136 | And you think, child, that he does n''t know? 3136 And you think, therefore, that they should not have a scientific education?" |
3136 | And you want me to get a twist on old Blunt? |
3136 | And you want to endow him? |
3136 | And you were not? |
3136 | And you will ask, what now? 3136 And your husband has not come yet?" |
3136 | And your wife did n''t come? |
3136 | And( Margaret was moving as if to go)"did he say nothing-- nothing to you?" |
3136 | And, oh, ca n''t you come in to dinner tomorrow night-- just Carmen-- I think I can persuade her-- and nobody else? |
3136 | And--? |
3136 | Any more? |
3136 | Anybody else there? |
3136 | Anything else? |
3136 | Anything special turned up? |
3136 | Are n''t they beautiful? |
3136 | Are n''t they that now? |
3136 | Are n''t you lonesome-- and disgusted? |
3136 | Are not the people learning anything? |
3136 | Are the people on the border as bad as they are represented? |
3136 | Are there many people here? |
3136 | Are you afraid to speak to him? |
3136 | Are you asleep, pa? |
3136 | Are you going farther south? |
3136 | Are you going to stay here always? |
3136 | Are you interested in foundlings? |
3136 | Are you much tired, Miss Benson? |
3136 | Are you open to an offer? |
3136 | Are you quite sure you know your own mind? |
3136 | Are you real glad to see me, Phil? 3136 Are you sorry for what you have done?" |
3136 | Are you timid about the train? |
3136 | Are you? |
3136 | Arrange what? |
3136 | As New Yorkers go to Europe to get rid of their future? |
3136 | As bad as what? 3136 As for instance?" |
3136 | At the end of the season,she said,"and alone?" |
3136 | Atlantic City? 3136 Avez- vous la poussee?" |
3136 | Because the world is so big? |
3136 | Build? 3136 Burnett? |
3136 | But Henderson looks out for his friends? |
3136 | But I mean, you know, do they look to marriage as an end so much? |
3136 | But are n''t Mr. Morgan and Mr. Fairchild business men? |
3136 | But do n''t you know that the hardest thing to do is the obvious, the thing close to you? |
3136 | But do n''t you know, child,said Miss McDonald, laughing,"that we are required to love our enemies?" |
3136 | But do n''t you see that it is n''t safe for the Lamonts and Mrs. Farquhar to go there? |
3136 | But do n''t you see this affair upsets all our arrangements? 3136 But do n''t you think we are putting history and association into them pretty fast?" |
3136 | But how about the Lachine Rapids? 3136 But how did you live in those early days, way back there?" |
3136 | But how, when whatever I attempt is considered a condescension? 3136 But is n''t it a compromising distinction,"my wife asked,"to take his money without his name? |
3136 | But it is a lovely country? |
3136 | But suppose that does not interest me? |
3136 | But suppose you fall in love with a poor man? |
3136 | But the fig- tree said unto them,''Should I forsake my sweetness and my good fruit, and go to be promoted over the trees?'' 3136 But the olive- tree said unto them,''Should I leave my fatness wherewith by me they honor God and man, and go to be promoted over the trees?'' |
3136 | But was it generosity? 3136 But we are to understand that if we do not accept your terms, it''s a freeze- out?" |
3136 | But what do you care for money? |
3136 | But what does it matter about the bills if you enjoy yourself? |
3136 | But what has Congress to do with it? |
3136 | But what two have you in mind? |
3136 | But where does the news come from? |
3136 | But who caught it? |
3136 | But who wanted him to be your husband? |
3136 | But why did you think she expected me? |
3136 | But why do you want them? |
3136 | But would n''t it be a sneaking thing to take a man''s money, and refuse him the credit of his generosity? |
3136 | But you can not do away with distinctions? |
3136 | But you do n''t say you like that? 3136 But you seem, Major, to have preferred a single life?" |
3136 | But you think that mine is changed for you? |
3136 | But you wanted to comeback? |
3136 | But, dear, we do n''t pretend, do we? |
3136 | But, on Sunday? |
3136 | But,said Edith, with a flush of earnestness"but, Father Damon, is n''t human love the greatest power to save?" |
3136 | But,said Philip,"do n''t England and the Continent long for the presence of Americans in the season in the same way?" |
3136 | By- the- way, did I ever show you this? |
3136 | By- the- way,he said, after a silence,"is Henderson in town?" |
3136 | Ca n''t think? 3136 Ca n''t you stow me away anywhere? |
3136 | Celia Howard? 3136 Celia, do n''t you think it would be an ungentlemanly thing to take a social event like that?" |
3136 | Charities? 3136 Come round?" |
3136 | Confederate? |
3136 | Contest the will? |
3136 | Could n''t I,said the stranger, with the same deliberation--"wouldn''t you let me go to Charleston?" |
3136 | Could you do them any better, with all your cultivation? |
3136 | Could you take us where we would be likely to get any muskallonge? |
3136 | Critical? 3136 Diamonds or pearls?" |
3136 | Did I tell you I was in that? 3136 Did I tell you,"interposed Morgan--"it is almost in the line of your thought-- of a girl I met the other day on the train? |
3136 | Did I? 3136 Did he run?" |
3136 | Did he say anything? |
3136 | Did n''t you know they were Americans? |
3136 | Did n''t you say you knew her in Europe? |
3136 | Did she-- did Miss Benson say anything about Newport? |
3136 | Did the little pig know Jimmy? |
3136 | Did you come alone? |
3136 | Did you come in a cutter? |
3136 | Did you deny it? |
3136 | Did you ever see a work called''Evangeline''? |
3136 | Did you ever see him? |
3136 | Did you ever see so many pretty girls together before? 3136 Did you ever,"he went on,"commit the crime of using intoxicating drinks as a beverage?" |
3136 | Did you have any fighting? |
3136 | Did you read them? |
3136 | Did you recommend the president to take the money, if he could get it without using the gambler''s name? |
3136 | Did you report to the Associated Charities? |
3136 | Did you say, Mrs. Fairchild,he asked my wife,"that Miss Debree is a teacher? |
3136 | Did you see the porpoise? |
3136 | Did you see what one of the papers said about the use of wealth in adorning the city? 3136 Did you want to come to me for help?" |
3136 | Did you wish me for anything? |
3136 | Different from what? |
3136 | Disgusted? 3136 Do I? |
3136 | Do I? 3136 Do n''t remember? |
3136 | Do n''t you intend to go on with medicine? |
3136 | Do n''t you know, child, that there is society and society? 3136 Do n''t you see I am busy, child? |
3136 | Do n''t you see? 3136 Do n''t you think it better, Father Damon,"Dr. Leigh interposed,"that Gretchen should have fresh air and some recreation on Sunday?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think it would be nice to have a?.... |
3136 | Do n''t you think we could sell some strawberries next year? |
3136 | Do n''t you think, dear,she said, puzzling over the drawings,"that it would better be all sandalwood? |
3136 | Do they sell the weather? |
3136 | Do what? |
3136 | Do you believe, Mr. Morgan, that any vast fortune was ever honestly come by? |
3136 | Do you happen to know whether he knows Bilbrick, the present Collector? |
3136 | Do you know, Rodney, I hated this house at five o''clock-- positively hated it? |
3136 | Do you live here? |
3136 | Do you live in Baddeck? |
3136 | Do you make a long stay? |
3136 | Do you mean to say that Henderson and Mavick and Mrs. Henderson would have thrown me over? |
3136 | Do you mean to say there are no distinctions? |
3136 | Do you mean to say,asked Mr. Lyon,"that in this country you have churches for the rich and other churches for the poor?" |
3136 | Do you mean, Mrs. Mavick, that-- you-- want-- that I am to leave Evelyn, and you? |
3136 | Do you really want me to go, dear? |
3136 | Do you remember when I got this, Carmen? 3136 Do you think I am going to be run, as you call it, by the newspapers? |
3136 | Do you think I''d ever do that for John the Lyon''s head on a charger? |
3136 | Do you think Mr. Henderson believes in people? |
3136 | Do you think all men who are what you call operating around are like that? |
3136 | Do you think he is good enough for her? |
3136 | Do you think he would have been the one to give in if they had gone to France? |
3136 | Do you think it is the worst in the country? |
3136 | Do you think she is able to stand alone? |
3136 | Do you think that if Raphael had known nothing of anatomy the world would have accepted his Sistine Madonna for the woman she is? |
3136 | Do you think there was anything between Miss Eschelle and Mr. Lyon? 3136 Do you think we would want to wreck our own property?" |
3136 | Do you think, Father,said the girl, looking up wistfully,"that I can--can be forgiven?" |
3136 | Do you think, Mr. Mavick, that the decay of dancing is the reason our religion lacks seriousness? 3136 Do you think, Mr. Mavick, that will was ever executed?" |
3136 | Do you think,said Irene, a little anxiously, letting her hand rest a moment upon Stanhope''s,"that they will like poor little me? |
3136 | Do you trust him? |
3136 | Do you understand? 3136 Do you want me to put on my business or my evening expression?" |
3136 | Do you want to get out of it? 3136 Do you want to run right into the smallpox at Montreal?" |
3136 | Do you? 3136 Do you?" |
3136 | Do? 3136 Does Evelyn like him?" |
3136 | Does Father Damon join in this? |
3136 | Does any other stage go from here to- day anywhere else? |
3136 | Does he? |
3136 | Does she know anything of this absurd, this silly attempt? |
3136 | Does she know you are out? |
3136 | Does she know? 3136 Does the signor live near Mexico?" |
3136 | Does the world seem any larger here, Miss Debree? |
3136 | Domestication? 3136 Eh, what did he want?" |
3136 | Elevated''em, did n''t he? 3136 Executed?" |
3136 | Faith? 3136 Fish? |
3136 | Fleas? 3136 Get ready? |
3136 | Going for the government? |
3136 | Going to drop law, eh? |
3136 | Had she any friends? |
3136 | Has Mr. Lyon been here? |
3136 | Has anything gone wrong? 3136 Has anything gone wrong?" |
3136 | Have n''t I waited on you befo'', sah? 3136 Have the falls been taken in today?" |
3136 | Have to go, child? 3136 Have you answered Miss Tavish''s invitation?" |
3136 | Have you any explanations? |
3136 | Have you any memorandum of it? |
3136 | Have you any statistics on the subject? |
3136 | Have you been accustomed,he said, after a time, rather sadly,"to break the Sabbath?" |
3136 | Have you begun another? |
3136 | Have you done? |
3136 | Have you ever been dissipated, living riotously and keeping late hours? |
3136 | Have you had a good day, child? |
3136 | Have you had a worrying day? |
3136 | Have you repented of your sin? |
3136 | Have you seen him? |
3136 | Have you spoken to any of your friends? |
3136 | Have you,he went on,"ever stolen, or told any lie?" |
3136 | Have you? |
3136 | He was a--"Was he a philosopher?" |
3136 | Here? 3136 Here?" |
3136 | How about his staying quality, Stalker? |
3136 | How can you talk such nonsense? 3136 How could he help it?" |
3136 | How did it come about? |
3136 | How did little Jimmy know his pig from the other little pigs? |
3136 | How did you like it? |
3136 | How did you sleep, cap? |
3136 | How do we know what is necessary to any poor soul? 3136 How do you know that anybody is always to be unregenerate? |
3136 | How do you mean''finished''? |
3136 | How do you mean, before a magistrate? |
3136 | How does your experiment get on, Miss Tavish? |
3136 | How is it? |
3136 | How is that? |
3136 | How is this privileged person? |
3136 | How long has he been here? |
3136 | How long have they been there? |
3136 | How many are there in the coupe? |
3136 | How much for this? |
3136 | How much money was in it? |
3136 | How much of it is curiosity? |
3136 | How so? |
3136 | How so? |
3136 | How square? |
3136 | How was that? 3136 How''s that?" |
3136 | How''s that? |
3136 | How? |
3136 | How? |
3136 | How? |
3136 | How? |
3136 | How? |
3136 | I do wonder where she came from? |
3136 | I have not seen much of your life,he said one night to Mr. Morgan;"but are n''t most American women a little restless, seeking an occupation?" |
3136 | I remember-- Hunt, Sharp& Tweedle; why did n''t you keep it? |
3136 | I say, Delancy, what''s this I hear? |
3136 | I see it is interesting,said Philip, shifting his ground again,"but what is the real good of all these botanical names and classifications?" |
3136 | I suppose it has been dreadfully hot in the city? |
3136 | I suppose there is fishing here in the season? |
3136 | I suppose you have pretty well seen the island? |
3136 | I suppose, Mr. Lyon,said Margaret, demurely,"that this sort of thing is unknown in England?" |
3136 | I thought all the churches here were organized on social affinities? |
3136 | I thought perhaps some other field, for a time? |
3136 | I thought you liked him? 3136 I wanted to ask you, Mavick, as a friend, do you think Henderson is square?" |
3136 | I wish he would,said Philip; and then, having moved so that he could see Celia''s face,"Do you like Murad Ault?" |
3136 | I wonder how Henderson came to do it? |
3136 | I wonder how he knows? |
3136 | I wonder,Mr. King was saying,"if these excursionists are representative of general American life?" |
3136 | I wonder,continued Mr. Sage,"if it was ever executed? |
3136 | I-- suppose,said the earl, rising,"we shall see you again on the other side?" |
3136 | I? 3136 I? |
3136 | I? 3136 I? |
3136 | If one do n''t, what''s the use of talk? |
3136 | If the country is so bad, why send any more unregenerates into it? |
3136 | In a boat? 3136 In my new story?" |
3136 | In order to snuff myself out? 3136 Is Jim poor?" |
3136 | Is Major Fairfax in? |
3136 | Is Mr. Delancy at home? |
3136 | Is Mr. Henderson in? |
3136 | Is Mr. Meigs in the lumber business? |
3136 | Is he dead, Dr. Leigh? 3136 Is he married?" |
3136 | Is he not sometimes at home in the daytime? |
3136 | Is he recognized by respectable people? |
3136 | Is he? 3136 Is it a true book, John?" |
3136 | Is it all true? |
3136 | Is it possible? 3136 Is it so bad as that?" |
3136 | Is it too late? |
3136 | Is it true that Lyon is''epris''there? |
3136 | Is it true, sir? |
3136 | Is it true? |
3136 | Is it your American idea, then, that a church ought to be formed only of people socially agreeable together? |
3136 | Is n''t it a shame that the tomatoes are all getting ripe at once? 3136 Is n''t it all very revolutionary?" |
3136 | Is n''t it becoming? |
3136 | Is n''t it funny,she wrote,"and is n''t it preposterous? |
3136 | Is n''t it natural,spoke up Mr. Lyon, who had hitherto been silent,"that you should drift into this condition without an established church?" |
3136 | Is n''t it safe? |
3136 | Is n''t it? 3136 Is n''t that enough?" |
3136 | Is n''t that occupation enough? 3136 Is n''t that the fault mostly of the writer, who vulgarizes his material?" |
3136 | Is n''t that,Edith exclaimed,"a surrender of individual rights and a great injustice to men not in the unions?" |
3136 | Is n''t the hall just as jammed when the clever attorney of Nothingism, Ham Saversoul, jokes about the mysteries of this life and the next? |
3136 | Is n''t this a nervous sort of a place? |
3136 | Is n''t your idea of painting rather anatomical? |
3136 | Is she pretty? |
3136 | Is she trustworthy? |
3136 | Is she very ill? |
3136 | Is that the pocket- book? |
3136 | Is there any protection, Mr. Morgan, for people who have invested their little property? |
3136 | Is there any stage for Baddeck? |
3136 | Is there anything that you want from town, auntie? |
3136 | Is there nothing like a court? 3136 Is this all of it?" |
3136 | Is this stage for Baddeck? |
3136 | It does seem hard and mean, does n''t it? 3136 It is n''t anything like wrecking, is it, dear?" |
3136 | Jump? |
3136 | Just a little? 3136 Law?" |
3136 | Left the pail? 3136 Let''s go round her,"said Jack;"eh, skipper?" |
3136 | Like her-- Miss Benson? 3136 Likely?" |
3136 | Little? |
3136 | Loss of what? |
3136 | Ma, are you asleep? |
3136 | Me? 3136 Me? |
3136 | Me? |
3136 | Me? |
3136 | Mr. Burnett? 3136 Mr. Meigs? |
3136 | Mr. Morgan,suddenly asked Margaret, who had been all the time an uneasy listener to the turn the talk had taken,"what is railroad wrecking?" |
3136 | My dear,she said,"why should n''t I renege? |
3136 | My permission, Mr. Lyon? 3136 No,"said Jerry, with a little reluctance;"might as well have it all out-- eh, Henderson?" |
3136 | No? 3136 No? |
3136 | No? 3136 No? |
3136 | No? 3136 Not classic, then?" |
3136 | Not intending always to teach? |
3136 | Nothing is said about the training- school? |
3136 | Now what is it? |
3136 | Now, wherever can he be going this morning in the very midst of getting in his hay? 3136 Now, why do n''t you do it?" |
3136 | Of course you all have the poems of Burns? |
3136 | Of myself? |
3136 | Oh, I did n''t know--"What is it, dear? |
3136 | Oh, can she? 3136 Oh, indeed, is that the place? |
3136 | Oh, is that all? |
3136 | Oh, literature? 3136 Oh, the ebony and gold? |
3136 | Ohio? 3136 Old Jerry? |
3136 | Old fellow, what do you say to going to Virginia? |
3136 | Pa, are you asleep? |
3136 | Pa, what is a phalanx? |
3136 | Papa, what does he mean? |
3136 | Pardon me,he persisted,"have you no sense of incompleteness in this life, in your own life? |
3136 | Perhaps I ought to tell her your plan for her? 3136 Perhaps your daughter would have preferred to furnish it herself?" |
3136 | Picked up what you could find, corn, bacon, horses? |
3136 | Plunder seems to have been the object? |
3136 | Portia,said Evelyn;"yes, but that is poetry; and, McDonald, was n''t it a kind of catch? |
3136 | Quite an admission, was n''t it, from an American? 3136 Quoted me? |
3136 | Recognized? |
3136 | Remember the joke he played on Prof. A., freshman year? |
3136 | Rights, what''s that? |
3136 | Rumor? |
3136 | Sell what? |
3136 | Shall I send it? |
3136 | She''s so bright, and-- and interesting, do n''t you think? 3136 Sir,"cried Mr. Irving, in a burst of indignation that overcame his habitual shyness,"do you seize upon such a disaster only for a sneer? |
3136 | Sleep? |
3136 | So Brandon was a little dull? |
3136 | So men only dropped the a pluribus unum method on account of the expense? |
3136 | So soon? |
3136 | So that is another thing I pretend? 3136 So the college is not open yet?" |
3136 | So you earn fifteen cents a day? |
3136 | So you have been at the White Sulphur? |
3136 | So you put your faith in an American millionaire? |
3136 | So you remember that? |
3136 | So you want things picked out like a photograph? |
3136 | So your friend''s an artist? 3136 Sorry for what?" |
3136 | Spades, did you say? |
3136 | Spanish or French? |
3136 | Surely you are not uninterested in what is now called psychical research? |
3136 | Tell Mrs. Van Cortlandt? 3136 That flame,"he says,"you have put out, but where has it gone?" |
3136 | The Mavicks? 3136 The publishers have n''t decided?" |
3136 | The reception? 3136 Then Carmen, as you call her, was n''t the first?" |
3136 | Then her influence on him is good? |
3136 | Then it is not money that determines social position in America? |
3136 | Then she does go there? |
3136 | Then what are you girding Mr. Henderson for about his university? |
3136 | Then you do n''t care for real life? |
3136 | Then you have some curiosity to see the story? |
3136 | Then you think international marriages are a mistake? |
3136 | Then you want a romance? |
3136 | Then you would call yourself a realist? |
3136 | This is a rotation of crops, is n''t it? |
3136 | To be with us? |
3136 | To bombard Alexandria? |
3136 | To vespers? |
3136 | Very well,said the Major, at the close of the last of their talks at the club;"what are you going to do?" |
3136 | Walked? 3136 Want whom to know?" |
3136 | Was Navisson a modern lawyer? |
3136 | Was he on the Union or Confederate side? |
3136 | Was it a great change from the first? |
3136 | Was it slippery? |
3136 | Was it very dull? |
3136 | Was it? 3136 Was n''t it the Margaret Fund?" |
3136 | Was n''t she interested? |
3136 | Was she a good woman? |
3136 | Was she? 3136 Was there a later will?" |
3136 | Was there a panic on board? |
3136 | Was there anything else? |
3136 | We? 3136 Well"( the girl only wanted an excuse to say something),"I only ast, is you?" |
3136 | Well, I declare; and you could''a looked right in? |
3136 | Well, do n''t you think it would pay best to be honest, and live with your family, out of jail? 3136 Well, honestly, Miss Eschelle, do you think the negroes are any better off?" |
3136 | Well, how''s things? 3136 Well, safe?" |
3136 | Well, sweet, keeping house alone? 3136 Well, what have you against Newport?" |
3136 | Well, what is the news today? |
3136 | Well, what is your idea? |
3136 | Well, what now? |
3136 | Well, what of it? |
3136 | Well, what of that? 3136 Well, where can I go?" |
3136 | Well, why should n''t we support the working- people of Paris and elsewhere? 3136 Well, young man,"said he, rising, with a queer grin on his face,"what are you sent here for? |
3136 | Well,he said, when she came to him in the vestry, with a drop from the rather austere manner in which he had spoken,"what can I do for you?" |
3136 | Well,said Edith, not to be diverted,"but, Mr. Henderson, what is it all for-- this conflict? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Were the Pilgrims and the Puritans? |
3136 | Were you amused with the dancing-- this morning? |
3136 | Were you in any engagements? |
3136 | Were you trying to make Mr. Lyon comfortable by dragging in Bunker Hill? |
3136 | What are the business hours here? |
3136 | What are you going to do? 3136 What are you looking at, Jack?" |
3136 | What are you two plotting? |
3136 | What became of him? |
3136 | What can you do for me? |
3136 | What could you expect from such a sudden proposal to a young girl, almost a child, wholly unused to the world? 3136 What did Lycurgus do then?" |
3136 | What did Pericles do to the Greeks? |
3136 | What did he say? |
3136 | What did you do in Hugh White''s regiment? |
3136 | What did you do? |
3136 | What did you expect? 3136 What do I think of the Milky Way? |
3136 | What do people generally do? |
3136 | What do they do there, uncle? |
3136 | What do you mean, Carmen? |
3136 | What do you suppose I am here for? |
3136 | What do you think of Missouri? |
3136 | What do you want? |
3136 | What does anybody after a reception call for? |
3136 | What does he do? |
3136 | What does he say? |
3136 | What does it matter? |
3136 | What for? |
3136 | What good? |
3136 | What had it in it? |
3136 | What has come over you tonight, Carmen? |
3136 | What has come over you? 3136 What has she done?" |
3136 | What have I to do with it? 3136 What have you done, what have you done to me?" |
3136 | What have you heard, Major? |
3136 | What in the world, child, made you go on so tonight? |
3136 | What is all this about forgiveness? |
3136 | What is he doing? |
3136 | What is he like? |
3136 | What is it for? |
3136 | What is it, dear? |
3136 | What is it? |
3136 | What is it? |
3136 | What is it? |
3136 | What is that for? |
3136 | What is that? |
3136 | What is the Mountain Miller? |
3136 | What is the difference between that and getting possession of a bank and robbing it? |
3136 | What is the difference, Mr. Henderson,asked Margaret,"between the gossip in the boxes and the country gossip you spoke of?" |
3136 | What is the matter, Tom? |
3136 | What is the matter? |
3136 | What is the program for tomorrow? |
3136 | What is what, dear? |
3136 | What is your name? |
3136 | What is? |
3136 | What kind of a summer have you had? |
3136 | What made you snub Mr. Lyon so often? |
3136 | What more could I do for Miss Eschelle than to leave her in such company? |
3136 | What on earth do you suppose made those girls come up here in white dresses, blowing about in the wind, and already drabbled? 3136 What sort of a pocket- book was it?" |
3136 | What sort of repairs? |
3136 | What time does the sun rise? |
3136 | What was that, Phelps? |
3136 | What way? |
3136 | What were they talking about all night? |
3136 | What woman of spirit would n''t rather mate with an eagle, and quarrel half the time, than with a humdrum barn- yard fowl? |
3136 | What would you? |
3136 | What''s got into you to look so splendid? 3136 What''s over, child?" |
3136 | What''s that? 3136 What''s that?" |
3136 | What''s that? |
3136 | What''s that? |
3136 | What''s the Island, mamma? |
3136 | What''s the name o''the mon? |
3136 | What''s this? 3136 What''s your initials? |
3136 | What, all day? |
3136 | What, left the city, quit his work? 3136 What,"continued he, in tones still more serious,"has been your conduct with regard to the other sex?" |
3136 | What? 3136 What?" |
3136 | What? |
3136 | When was the first moment you began to love me, dear? |
3136 | Where be you from? |
3136 | Where does this go, and when? |
3136 | Where is he? |
3136 | Where''s the bear? |
3136 | Where''s your pail? |
3136 | Where,we said, as we came easily, and neither uphill nor downhill, into the pleasant harbor of St. John,---"where are the tides of our youth?" |
3136 | Which would you choose? |
3136 | Which would you rather live with? |
3136 | Which? |
3136 | Which? |
3136 | Which? |
3136 | Which? |
3136 | Which? |
3136 | Who are you making that for? |
3136 | Who does? 3136 Who has died?" |
3136 | Who is good enough for whom? |
3136 | Who is he? |
3136 | Who is it? |
3136 | Who is that lovely creature? |
3136 | Who is that? |
3136 | Who is that? |
3136 | Who taught me? |
3136 | Who''s been talking? |
3136 | Who''s that? |
3136 | Who, Ault? |
3136 | Who? 3136 Who?" |
3136 | Whose trout is that? |
3136 | Why almost? |
3136 | Why did n''t he send it, then? 3136 Why did n''t you call me? |
3136 | Why do n''t he say what his business is? |
3136 | Why do n''t you applaud, child? |
3136 | Why do n''t you ask leave to read a paper, Forbes, on the relation of dress to education? |
3136 | Why do n''t you cut her? 3136 Why do n''t you go with a boy, then?" |
3136 | Why do n''t you put her into a novel? |
3136 | Why do n''t you take the other? |
3136 | Why do you smoke? |
3136 | Why insist on rash personal relations with your friend? |
3136 | Why is it called Pulpit Rock? |
3136 | Why is it that so few English women marry Americans? |
3136 | Why not? 3136 Why not? |
3136 | Why not? |
3136 | Why pretend? |
3136 | Why should n''t she be? |
3136 | Why should n''t she believe in him? |
3136 | Why were you gone so long? |
3136 | Why, Polly, where is the camel''s- hair shawl? |
3136 | Why, dearest? |
3136 | Why, my dear Lord Montague, did you ever offer her anything? |
3136 | Why, my dear, do n''t you know? |
3136 | Why, the first moment, that day; did n''t you know it then? |
3136 | Why, what has come over you, old man? |
3136 | Why,I asked the bright and light- minded colored boy who sold papers on the morning train,"do n''t you stay in the city and see it?" |
3136 | Why,asked Irene, trembling at the thought of that danger so long ago--"why did n''t you go back down the ravine?" |
3136 | Why? 3136 Why? |
3136 | Why? |
3136 | Why? |
3136 | Will I? |
3136 | Will madame have the carriage? |
3136 | Will you be my teacher? |
3136 | Will you read that? |
3136 | Will you smoke? |
3136 | Will you take us to Baddeck to- day? |
3136 | Will you? 3136 Will you? |
3136 | With Congress, do you mean? |
3136 | With whom, mamma? |
3136 | Worse? 3136 Would I rather? |
3136 | Would n''t he be satisfied with an LL.D.? |
3136 | Would n''t it be prettier hung with silken arras figured with a chain of dancing- girls? 3136 Would n''t she have come with you? |
3136 | Would n''t that be nice? |
3136 | Would n''t the money do good-- as much good as any other hundred thousand dollars? |
3136 | Would n''t the torpedo station make up for it? |
3136 | Would n''t uncle like to take a drive this charming morning? |
3136 | Would the law pay you? |
3136 | Would the little pig let him? |
3136 | Would you buy stocks that way? |
3136 | Would you mind telling me what they are? |
3136 | Would you rather be there? |
3136 | Write? |
3136 | Yes, I know; and did you see that some of the scholars had red hair and blue eyes, quite in the present style? 3136 Yes, indeed,"said Edith, looking up brightly;"does n''t it you?" |
3136 | Yes, sir,says John,"is that all?" |
3136 | Yes, yes; but I wonder if it was worth while? |
3136 | Yes-- why not? |
3136 | Yes? 3136 Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yet you wish to be treated as a woman? |
3136 | You ai n''t got no cotton, is you? |
3136 | You are afraid they will get lost in that big house? |
3136 | You are not going to waste your ground on muskmelons? |
3136 | You are not offended? |
3136 | You are not offended? |
3136 | You are of the city, then? |
3136 | You could n''t lie along a hair? |
3136 | You did n''t tell her that I approved of all the French novels you read? |
3136 | You do n''t find it lively? |
3136 | You do n''t like trees? |
3136 | You do n''t mean that she refused you? |
3136 | You do n''t mean that you are tired of America? |
3136 | You do n''t mean, mamma, that she is going away for good? |
3136 | You do n''t tell me you''ve gone and refused him, Irene? |
3136 | You do n''t think I''d be seen going around with him? 3136 You got a living out of the farmers?" |
3136 | You got our circular? |
3136 | You have no business here: what are you after? |
3136 | You here? |
3136 | You know Mr. Henderson very well? |
3136 | You like Bar Harbor so well,he said,"that I suppose your father will be buying a cottage here?" |
3136 | You lived on the country? |
3136 | You mean for himself, for his own self? |
3136 | You mean gossiped about? |
3136 | You mean making Christianity practical? |
3136 | You mean she does not know what I offer her? |
3136 | You mean she will be sorry, whichever she chooses? |
3136 | You mean that I must go back to my labor in the city? |
3136 | You mean that young swell whose business it is to drive a four- in- hand to Yonkers and back, and toot on a horn? |
3136 | You mean to say,I asked,"that the lawyer takes what the operator leaves?" |
3136 | You promise me, dear, that you will put the whole thing out of your mind? |
3136 | You surely do not think human beings are created just for this miserable little experience here? |
3136 | You want to build a cathedral? |
3136 | You went? |
3136 | You will remain? |
3136 | You will solemnly promise me, solemnly, will you not, Stanhope, never to go there again-- never-- without me? |
3136 | You will write, dear, the moment you get there, will you not? 3136 You''d be willing to take your oath on it?" |
3136 | You''ve only recently come over, Lord Montague? |
3136 | You? 3136 Young man, did you ever use tobacco?" |
3136 | Your mother is pleased here? |
3136 | ''And you are not discouraged by the repeated failure of the predictions of the end of the world?'' |
3136 | ''And you?'' |
3136 | ''Are you afraid?'' |
3136 | ''Are you one?'' |
3136 | ''But how do you know?'' |
3136 | ''Oh, it is n''t the place?'' |
3136 | ''What was it?'' |
3136 | ''Where did they find transports?'' |
3136 | ''Why?'' |
3136 | ''Yes,''he continued, walking close up to it,''but what is it?'' |
3136 | ( I wonder what all this is about?) |
3136 | ( Suppose my squash had not come up, or my beans--as they threatened at one time-- had gone the wrong way: where would I have been?) |
3136 | ("Children, what is the meaning of''absorbed''?") |
3136 | ("Children,"asks the teacher,"what is the meaning of''twist''?") |
3136 | ), to fetch her shawl-- was there anything they could do? |
3136 | --"But what kind of perishable things?" |
3136 | A companion? |
3136 | A country? |
3136 | A forlorn fishing- station, a dreary hotel? |
3136 | A lady leaned from the carriage, and said:"What have you got, little boy?" |
3136 | A monument like your Pulpit Rock?" |
3136 | A more pertinent inquiry is, what sort of people have we become? |
3136 | A more recent letter:--"Do you remember Aunt Hepsy, who used to keep the little thread- and- needle and candy shop in Rivervale? |
3136 | A small, unpicturesque, wooden town, in the languor of a provincial summer; why should we pretend an interest in it which we did not feel? |
3136 | A white house,--a pleasant- looking house at a distance,--amiable, kindly people in it,--why should we have arrived there on its dirty day? |
3136 | A young man will catch the whole family with this flaming message, but where is that sentiment that once set the maiden heart in a flutter? |
3136 | About how do they run here as to size?" |
3136 | After a day of toil, what more natural, and what more probable for a Spaniard? |
3136 | After a few moments, in a recurring wave of strength, he looked up again, still bewildered, and said, faintly:"Where am I?" |
3136 | After all, King reflected, as the party were on their way to the Isles of Shoals, what was it that had most impressed him at Manchester? |
3136 | After all, what did it matter? |
3136 | After one campaign, must there not be time given to organize for another? |
3136 | Ai n''t that about so?" |
3136 | All our territory is mapped out as to its sanitary conditions; why not have it colored as to its effect upon the spirits and the enjoyment of life? |
3136 | All right down here?" |
3136 | Always does? |
3136 | Am I mistaken in supposing that this is owing to the discontinuance of big chimneys, with wide fireplaces in them? |
3136 | Am I to be sacrificed, broiled, roasted, for the sake of the increased vigor of a few vegetables? |
3136 | An angry voice,"What do you want?" |
3136 | And Ault? |
3136 | And Evelyn herself? |
3136 | And Father Damon, who was trying to save souls, was he accomplishing anything more than she? |
3136 | And Forbes replied:"Why did n''t you say so? |
3136 | And I can send that?" |
3136 | And I do not stick to anything? |
3136 | And I said, why not make her an intellectual woman? |
3136 | And Jack himself, happily married, with a comfortable income, why was life getting flat to him? |
3136 | And Jack, dear Jack, would he love her more? |
3136 | And Margaret, what view of the world did all this give her? |
3136 | And Miss Tavish; to whom did she fly in this peril? |
3136 | And a little''sadness''in them, was n''t there? |
3136 | And affectionate? |
3136 | And all this promenading and flirting and languishing and love- making, would it come to nothing- nothing more than usual? |
3136 | And could he guess what gown she would wear? |
3136 | And did you tell your aunt that?" |
3136 | And do n''t you think she is more beautiful than ever? |
3136 | And do n''t you think she''s a little too intellectual for society? |
3136 | And do we not all look about us in the pews, when he thus moralizes, to see who has prospered? |
3136 | And do you think we''d better have those life- size figures all round, mediaeval statues, with the incandescents? |
3136 | And had he noticed a little disposition to patronize on two or three occasions? |
3136 | And had she not reason to be? |
3136 | And have we forgotten the"murmuring pines and the hemlocks"? |
3136 | And he cries after his departing parent,"Say, father, ca n''t I go over to the farther pasture and salt the cattle?" |
3136 | And he? |
3136 | And how could he ever again stand before erring, sinful men and women and speak about that purity which he had violated? |
3136 | And how does he find out that? |
3136 | And how fares it with the intellectual man? |
3136 | And how in this generation is he equipping himself for the future? |
3136 | And how was it in the late war? |
3136 | And if it were true, why did n''t I go at once to the gate, and not lurk round there all night like another Clement? |
3136 | And if she did, what would become of her own ideals? |
3136 | And if the stage goes on in this materialistic way, how long will it be before it ceases to amuse intelligent, not to say intellectual people? |
3136 | And if this divorce is permanent, is it a good thing for literature or the stage? |
3136 | And if your story does not take the popular fancy, where will you be then?" |
3136 | And is it not pretty sport, to pull up two pence, six pence, and twelve pence as fast as you can hale and veere a line?... |
3136 | And is this because we do not like to be insulted with originality, or because in our experience it is only the commonly accepted which is true? |
3136 | And it gives specimens of this pleasant converse, as:"Comment va votre poussee?" |
3136 | And meantime what is being done for the young men who are expected to share in the high society of the future? |
3136 | And men go to work to do this, to get other people''s property, in cool blood?" |
3136 | And so far as I am concerned--""Then I have your permission?" |
3136 | And that handsome woman--Nashville?--Louisville? |
3136 | And that''s jest a make- believe? |
3136 | And the Eschelles-- do you know anything of the Eschelles?" |
3136 | And the hat? |
3136 | And the mission?" |
3136 | And then Carmen? |
3136 | And then he asked:"Is your work ended for the day? |
3136 | And then she added, more lightly,"Do n''t you know it is wrong to commit suicide?" |
3136 | And then she continued, partly to herself, partly to Miss McDonald:"He will come now, ca n''t he? |
3136 | And then suppose he should become famous-- well, not exactly famous, but an author who was talked about, and becoming known, and said to be promising? |
3136 | And then, after a moment, she asked,"Do you, Father Damon, see any sign of anything better here?" |
3136 | And then, how many would reach youth? |
3136 | And then, if one has sentiment, is there anywhere that it is more ministered to than in the city at the close of the year? |
3136 | And then, leaning forward,"Do you mean that about Mr. Henderson in the morning papers?" |
3136 | And then, not heeding the nervous start the girl gave in stepping backward,"And-- and, will you be my wife?" |
3136 | And then, quite inconsequently,"I suppose you have news from Rivervale?" |
3136 | And then, showing the drift of his thoughts,"I wonder what Carmen will do?" |
3136 | And then, to the mother:"Where is Gretchen? |
3136 | And then,''Do you bike, Miss Mavick?'' |
3136 | And to wait for what? |
3136 | And today, for the first time, he seemed to have seen the woman in her-- or was it the saint? |
3136 | And under such a tutelage and dependence, how in any event could she be able to take care of herself? |
3136 | And was Henderson a vanishing part of this pageant? |
3136 | And was Henderson unconscious of all this? |
3136 | And was it an unmanly trait that he evoked in men that sentiment of chivalry which is never wanting in the roughest community for a pure woman? |
3136 | And was she only a part of it? |
3136 | And was she serious in all her various occupations, or only experimenting? |
3136 | And was there not sometimes, not yet habitually, coming upon these faces, faces plain and faces attractive, the shade of renunciation? |
3136 | And what can a man like that want with scenery? |
3136 | And what do we gain by our present method? |
3136 | And what effect would this change in relations have upon men? |
3136 | And what is dramatic art as at present understood and practiced by the purveyors of plays for the public? |
3136 | And what is politics? |
3136 | And what of it? |
3136 | And what would become of us without Receptions? |
3136 | And what, pray, was there to appeal? |
3136 | And when it was done, and the whole thing had blown over, who cared? |
3136 | And when you came to that, why should n''t any American girl marry her equal? |
3136 | And where am I? |
3136 | And where are we to look for this if not in the youth, and especially in those to whom fortune and leisure give an opportunity of leadership? |
3136 | And where in the world are beauty, and gayety with a touch of daring, and a magnificent establishment better appreciated? |
3136 | And where is the money to come from?" |
3136 | And wherever is he going? |
3136 | And who are we?" |
3136 | And who can say that some time, in the waiting and working future, this new light might not change life altogether for this faithful soul? |
3136 | And who knows what we shall find if we get there? |
3136 | And why not, since it is absolutely necessary that the world should be amused? |
3136 | And why not? |
3136 | And why not? |
3136 | And why should n''t a man of family amuse himself? |
3136 | And why should she be expected to go back to that stage? |
3136 | And why should we presume to set up our standard of what is valuable in life, of what is a successful career? |
3136 | And why town? |
3136 | And why, so far as she was concerned, should she deny it? |
3136 | And would this change be of any injury to them in their necessary fight for existence in this pushing world? |
3136 | And yet if she had yielded to it? |
3136 | And yet might there not be an element of selfishness in this-- might not its sacrifice be a family duty? |
3136 | And yet she was but a girl; she was now practically alone, and could she resist the family and the social pressure? |
3136 | And yet suppose he should break his solemn vows and throw away his ideal, and marry Ruth Leigh, would he ever be happy? |
3136 | And yet why was it absurd? |
3136 | And you call this hypocrisy? |
3136 | And you did not see it?" |
3136 | And you do n''t object?" |
3136 | And you have not seen anybody?" |
3136 | And you made a direct proposal?" |
3136 | And you said Miss Debree was there?" |
3136 | And you wo n''t mind my repeating it-- I was a mite of a girl-- I said,''Is n''t that rather sophistical, papa?'' |
3136 | And you?" |
3136 | And, Phil, that great monster of a Mavick, who is eating up the country, is n''t he a client also?" |
3136 | And, besides, how did the vine know enough to travel in exactly the right direction, three feet, to find what it wanted? |
3136 | And, if there is steadier diet needed than venison and bear, is the pig an expensive animal? |
3136 | And, indeed, if you see what a hopeless tangle our present situation is, where else can the mind logically go?" |
3136 | And, oh, wo n''t you ask Babcock to step round here?" |
3136 | And, then, a question I never will answer,"Ten? |
3136 | And-- I wonder if you will let me say it?" |
3136 | Any news here?" |
3136 | Anything wrong?" |
3136 | Are men always gentle and considerate, and women always even- tempered and consistent, simply by virtue of a few words said to the priest? |
3136 | Are men and women essentially changed, however? |
3136 | Are n''t they in a condition that binds them half the time to do what they do n''t wish to do?" |
3136 | Are n''t we having a good time up here?" |
3136 | Are n''t you tired?" |
3136 | Are the Enoch Ardens ever wanted? |
3136 | Are the majority of women likely to be whistlers? |
3136 | Are the people who, by reason of a competence or other accidents of good- fortune, have most leisure, becoming more agreeable? |
3136 | Are the proceeds of labor more evenly distributed? |
3136 | Are the women, or are they not, taking all the virility out of literature? |
3136 | Are their husbands brigands, and are they in wait for us in the chestnut- grove yonder? |
3136 | Are there any homesteads nowadays? |
3136 | Are there mice?" |
3136 | Are there more purity, more honest, fair dealing, genuine work, fear and honor of God? |
3136 | Are there no homes where the tempter does not live with the tempted in a mush of sentimental affinity? |
3136 | Are they adapting themselves to the new conditions? |
3136 | Are they altogether in the past? |
3136 | Are they electric affinities? |
3136 | Are they not for the most part the records of the misapprehensions of the misinformed? |
3136 | Are they so different, then, from other people? |
3136 | Are they so very high and mighty?" |
3136 | Are those who start and do n''t arrive any better than those who do arrive? |
3136 | Are we any better off for the privilege of following first one inclination and then another, which is called making a choice? |
3136 | Are we exaggerating this astonishing rise, development, and spread of the chrysanthemum? |
3136 | Are we not always trying to adjust ourselves to new relations, to get naturalized into a new family? |
3136 | Are you High- Church or evangelical?" |
3136 | Are you against me?" |
3136 | Are you all tired of civilization?" |
3136 | Are you engaged in anything?" |
3136 | Are you going in?" |
3136 | Are you going to make a race of men on feminine fodder? |
3136 | Are you interested in A. and B.?" |
3136 | Are you rested?" |
3136 | Are you shocked?" |
3136 | Art is good in its way; but what about a perfect figure? |
3136 | As I look at it, you might as well ask, Does a sunset pay? |
3136 | As long as he was in the world was it right that he should isolate himself from any of its sympathies and trials? |
3136 | As quick as a flash he said,"Why do n''t you call them''The Reverdy Johnson''?" |
3136 | As the lawyers say, is it a''vinculo'', or only a''mensa et thoro?'' |
3136 | As you recall it, what was it all about? |
3136 | Ask them to let me out? |
3136 | At Capon Springs? |
3136 | At length I said,--"Polly, do you know who planted that squash, or those squashes?" |
3136 | At length Newport''s ship was loaded with clapboards, pitch, tar, glass, frankincense(?) |
3136 | At length he asked, in a softened voice,"Is the mother a Christian?" |
3136 | At length he said, in his ordinary tone,"Well, what is it?" |
3136 | Ault?" |
3136 | Balls? |
3136 | Be unhappy because Henderson was prosperous, and she could indulge her tastes and not have to drudge in school? |
3136 | Because a man was married, was he to be shut up to one little narrow career, that of husband? |
3136 | Been up to fix the Legislature?" |
3136 | Before they rose from the table, Philip asked, speaking low,"Miss Mavick, wo n''t you give me a violet from your bunch in memory of this evening?" |
3136 | Benson?" |
3136 | Blunt?" |
3136 | Brown?" |
3136 | Bullets? |
3136 | Burnett?" |
3136 | Burnett?" |
3136 | Burnett?" |
3136 | But I wonder what Boston could have done for the Jersey coast?" |
3136 | But about the crowbar? |
3136 | But by what mediation shall the culture that is now the possession of the few be made to leaven the world and to elevate and sweeten ordinary life? |
3136 | But did John like the color of her eyes? |
3136 | But do all the women like this method of spending hour after hour, day after day- indeed, a lifetime? |
3136 | But do we talk as well as our fathers and mothers did? |
3136 | But does the preacher in the pulpit, Sunday after Sunday, year after year, shrink from speaking of sin? |
3136 | But had it not been all along in the minds of the builders to ask all the world to see it, to share the delight of it? |
3136 | But has the whistling woman come to stay? |
3136 | But he almost immediately came back, and poked in his head with,--"Is you go by de diligence?" |
3136 | But how was I to know about Lyon, my dear? |
3136 | But if the fence were papered with fairy- tales, would he not stop to read them until it was too late for him to climb into the garden? |
3136 | But is it true that a woman is ever really naturalized? |
3136 | But is it well- founded, is there any more mystery about women-- than about men? |
3136 | But is n''t it singular how local and provincial society talk is everywhere? |
3136 | But is n''t this what I''m accused of doing-- shirking my duty of personal service by a contribution?" |
3136 | But is not the sunshine common, and the bloom of May? |
3136 | But is not this because he is then most opposed? |
3136 | But must not every one decide for herself what is right before God?" |
3136 | But suddenly Evelyn added:"Why do n''t you do it?" |
3136 | But the Blue Grotto? |
3136 | But the boat? |
3136 | But the inquiry has come from many cities, from many women,"Can not something be done to stop social screaming?" |
3136 | But the mind? |
3136 | But the professorship was to bear his name, and what would be the moral effect of that?" |
3136 | But then, what would become of Lenox? |
3136 | But was he well?" |
3136 | But was it not the ghost of a ship? |
3136 | But was the New England atmosphere a little cold? |
3136 | But were we not saying something about moving? |
3136 | But what avails his Conquest now he lyes Inter''d in earth a prey for Wormes& Flies? |
3136 | But what color, what charming turns of expression, what of herself, had the girl put into it, that gave him such a thrill of pleasure when he read it? |
3136 | But what could he conjure out of a register? |
3136 | But what could she do? |
3136 | But what do you do with the ebony?" |
3136 | But what had he to offer to evoke such a love? |
3136 | But what in the last analysis is the object of a government? |
3136 | But what is it in human nature that is apt to carry a man who may take a step in personal reform into so many extremes? |
3136 | But what is the relation of our general intellectual life to popular education? |
3136 | But what is the row now? |
3136 | But what procession was that moving along the southern terrace? |
3136 | But what right had he to expect that it would be favorably considered? |
3136 | But what security would there be for any calculations in life in a state of things in expectation of a revolution any moment? |
3136 | But what should he telegraph? |
3136 | But what was the good of that when one had passed beyond the reach of envy? |
3136 | But what was the other thing?" |
3136 | But what would she gain by that? |
3136 | But what, exactly, do you mean?" |
3136 | But where was Philip? |
3136 | But where,"she added, turning to King,"are the rest of your party?" |
3136 | But who can measure the inner change in her life? |
3136 | But who can say what is most effective? |
3136 | But who could it be? |
3136 | But who hoed them?" |
3136 | But who knows? |
3136 | But who was the man on the sorrel horse, and where had he gone? |
3136 | But who was to give me back my peas? |
3136 | But why do elderly people go there? |
3136 | But why not? |
3136 | But why should they disapprove of her? |
3136 | But why was it, he asked himself, that he had so many followers, his religion so few? |
3136 | But why was the separation desired? |
3136 | But will it be a rainy night? |
3136 | But would he not feel, even if no one else knew it, that he was the poet- laureate of a corporation? |
3136 | But would it be so? |
3136 | But you did n''t have any of that shirking feeling last night, did you?" |
3136 | But you know, do n''t you, dear?" |
3136 | But you went south from Fortress Monroe?" |
3136 | But you wo n''t mind? |
3136 | But, Celia, what is the matter with you? |
3136 | But, Mr. Lyon, how much good do you suppose condescending charity does?" |
3136 | But, dear, as a friend, ought n''t I to tell you?" |
3136 | But, lonely? |
3136 | But, style? |
3136 | By books? |
3136 | By land to the island of Cape Breton?'' |
3136 | By the diffusion of works of art? |
3136 | By the newspaper? |
3136 | By the way, did I tell you that Miss Lamont''s uncle came last night from Richmond? |
3136 | By what logic can I say that I should have a part in the conduct of this world and that my neighbor should not? |
3136 | By- the- way, Mr. Burnett, Hunt''s a Republican, is n''t he?" |
3136 | By- the- way, did Dr. Leigh say anything about Henderson?" |
3136 | By- the- way, what do you think of the escape suggested by the Spectrum, in the assertion that you and Evelyn had arranged to go to Europe? |
3136 | By- the- way, why not run out with me and spend the night, and we can talk the thing over?" |
3136 | CAN A HUSBAND OPEN HIS WIFE''S LETTERS? |
3136 | CAPRI"CAP, signor? |
3136 | Ca n''t it wait?" |
3136 | Ca n''t you suggest any?" |
3136 | Can I go?" |
3136 | Can I have them?" |
3136 | Can I raise all those beautiful varieties, each one of which is preferable to the other? |
3136 | Can a husband open his wife''s letters? |
3136 | Can any one deny that this blessed sentiment is extending in modern life? |
3136 | Can any one float in such scenes and be so contentedly idle anywhere in our happy land? |
3136 | Can it be that there is anything of more consequence in life than the great business in hand, which absorbs the vitality and genius of this age? |
3136 | Can it be used more than once? |
3136 | Can not one enjoy a rose without pulling it up by the roots? |
3136 | Can not one see it all from the citadel hill, and by walking down by the horticultural garden and the Roman Catholic cemetery? |
3136 | Can not you believe, Miss Benson, that I had some pride in having my friends see you and know you?" |
3136 | Can the lady act? |
3136 | Can there be any doubt that this lovely woman was orthodox? |
3136 | Can training give one an elegant form, and study command the services of a man milliner? |
3136 | Can we buy it with money quickly, or is it a grace that comes only with long civilization? |
3136 | Can we reform London and Paris and New York, which our own hands have made? |
3136 | Can women stop in such a career, even if they wish to stop? |
3136 | Can you get ready?" |
3136 | Can you have that without the social traditions,"she appealed to the earl,"such as you have in England?" |
3136 | Can you hear me?" |
3136 | Can you mention any class in this country whose interest it is to overturn the government? |
3136 | Can you poke it? |
3136 | Can you say how these things fed the imagination of the boy, who had few books and no contact with the great world? |
3136 | Christmas? |
3136 | Come, Henderson, speak up; what do you get out of it?" |
3136 | Could Baddeck be as attractive as this peaceful valley? |
3136 | Could any boy pass by those ripe berries? |
3136 | Could anything be more commonplace than such a parting? |
3136 | Could he go about in a long cloak and a slouch hat, curl up in doorways out of the blast, and be content in a feeling of his own picturesqueness? |
3136 | Could he help it if after the first hours of his return he felt the restraint of his home, and that the life seemed a little flat? |
3136 | Could he know what misery she was in, the daily witness of her father''s broken condition, of her mother''s uncertain temper? |
3136 | Could he say that he had become very much interested in studying a schoolteacher-- a very charming school- teacher? |
3136 | Could he sit all day on the stone pavement and hold out his chilblained hand for soldi? |
3136 | Could not the infinite possibilities of it fill the hunger of any soul? |
3136 | Could repentance, confession, penitence, wipe away this stain? |
3136 | Could she always be thinking of what they would think at Brandon? |
3136 | Could she be comparing the Londoner with the handsome American who sat by her side at the opera last night? |
3136 | Could she possibly make them her own? |
3136 | Could the girl throw herself away? |
3136 | Could there be any fitter resting- place for that most, weary, and gentle spirit? |
3136 | Could there be any happiness in life in any other course? |
3136 | Could these men have conquered the world? |
3136 | Could this be the Cape May about which hung so many traditions of summer romance? |
3136 | Could this interest any but us-- we who felt the loss because we still loved her? |
3136 | Could we say that life, after all, had not given her what she most desired? |
3136 | Cranks? |
3136 | D.W.]"Why not? |
3136 | DOES REFINEMENT KILL INDIVIDUALITY? |
3136 | Delancy?" |
3136 | Delancy?" |
3136 | Delancy?" |
3136 | Did Alice say so?" |
3136 | Did Carmen resent this? |
3136 | Did God require in His service the atrophy of the affections? |
3136 | Did Henderson believe? |
3136 | Did I love him? |
3136 | Did I make their investments? |
3136 | Did I never get caught? |
3136 | Did I see anything? |
3136 | Did I shirk any duty? |
3136 | Did Jack tell you about Henderson?" |
3136 | Did Mrs. Mavick understand what she was doing? |
3136 | Did Smith see Strachey''s manuscript before he published his Oxford tract, or did Strachey enlarge his own notes from Smith''s description? |
3136 | Did Their Pilgrimage end on these autumn heights? |
3136 | Did he comprehend? |
3136 | Did he distrust even her, as he did everybody else? |
3136 | Did he ever speak of that?" |
3136 | Did he frequent the theatre? |
3136 | Did he loaf in the coffee- houses, and spin the fine thread of his adventures to the idlers and gallants who resorted to them? |
3136 | Did he perhaps see Shakespeare himself at the Globe? |
3136 | Did he regret it? |
3136 | Did it occur to Mr. Froude to ask the man whether he would be contented with a good trade and the Ten Commandments? |
3136 | Did it rebuke the means by which the vast fortune of Henderson was accumulated, that it was defeated of any good use by the fraud of his wife? |
3136 | Did it seem like home at all? |
3136 | Did n''t I always tell you that I want to know? |
3136 | Did n''t I tell you that it is always darkest just before the dawn?" |
3136 | Did n''t I write you reams about my studies in psychology? |
3136 | Did n''t he elevate Pem?" |
3136 | Did n''t they tell you? |
3136 | Did n''t you notice that Redfern has an establishment on the Avenue? |
3136 | Did n''t you see, mother, that he was distrait the moment he espied that girl? |
3136 | Did not Mr. Tupper, that sweet, melodious shepherd of the undisputed, lead about vast flocks of sheep over the satisfying plain of mediocrity? |
3136 | Did not men always make all the money they had an opportunity to make? |
3136 | Did not the city offer her everything that she desired? |
3136 | Did she apologize, as if she had done anything to provoke it? |
3136 | Did she come in contact with any one who had not his price, who was not going or wanting to go in the general current? |
3136 | Did she get any strength, I wonder? |
3136 | Did she love him yet, as in the old happy days? |
3136 | Did she love these people? |
3136 | Did she think of him in surroundings so brilliant? |
3136 | Did she upbraid him for his manner? |
3136 | Did she wonder where I was?" |
3136 | Did she, was she beginning in any degree to return his passion? |
3136 | Did the Concord Grape ever come to more luscious perfection than this year? |
3136 | Did the public overpraise you at first? |
3136 | Did there ever come a moment of reflection as to the nature of this prosperity which was altogether so absorbing and agreeable? |
3136 | Did they not also once prefer the dance to hobbling to the spring, and the taste of ginger to sulphur? |
3136 | Did they not love flowers, and pets, and had they not a passion for children? |
3136 | Did you cut? |
3136 | Did you ever get into a diligence with a growling English- man who had n''t secured the place he wanted? |
3136 | Did you ever see Vanderbilt''s house? |
3136 | Did you ever see a female lobbyist? |
3136 | Did you ever see a woman refurnish a house? |
3136 | Did you ever see an English exquisite at the San Carlo, and hear him cry"Bwavo"? |
3136 | Did you ever see her again? |
3136 | Did you ever see her?" |
3136 | Did you ever see such a lot of cheap millinery? |
3136 | Did you fall in love with a Southern belle? |
3136 | Did you happen to hear where they have gone?" |
3136 | Did you never hear of the leading case of''repairs''of a government vessel here at Kittery? |
3136 | Did you say her eyes were gray? |
3136 | Did you see anything outdoors?" |
3136 | Did you see that wave? |
3136 | Did you sleep? |
3136 | Do n''t we all know we are trying to deceive each other and get the best of each other? |
3136 | Do n''t yer see, she''s a- slummin''?''" |
3136 | Do n''t you find it so, Mr. Henderson? |
3136 | Do n''t you get tired of that?" |
3136 | Do n''t you hate him?" |
3136 | Do n''t you know him? |
3136 | Do n''t you like Atlantic City?" |
3136 | Do n''t you see, I do n''t want to be bothered?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think Mr. Henderson would like a place here?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think it would be a good investment?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think it''s more refined, and, do n''t you know, sort of cultivated, and subdued, and Boston? |
3136 | Do n''t you think it''s nicer not to have any deceptions?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think she is very hospitable, mamma?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think so, McDonald?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think so?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think that a bright, clever woman, especially if she were pretty, would have an advantage with judge and jury?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think that would be a novelty? |
3136 | Do n''t you think the Count of Monte Cristo is the elder brother of Rochester? |
3136 | Do n''t you think there is too much leniency toward crime and criminals, taking the place of justice, in these days? |
3136 | Do n''t you think there ought to be a public official whose duty it is to enforce the law gratis which I can not afford to enforce when I am wronged?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think these novels fairly represent a social condition of unrest and upheaval? |
3136 | Do n''t you think women ought to know life? |
3136 | Do n''t you think, McDonald, it is like Scotland?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think, dear, that we have had enough domestic notoriety for one year?" |
3136 | Do not men do the same? |
3136 | Do people hesitate to change houses any more than they do to change their clothes? |
3136 | Do the young men, to any extent, join in Browning clubs and Shakespeare clubs and Dante clubs? |
3136 | Do they bite?" |
3136 | Do they in concert dig in the encyclopaedias, and write papers about the correlation of forces, and about Savonarola, and about the Three Kings? |
3136 | Do they meet for the study of history, of authors, of literary periods, for reading, and discussing what they read? |
3136 | Do they need continually to justify themselves?" |
3136 | Do they not ape what is most prosperous and successful in American life? |
3136 | Do they want spiritual help?" |
3136 | Do two living streams hesitate when they come together? |
3136 | Do we build houses for ourselves or for others? |
3136 | Do we make great entertainments for our own comfort? |
3136 | Do we not like the books that raise us to the great level of the commonplace, whereon we move with a sense of power? |
3136 | Do we often stop to think what influence, direct or other, the scholar, the man of high culture, has today upon the great mass of our people? |
3136 | Do women ever? |
3136 | Do women never think of anything but mating people who happen to be thrown together? |
3136 | Do you adapt yourself and your surroundings to him, or insist that he shall adapt himself to you? |
3136 | Do you always give some charity to your friends? |
3136 | Do you believe in her education?" |
3136 | Do you expect the millennium to begin in New York? |
3136 | Do you happen to know what Socrates was called? |
3136 | Do you know his wife?" |
3136 | Do you know that the birds and other animals those beggars have been drawing, which we thought were caricatures, are the real thing? |
3136 | Do you know what it is to want what you do n''t want? |
3136 | Do you know what you are talking about?" |
3136 | Do you know, Margaret, that I think you are just a little bit sly?" |
3136 | Do you know, Phil, that I''m getting into the supernatural? |
3136 | Do you know,"she went on,"that I feel a great deal less worldly than I used to?" |
3136 | Do you like him?" |
3136 | Do you like it? |
3136 | Do you mean that one must be more daring, as you call it, in London than in New York?" |
3136 | Do you mean that people do not dare go ahead and do things?" |
3136 | Do you object to such innocent amusement? |
3136 | Do you read French?" |
3136 | Do you remember that ugly brown- stone statue of St. Antonio by the bridge in Sorrento? |
3136 | Do you remember what Mr. Morgan said last winter?" |
3136 | Do you see him often?" |
3136 | Do you think I am queer? |
3136 | Do you think I have time to attend to every poor duck? |
3136 | Do you think I want to banish romance out of the world?" |
3136 | Do you think I''d better offer my novel, when it is done, to Tweedle?" |
3136 | Do you think a cat would lie down before it? |
3136 | Do you think any city lad could have written"Thanatopsis"at eighteen? |
3136 | Do you think any one knows really anything more about the operation in the world of electricity than he does about the operation of the Holy Ghost? |
3136 | Do you think dipping is nice?" |
3136 | Do you think fasting strengthens you to go through your work night and day?" |
3136 | Do you think it was just sentiment?" |
3136 | Do you think that my-- my prospective position would be an objection to her?" |
3136 | Do you think that religion and education are benefited in the long- run by this? |
3136 | Do you think they care anything about Father Damon''s gospel?" |
3136 | Do you think you could live with such a man twenty- four hours, even if he had his crown on?" |
3136 | Do you think you have anything to say about the use of my money, scraped up in forty years in Ingy? |
3136 | Do you think, Jack,"asked Carmen, with a sudden change of manner,"that Mr. Henderson is really the richest man in the United States?" |
3136 | Do you think, Mr. Burnett, that law would pay you?" |
3136 | Do you think, Mr. Henderson, we had better sell?" |
3136 | Do you understand poker, Mrs. Delancy? |
3136 | Do you understand why it is, Mr. Henderson, that one can enjoy the whole day and then be thoroughly dissatisfied with it?" |
3136 | Do you want me to help you any more than I am helping?" |
3136 | Do you want us to make our own clothes and starve the sewing- women? |
3136 | Do you, know if the exercises will open with prayer?" |
3136 | Does Strachey intend to say that Pocahontas was married to an Iniaan named Kocoum? |
3136 | Does anybody do anything well if his heart is not in it?" |
3136 | Does anybody regard it as anything but a sham and a burden? |
3136 | Does anything really take the place of that entire ease and confidence that one has in kin, or the inborn longing for their sympathy and society? |
3136 | Does gardening in a city pay? |
3136 | Does he examine the subject, and try to understand it? |
3136 | Does he paint? |
3136 | Does he read as much as she does? |
3136 | Does he study that bill? |
3136 | Does he take pains to inform himself by reading and conversation with experts upon its probable effect? |
3136 | Does he take portraits? |
3136 | Does it require nowadays, then, no special talent or gift to go on the stage? |
3136 | Does it take the place of duty, of conscience? |
3136 | Does literature pay?" |
3136 | Does n''t it depend?" |
3136 | Does n''t life spare anybody? |
3136 | Does n''t that depend upon whether the reform is large or petty? |
3136 | Does not each of them have to encounter misery enough without this? |
3136 | Does not the great public involuntarily respect the author rather for the sale of his books than for the books themselves? |
3136 | Does not the preacher say that? |
3136 | Does one ever do it entirely? |
3136 | Does our process too much eliminate the rough vigor, courage, stamina of the race? |
3136 | Does she dress for her lover as she dresses to receive her lawyer who has come to inform her that she is living beyond her income? |
3136 | Does she ever lose the instinct of it? |
3136 | Does she know?" |
3136 | Does she think I have no feeling? |
3136 | Does she think I would take from her as a charity what her husband knows is mine by right?" |
3136 | Does the college graduate know how to use his tools? |
3136 | Does the gate of divorce open more frequently from following the one theory than the other? |
3136 | Does the reader think these inferences not warranted by the facts? |
3136 | Does the time ever come when the distinction ceases between his family and hers? |
3136 | Does this seem to you a Lenten performance?" |
3136 | Dost thou desire fortune?'' |
3136 | Eh?" |
3136 | Else why do we take pleasure-- a pleasure so deep that it touches the heart like melancholy-- in the common drama of the opera? |
3136 | Evelyn? |
3136 | Even Father Damon--""Is he at work again? |
3136 | Even Henderson, the great Henderson, did the friends of his youth respect him? |
3136 | Even throw in goodness, a certain amount of altruism, gentleness, warm interest in unfortunate humanity-- is the situation much improved? |
3136 | Even with all her money at command, did she not know that her position was at the price of incessant effort? |
3136 | Even with these concessions, can England keep her great colonies? |
3136 | FASHION IN THE STREETS Was there ever elsewhere such a blue, transparent sky as this here in Munich? |
3136 | Fairchild?" |
3136 | Farquhar?" |
3136 | Fine Swiss wood- carving? |
3136 | Fletcher?" |
3136 | For Jack? |
3136 | For how long? |
3136 | For what does abandonment mean? |
3136 | For what had Mr. Mavick toiled? |
3136 | For what had Mrs. Mavick schemed all these years? |
3136 | For what other purpose are they set apart in elegant leisure? |
3136 | For what? |
3136 | For what?" |
3136 | For what?" |
3136 | For, as Plato says in the Phaedo,"whence come wars and fightings and factions? |
3136 | Forbes?" |
3136 | From Rivington Street?" |
3136 | GHENT AND ANTWERP What can one do in this Belgium but write down names, and let memory recall the past? |
3136 | Go? |
3136 | Granted that this miscellaneous hodge- podge is the cream of current literature, is it profitable to the reader? |
3136 | Granted that woman is the superior being; all the more, what chance is there for man if this sort of thing goes on? |
3136 | Had Evelyn reflected on the mortification that would fall upon her mother if she persisted in her unreasonable attitude? |
3136 | Had any hot fights? |
3136 | Had cohesion and gravitation given out? |
3136 | Had he a new sense to see all this? |
3136 | Had he any better opinion of men and women than her husband had? |
3136 | Had he any family? |
3136 | Had he been over the Gemmi? |
3136 | Had he not some of the beautiful auburn tresses of Cynthia Rudd in his skate, spruce- gum, and wintergreen box at home? |
3136 | Had he slept well? |
3136 | Had he, in fact, a longing to be in the streets where she had walked, among the scenes that had witnessed her beautiful devotion? |
3136 | Had his willingness to take up this work again been because it brought him nearer to her in spirit? |
3136 | Had n''t she been satisfied for almost twenty- four hours? |
3136 | Had not Miss Tavish danced for one of the guilds; and had not Carmen given Father Damon a handsome check in support of his mission? |
3136 | Had not the Hebrew prophets a vision of the punishment by prosperity? |
3136 | Had not women ceased to be romantic and ceased to indulge in vagaries of affection? |
3136 | Had she changed? |
3136 | Had she heard something? |
3136 | Had she not been coolly judging his conduct? |
3136 | Had she not come to know how success even in social life is sometimes attained--the meannesses, the jealousies, the cringing? |
3136 | Had she read the"Swiss Family Robinson"? |
3136 | Had she strength to swim it? |
3136 | Had she? |
3136 | Had that gay society danced itself off into the sea, and left not even a phantom of itself behind? |
3136 | Had the Old World anything to show more positive and uncompromising in all the elements of character than the Englishman? |
3136 | Had the hope that he should see her occasionally influenced him at all in his obedience to Father Monies? |
3136 | Had we not told everybody that we were going to Baddeck? |
3136 | Half an hour passes with only a languid exchange of family feeling, and then:"Pa?" |
3136 | Happiness, tragedy, anguish-- who can tell what is in store for her? |
3136 | Has Irene telegraphed you that she has got over her chill?" |
3136 | Has Miss Lamont said anything about going there?" |
3136 | Has a novelist the right to subject his creations to tortures that he would not dare to inflict upon his friends? |
3136 | Has any other coast town besides Plymouth had the good sense and taste to utilize such an elevation by the water- side as an esplanade? |
3136 | Has either he or the great politician or the great scholar cultivated the real sources of enjoyment? |
3136 | Has he changed? |
3136 | Has he expended or produced capital? |
3136 | Has he fled?" |
3136 | Has it come to that? |
3136 | Has that odious Ault turned up again?" |
3136 | Has the audience been creating a theatre to suit its taste, or have the managers been educating an audience? |
3136 | Has the divorce of literary art from the mimic art of the stage anything to do with this condition? |
3136 | Has uncle come home yet?" |
3136 | Have these questionings anything to do with the increasing Realism of women, and a consequent loss of ideals? |
3136 | Have they not the time? |
3136 | Have we all double natures, and do we simply conform to whatever surrounds us? |
3136 | Have we learned yet the simple art of easy enjoyment? |
3136 | Have women more time? |
3136 | Have you any idea how it got hold of the details?" |
3136 | Have you any idea how much ten millions are, or how much one million is?" |
3136 | Have you any right to enjoy yourself at all until the fag- end of the day, when you are tired and incapable of enjoying yourself? |
3136 | Have you any right to read, especially novels, until you have exhausted the best part of the day in some employment that is called practical? |
3136 | Have you discovered any material for such use?" |
3136 | Have you finished your novel?" |
3136 | Have you had a rise in the office? |
3136 | Have you heard any Street rumor?" |
3136 | Have you seen Evelyn?" |
3136 | Have you seen it?" |
3136 | Have you written to your uncle and to your aunt?" |
3136 | He added,"So you think our society is getting too sensitive and nervous, and inclined to make dangerous mental excursions?" |
3136 | He had a little money he wanted to invest--"''In our mission chapel?'' |
3136 | He had been in the war sixteen months, in Hugh White''s regiment,--reckon you''ve heerd of him? |
3136 | He has twenty- four hours''warning; but what can he do? |
3136 | He is great in his field, but is he leaving the intellectual province to woman? |
3136 | He shrugs his shoulders, raises his hands, and, with a sidewise shake of the head, and a look which says, How can you be so faithless? |
3136 | He spent that summer in the west of England, visiting"Bristol, Exeter, Bastable? |
3136 | Help from Carmen? |
3136 | Henceforth would she be less or more sensitive to the suggestion of love, to the allurements of ambition? |
3136 | Henderson?" |
3136 | Henderson?" |
3136 | Henderson?" |
3136 | Herbert, we can agree in one thing: old memories, reveries, friendships, center about that:--is n''t an open wood- fire good?" |
3136 | Herbert, what do you think women are good for? |
3136 | Here is the Gut of Canso, but where is Baddeck? |
3136 | Honest? |
3136 | Hopeless? |
3136 | Hopper?" |
3136 | How are they preparing to meet socially these young ladies who are cultivating their minds? |
3136 | How are they to take their place in the world unless they know life as men know it?" |
3136 | How are things down here?" |
3136 | How are we going to live when we are all educated, without knowing how to live? |
3136 | How are we to select the few capable men that are to rule all the rest? |
3136 | How can Johnny bring in wood when he is in that defile with Braddock, and the Indians are popping at him from behind every tree? |
3136 | How can a woman, without being misunderstood? |
3136 | How can people permit it? |
3136 | How can there be mint juleps( to go into details) without ice? |
3136 | How can they live in their narrow limits? |
3136 | How can you want it to go on?'' |
3136 | How cast away? |
3136 | How could he be?" |
3136 | How could he? |
3136 | How could it be otherwise than that our interests should diverge? |
3136 | How could it be otherwise, when all the promise of the girl was realized in the bloom and the exquisite susceptibility of the woman? |
3136 | How could it be otherwise? |
3136 | How could she have acted otherwise? |
3136 | How could she reach the high ceiling? |
3136 | How did she look? |
3136 | How did she what? |
3136 | How did the story get out? |
3136 | How do you account for the alleged personal regard for Socrates? |
3136 | How do you treat the stranger? |
3136 | How else can they be judged? |
3136 | How else should it be rated, when a very popular author, by whom Philip sat one day at luncheon, confessed that he never read books? |
3136 | How far is our popular education, which we have now enjoyed for two full generations, responsible for this state of mind? |
3136 | How is it about the war- path and all that? |
3136 | How is it gathered? |
3136 | How is she?" |
3136 | How is the lord?" |
3136 | How long did"The Country Parson"feed an eager world with rhetorical statements of that which it already knew? |
3136 | How long had Carmen waited on the social outskirts; and now she had come into her kingdom, was she anything but a tinsel queen? |
3136 | How long is it since a play has been written and accepted and played which has in it any so- called literary quality or is an addition to literature? |
3136 | How long would it take to fill the hole and drown out the woodchuck? |
3136 | How many New- Yorkers are there in New York? |
3136 | How many ages has it been so? |
3136 | How many are trying to save others-- others except the distant and foreign sinners?" |
3136 | How many hours, how many minutes, does one get of that pure content which is happiness? |
3136 | How many worlds are there, and does one ever, except by birth( in a republic), conquer them all? |
3136 | How much of our virtue do we owe to inherited habits? |
3136 | How much of privilege had been gathered and perpetuated in a century? |
3136 | How much time do we waste in futile experiment? |
3136 | How must the world look to a man in a basket, riding about on his wife''s head? |
3136 | How often do we deliberately weigh such a choice as we would that of another person, testing our inclination by solid reason? |
3136 | How should the department know that there were two places of the same name? |
3136 | How so? |
3136 | How was it possible to frame a message that should be commercial on its face, and yet convey the deepest agony and devotion of the sender''s heart? |
3136 | How was she to know that she had made a mistake, if mistake it was? |
3136 | How was she to know that this hour was a crisis in her life? |
3136 | How was she to tell? |
3136 | How were we to get out with him or without him? |
3136 | How would she receive him? |
3136 | How''ll you swap for that one o''yourn?" |
3136 | How, then, can he be expected to comprehend it when it is depicted to the life in books? |
3136 | I am sure it was no mere curiosity, but a desire to be of service, that led me to approach her and say,"Madam, where are you going?" |
3136 | I came to say good- by, and-- and--""Shall I call my aunt?" |
3136 | I could see it in her eyes, and then she turned red and confused, and at length said:"But would n''t you have rich men do good with their money?" |
3136 | I have seen the most promising paradox come to grief by a simple"Do you think so?" |
3136 | I heard one man say to another just now,''How long do you suppose Henderson will last?'' |
3136 | I hope she did n''t give you a turn?" |
3136 | I kept seeing that Spanish woman whirl around and contort, and-- do you mind my telling you? |
3136 | I lost a hundred thousand yesterday; did I whine about it? |
3136 | I mean, what are you going to do? |
3136 | I s''pose I can go round and look?'' |
3136 | I should like to stop here a week; would n''t you?" |
3136 | I suppose I can think my thoughts?" |
3136 | I suppose the girl is plain, too-- takes after her mother?" |
3136 | I suppose the topic will be Transcendentalism?" |
3136 | I suppose you go there too, being brought up a Congregationalist?" |
3136 | I suppose you have been up Green Mountain?" |
3136 | I thought you did n''t care-- didn''t care to belong to anything?" |
3136 | I wonder how she knew?" |
3136 | I wonder if I should grow worldly, seeing more of it?" |
3136 | I wonder if he belongs to Sotor, King and Co., of New York?" |
3136 | I wonder if in society they go about saying that? |
3136 | I wonder if men are as blind as they seem to be? |
3136 | I wonder if that was the time? |
3136 | I wonder what Jehoiakim did with the mealy- bug on his passion- vine, and if he had any way of removing the scale- bug from his African acacia? |
3136 | I wonder what he''s at?" |
3136 | I wonder what she was like?" |
3136 | I wonder what such people think? |
3136 | IS THERE ANY CONVERSATION Is there any such thing as conversation? |
3136 | If I want to buy anything in the market, have I got to look into every tuppenny interest concerned in it? |
3136 | If I were to lead her away, the question was, Where? |
3136 | If Margaret''s destiny had been united with such a man as John Lyon, what would have been her discernment in such a case as this? |
3136 | If a man present a smiling front to the world under extreme trial, is not that all that can be expected of him? |
3136 | If all the artificial round of calls and cards should tumble down, what valuable thing would be lost out of anybody''s life? |
3136 | If circumstances had altered, was she to blame? |
3136 | If he attempted any explanation, would it not involve the offensive supposition that his social rank was different from hers? |
3136 | If he can not be trusted in the matter of worsted- work, why should he have such distinctive liberty in the most important matter of his life? |
3136 | If he had been conscious of rectitude, would he not have relied upon his simple denial?" |
3136 | If he waited five minutes, who would believe my story of going to sleep and not hearing the drums? |
3136 | If he was coming, why did he not come? |
3136 | If he was not to blame for it, why did n''t he tell her-- why did n''t he explain? |
3136 | If it came, did it give any doubts and raise any of the old questions that used to be discussed at Brandon? |
3136 | If it has not encouraged it, has it done much to correct it? |
3136 | If it was intended to adorn the landscape, why was it ruined by piercing it irregularly with square windows like those of a factory? |
3136 | If it were pride only, how could she overcome it? |
3136 | If one of her dispensary comrades had said it, would she have been so moved? |
3136 | If she had fully realized that it was a step in that direction, would she have penned it with so little regret as she felt? |
3136 | If she was a coquette, what did it matter to him? |
3136 | If sleep did not come that night to her tired head on the pillow, what wonder? |
3136 | If the Casino is then so exclusive, why is it not more used as a rendezvous and lounging- place? |
3136 | If the working- men do not stand by each other, where are they to look for help? |
3136 | If there was a little talk about Jack''s intimacy elsewhere, was there anything uncommon in that? |
3136 | If these men had millions, could they get any more enjoyment out of life? |
3136 | If they traveled farther, were the railway carriages anything but refrigerators tempered by cans of cooling water? |
3136 | If they were rich, what more could they have? |
3136 | If they, in any case, came back, would there be any place for them? |
3136 | If this is true, why is it? |
3136 | If we can not, where is the difficulty? |
3136 | If you do not write a better novel this year, will not the public flout you and jeer you for a pretender? |
3136 | If you long to go to a place where you will have peace, why should you let what you call your reason stand in the way? |
3136 | In a word, if the world were actually all civilized, would n''t it be too weak even to ripen? |
3136 | In all this time why did he make no sign? |
3136 | In fact, what sort of a hand would the Three Kings suggest to them? |
3136 | In what other part of the world can that achievement in comfort and convenience be approached? |
3136 | In what rank? |
3136 | In what respect? |
3136 | In your experience of society, what is it that it pursues and desires? |
3136 | Indeed, what chance was there to win her at all? |
3136 | Instead, he took refuge in the usual commonplace, and asked,"Would n''t you like to have been a man?" |
3136 | Into what unknown dangers were we going? |
3136 | Invented? |
3136 | Is Christmas swelling away? |
3136 | Is a man happier, or improved in character, by the woful tale of a world''s distress and apprehension that greets him every morning at breakfast? |
3136 | Is affection as whimsically, as blindly distributed as wealth? |
3136 | Is any one deceived by it? |
3136 | Is anybody beginning to feel it a burden, this sweet festival of charity and good- will, and to look forward to it with apprehension? |
3136 | Is anything the matter?" |
3136 | Is anything wanting to this picture of the degradation of woman? |
3136 | Is education giving us this? |
3136 | Is he any better, doctor? |
3136 | Is he becoming anything but a newspaper- made person? |
3136 | Is he ever anything but a sort of tolerated, criticised, or admired alien? |
3136 | Is he ill? |
3136 | Is he late? |
3136 | Is he out?''" |
3136 | Is he well?" |
3136 | Is his mind getting to be like the newspaper? |
3136 | Is it a New York story?" |
3136 | Is it a hard lot, that of the fishermen and the mariners of the Adriatic? |
3136 | Is it a means of anything but superficial culture and fragmentary information? |
3136 | Is it a smile of anticipated, triumph, or of contempt? |
3136 | Is it a sufficient account of the genius of Cervantes and Scott that they combined in their romances a representation of the higher and lower classes? |
3136 | Is it because it is an excuse for doing what she longs to do? |
3136 | Is it better than anything else? |
3136 | Is it extravagant to speak of a tendency to make the author merely an adjunct of the publishing house? |
3136 | Is it full?" |
3136 | Is it going to rain? |
3136 | Is it in fact till we come to mediaeval times, and the chivalric age, that women are set up as being more incomprehensible than men? |
3136 | Is it in her nature to be? |
3136 | Is it invigorating, even restful? |
3136 | Is it made of India- rubber? |
3136 | Is it not agreeable to have sweet charity silver shod? |
3136 | Is it not as easy to make nothing out of what never yet existed as out of what has ceased to exist? |
3136 | Is it not necessary to have an authentic list of pasteboard acquaintances to invite to the receptions? |
3136 | Is it not necessary to keep up what is called society? |
3136 | Is it not of more importance how they represented them? |
3136 | Is it not time to look the facts squarely in the face, and conform to them in our efforts for social and political amelioration? |
3136 | Is it not time we tried, radically, a scientific, a disciplinary, a really humanitarian method? |
3136 | Is it only a legend? |
3136 | Is it only thoughtlessness? |
3136 | Is it possible that this pirate of the Street had a bit of sentiment at the bottom of his heart? |
3136 | Is it possible that we can have too many ruins? |
3136 | Is it so blue? |
3136 | Is it the Homeric story of Nausicaa? |
3136 | Is it the Princess of Paphlagonia?" |
3136 | Is it the novel?" |
3136 | Is it the smile of the daughter of Herodias, or the invitation of a''ghazeeyeh''? |
3136 | Is it things of the mind or things of the senses? |
3136 | Is it to affect me like a strain of music? |
3136 | Is it to produce the effect of a picture? |
3136 | Is it true that cultivation, what we call refinement, kills individuality? |
3136 | Is it true that in certain spiritual states, say of isolation or intense nervous alertness, we can see them as they can see each other? |
3136 | Is it true that the mental process in one sex is intuitive, and in the other logical, with every link necessary and visible? |
3136 | Is it well for woman to whistle? |
3136 | Is it worth while to repeat even its outlines? |
3136 | Is it"low"to dwell upon these things of the senses, when one is on a tour in search of the picturesque? |
3136 | Is it, then, such a discerner of right and wrong? |
3136 | Is its condition any better? |
3136 | Is n''t it Spanish?" |
3136 | Is n''t it beautiful everywhere? |
3136 | Is n''t it better that money, however acquired, should be used for a good purpose than a bad one?" |
3136 | Is n''t it indeed the golden era of letters? |
3136 | Is n''t it queer that the further we go into science the deeper we go into mystery? |
3136 | Is n''t it the highest charity to give them work? |
3136 | Is n''t it true, Mr. Burnett, that you must have a human element to make any country interesting?" |
3136 | Is n''t that a pretty story?" |
3136 | Is n''t the feeling of inequality intensified? |
3136 | Is not eternal vigilance the price of position? |
3136 | Is not life real and terrible enough, he asked himself, but that brides must cast this experience also into their honeymoon? |
3136 | Is not that something? |
3136 | Is not the popular liking for him somewhat independent of his writings? |
3136 | Is not this book pleasing because it is commonplace? |
3136 | Is not this the ideal of a watering- place life? |
3136 | Is not this, O brothers and sisters, an evil under the sun, this dinner as it is apt to be conducted? |
3136 | Is she pretty?" |
3136 | Is she sagging towards Realism or rising towards Idealism? |
3136 | Is she well this summer?" |
3136 | Is she well?" |
3136 | Is that a modern idea?" |
3136 | Is that ill- natured?" |
3136 | Is that the essence of Calvinism? |
3136 | Is the Atlantic shore the only coast where beauty may lounge and spread its net of enchantment? |
3136 | Is the New England man any better able to bear or deal with his extraordinary climate by the daily knowledge of the weather all over the globe? |
3136 | Is the book a window, through which I am to see life? |
3136 | Is the feminine nature any more difficult to understand than the masculine nature? |
3136 | Is the feminization of the world a desirable thing for a vigorous future? |
3136 | Is the oak less strong and tough because the mosses and weather- stains stick in all manner of grotesque sketches along its bark? |
3136 | Is the present condition of the stage a degeneration, as some say, or is it a natural evolution of an art independent of literature? |
3136 | Is the rage for this flower typical of this fast and flaring age? |
3136 | Is the time approaching when we shall want to get somebody to play it for us, like base- ball? |
3136 | Is there a barbaric force left in the world that we have been daintily trying to cover and apologize for and refine into gentle agreeableness? |
3136 | Is there a particular moment when we choose our path in life, when we take the right or the left? |
3136 | Is there any being quite so happy, quite so stupid, as a lover? |
3136 | Is there any difference in kind between the country worldliness and the city worldliness? |
3136 | Is there any law that a wrong must right a wrong? |
3136 | Is there any region or circumstance of life that the poet did not forecast and provide for? |
3136 | Is there any truth in it? |
3136 | Is there any way to tell a good book from a bad one? |
3136 | Is there anybody else here I know?" |
3136 | Is there anything I can do for you?" |
3136 | Is there anything in the State, or public opinion, or anywhere, that will protect your interests against clever swindling?" |
3136 | Is there no charm in social life-- no self- sacrifice, devotion, courage to stem materialistic conditions, and live above them? |
3136 | Is there no manliness left? |
3136 | Is there not something supernatural in such a love itself? |
3136 | Is there nothing outside of that envied circle which you make so brilliant? |
3136 | Is there nothing stimulating in the conflict of mind with mind? |
3136 | Is there nothing, then, in the exchange of ideas? |
3136 | Is there such a thing as a vacation in religion? |
3136 | Is this a divine gift? |
3136 | Is this a hopeless world? |
3136 | Is this a selfish spirit? |
3136 | Is this an accident, or is it a necessity of the refinement that we insist on calling civilization? |
3136 | Is this an exaggeration? |
3136 | Is this an intangible matter? |
3136 | Is this an old sermon? |
3136 | Is this philosopher contented with what life has brought him? |
3136 | Is this the brigand of whom I have read, and is he luring me to his haunt? |
3136 | Is your compact, graceful, orderly society liable to be monotonous in its gay repetition of the same thing week after week? |
3136 | It has been a terrible campaign; but where is the indemnity? |
3136 | It is quite English, is it not? |
3136 | It is right odd, is n''t it? |
3136 | It may be continued, together with word- learning, until the children are able to say( is it reading?) |
3136 | It may be that this treatment has excited the sympathy of the world, but is it legitimate? |
3136 | It said,"Why on earth does n''t that boy come home? |
3136 | It''s rather nice for a fellow, Mrs. Henderson, to have a lot of women keeping him straight, is n''t it?" |
3136 | Job had the right idea in his mind when he asked,"Is there any taste in the white of an egg?" |
3136 | Just a little more, would he have? |
3136 | King?" |
3136 | LITERATURE AND THE STAGE Is the divorce of Literature and the Stage complete, or is it still only partial? |
3136 | Let it be common, and what distinction will there be in it? |
3136 | Like to dance? |
3136 | Lord Montague stared at him as if to say,"Who the deuce are you?" |
3136 | Love and moonlight, and the soft lapse of the waves and singing? |
3136 | Love you not me?'' |
3136 | Lucky for me, was n''t it? |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Ma?" |
3136 | Major, do you happen to know a cheap lodging- house that is respectable?" |
3136 | Mamma, do n''t you think it would be only civil to ask Mr. Lyon to a quiet dinner before he goes?" |
3136 | Mandeville, why do n''t you get up a"centenary"of Socrates, and put up his statue in the Central Park? |
3136 | Marriage? |
3136 | Married? |
3136 | Mavick?" |
3136 | May I ask what corps you belong to?'' |
3136 | McDonald, what is society for?" |
3136 | Meantime, where is the agricultural fair and cattle- show? |
3136 | Mebbe you''re used to fording? |
3136 | Meigs?" |
3136 | Merely that she may become a sort of second- rate man?" |
3136 | Might he fire at a mark with an air- gun that makes no noise? |
3136 | Moral ideas? |
3136 | Morgan?" |
3136 | Mr. Henderson did not care to extend the conversation in this direction, and he asked, abruptly,"Are you finding New York agreeable, Miss Debree?" |
3136 | Mr. Lyon tried to adopt her tone, and added,"Would you like to see me an American citizen?" |
3136 | Mr. Mavick at length broke the silence with:"Did you have a good time, child?" |
3136 | Mr. Van Dusen wants to know why Maud S. is like a salamander?" |
3136 | Must I subscribe to all the magazines and weekly papers which offer premiums of the best vines? |
3136 | Must it always go on by spurts and relapses, alternate civilization and barbarism, and the barbarism being necessary to keep us employed and growing? |
3136 | Must the Congressman read it? |
3136 | Must we always have the old slow- coach merchants and planters thrown up to us? |
3136 | Must we be always either vapid or serious? |
3136 | Must we not all live our lives? |
3136 | Must you shut yourself up because you found you could n''t trust everybody? |
3136 | My dear Charmian, who wrote the successful novel of last year, do you not already repent your rash act? |
3136 | My lord, why not say to her what you feel, and make the offer you intend? |
3136 | NINTH STUDY I Can you have a backlog in July? |
3136 | Nay, what would the world be without her? |
3136 | No flaw about that, is there?" |
3136 | No? |
3136 | Nothing could be more unpleasant than a northeast wind? |
3136 | Notoriety? |
3136 | Now there''s Henderson--""What have you got against Henderson?" |
3136 | Now what is the object in life of this great, growing class that has money and leisure, what does it chiefly care for? |
3136 | Now, Evelyn, have n''t you any curiosity to see what this world we are talking about is like?" |
3136 | Now, did the summer Bostonians make this coast refined, or did this coast refine the Bostonians who summer here?" |
3136 | Now, is our present system deterrent? |
3136 | Now, what is the relation of our intellectual development to this physical improvement? |
3136 | Now, whoever is sick down there? |
3136 | Of the sympathy of Alice he was sure, but why inflict his selfish grief on her tender heart? |
3136 | Of what did they talk? |
3136 | Ohio is more like France, I suppose?" |
3136 | On the 17th he was brought ashore to answer the charge of Jehu[ John?] |
3136 | On the contrary, did she see in him what John felt himself to be? |
3136 | Once spent, does the world to each succeeding experimenter in it become old and stale? |
3136 | One day she surprised Miss McDonald by asking her if she did n''t think that rich people were the only ones not free to do as they pleased? |
3136 | One might venture into the infernal regions to rescue such a woman; but why take her there? |
3136 | One of the first questions asked by any camp- fire is,"Did ye ever see Horace?" |
3136 | One of them, to whom she had partially explained the situation, ended by asking her,"Are you going to contest the will?" |
3136 | Only, is n''t it odd, this personal dropping back into an old situation? |
3136 | Only-- well, how is that?" |
3136 | Opalescent?" |
3136 | Or a criminal? |
3136 | Or did she think that circumstances and not her own choice were responsible for her state of feeling? |
3136 | Or is it, in fact, more artistic to ignore all these, and paint only the feeble and the repulsive in our social state? |
3136 | Or is the interest of this class, for the most part, with some noble exceptions, rather in things grossly material, in what is called pleasure? |
3136 | Or is there some mistake about our ideal of civilization? |
3136 | Or the Washington manner? |
3136 | Or up this or that mountain? |
3136 | Or was he composing one of those important love- letters of state to Madame Blank which have since delighted the lovers of literature? |
3136 | Or was it merely that he had confidence in the winning character of his own qualities and was biding his time? |
3136 | Or will you make it what humanity has passionately longed for? |
3136 | Or, in other words, what effect is popular education having upon the general intellectual habit and taste? |
3136 | Or, worse than that even, that one loses his taste by over- cultivation? |
3136 | Ought the president to take the money, knowing how it was made?" |
3136 | PARIS AND LONDON SURFACE CONTRASTS OF PARIS AND LONDON I wonder if it is the Channel? |
3136 | Parson, wo n''t you please punch that fire, and give us more blaze? |
3136 | Perhaps Mrs. Cortlandt fancied his eyes were following a particular figure, for she responded,"And how did you like her?" |
3136 | Perhaps some of my youthful illusions have vanished, but should I have been happier if I had indulged them? |
3136 | Perhaps the man would like eleven commandments? |
3136 | Perhaps you are going to the Neighborhood Guild?" |
3136 | Perhaps you could n''t tell whether Miss Eschelle was a bull or a bear in this case?" |
3136 | Perhaps you saw some allusion to it in the newspapers?" |
3136 | Perhaps, however, you are fighting the devil?" |
3136 | Permit me,"and he raised her hand to his lips;"I salute-- is it not"( turning to Mrs. Mavick)--"ze princess of ze house?" |
3136 | Philip''s?" |
3136 | Philip, why do n''t you take the heroine of the Mavick ball? |
3136 | Ponsonby?" |
3136 | Presently Mr. King said to his friend, Mrs. Cortlandt,"Who is that clever- looking, graceful girl over there?" |
3136 | Presently he asked:"Do you think, Mrs. Delancy, that Dr. Leigh has any sympathy with the higher life, with spiritual things? |
3136 | Probably when the Great Assize is held one of the questions asked will be,"Did you, in America, ever write stories for children?" |
3136 | Query, Why should this have such a different effect from Porter''s? |
3136 | Recognition? |
3136 | Rumor is a big thing, especially in a panic, eh? |
3136 | SHALL WOMEN PROPOSE? |
3136 | SIXTEENTH WEEK I do not hold myself bound to answer the question, Does gardening pay? |
3136 | Sage?" |
3136 | Shall I be so unnatural, as not to give bread to the hungrie, or uncharitable, as not to cover the naked?" |
3136 | Shall I carry your wreath?" |
3136 | Shall I describe the passage of the Tete Noire? |
3136 | Shall I tell Mrs. Van Cortlandt?" |
3136 | Shall I try all the kinds of grapes, and all the sorts of pears? |
3136 | Shall he not be excused for showing a little irritation at home when things go badly? |
3136 | Shall she surprise, or shock, or only please? |
3136 | Shall vulgarity be left just vulgar, and have no apotheosis and glorification? |
3136 | Shall we go on and brave a wetting, or ignominiously retreat? |
3136 | Shall we go to Capri? |
3136 | Shall we have, then, no refined characters on the stage? |
3136 | Shall we take a boat and sail over there, and so destroy forever another island of the imagination? |
3136 | She did n''t like it much, and asked,''What is anything for?'' |
3136 | She is such a hand to set things going, do n''t you know? |
3136 | She must know, she did know-- what was the use of writing? |
3136 | She told Jack afterwards that"Mrs. Henderson cares no more for the poor of New York than she does for--""Henderson?" |
3136 | She was watching him shrewdly, and saw the flush in his face as he hurriedly asked,"Did you ever see her?" |
3136 | She, on her part, was thinking, what could Miss Eschelle mean by saying that she was afraid of him? |
3136 | Should he risk the loss of her by timidity? |
3136 | Should he tell her that he did n''t mind if her parents were what Mrs. Bartlett Glow called"impossible"? |
3136 | Should one take a cynical view of mankind because he perceives this great power of the commonplace? |
3136 | Should she nestle under the great ledge, or sit on a projecting rock with her figure against the sky? |
3136 | Should they always end well in the novel? |
3136 | Should we dare return to the great Republic, and own that we had not been into the Blue Grotto? |
3136 | Should we find any inn on Cape Breton like this one? |
3136 | Since Mr. Henderson''s death--""What difference did Henderson''s death make over here?" |
3136 | Sit and dream in the Rent Tower under the lindens that grow in its top? |
3136 | Slavery? |
3136 | So American?" |
3136 | So he stood up and raised his hand, and said to the schoolma''am,"Please, ma''am, I''ve got the stomach- ache; may I go home?" |
3136 | So these are the little places where they sleep? |
3136 | So this impossible thing, this miracle, was explained? |
3136 | Some day I will make a hit, and everybody will ask,''Who is this daring, clever Olin Brad?'' |
3136 | Some one from the office, from her lawyer? |
3136 | Some one will ask, Why not? |
3136 | Somebody ought to get up before the dew is off( why do n''t the dew stay on till after a reasonable breakfast?) |
3136 | Soon, you think? |
3136 | Speaking generally of the mass of business men-- and the mass are business men in this country-- have they any habit of reading books? |
3136 | Sudden, was n''t it? |
3136 | Suppose I should give you that sort of sympathy in the projects you set your heart on?" |
3136 | Suppose it was left to you?" |
3136 | Suppose the proposal were made to women to exchange being mysterious for the ballot? |
3136 | Suppose we can not get on, and are forced to stay here? |
3136 | Suppose, Mrs. Fletcher, a wrecker should steal your money that way?" |
3136 | THE DIRECTOIRE GOWN THE MYSTERY OF THE SEX THE CLOTHES OF FICTION THE BROAD A CHEWING GUM WOMEN IN CONGRESS SHALL WOMEN PROPOSE? |
3136 | THE DIRECTOIRE GOWN THE MYSTERY OF THE SEX THE CLOTHES OF FICTION THE BROAD A CHEWING GUM WOMEN IN CONGRESS SHALL WOMEN PROPOSE? |
3136 | THE INDETERMINATE SENTENCE-- WHAT SHALL BE DONE WITH THE CRIMINAL CLASS? |
3136 | THE LOSS IN CIVILIZATION Have we yet hit upon the right idea of civilization? |
3136 | THE RELATION OF LITERATURE TO LIFE"EQUALITY"WHAT IS YOUR CULTURE TO ME? |
3136 | Talk? |
3136 | Taverns? |
3136 | Telegraph? |
3136 | Tell us, gentle driver, is there no other way? |
3136 | That her little girl? |
3136 | That is to say, are not barbarism and vast regions of uncultivated land a necessity of healthful life on this globe? |
3136 | That is, less logical, more whimsical, more uncertain in their mental processes? |
3136 | That it was the same as dragging a mother away from her child? |
3136 | That''s not the question; but what are women who write so large a proportion of the current stories bringing into literature? |
3136 | The Atlantic shore and Europe? |
3136 | The Directoire Gown The Mystery Of The Sex The Clothes Of Fiction The Broad A Chewing Gum Women In Congress Shall Women Propose? |
3136 | The Laocoon? |
3136 | The Relation Of Literature To Life"Equality"What Is Your Culture To Me? |
3136 | The Schuyler Blunts?" |
3136 | The arms moving? |
3136 | The citizen asks his neighbor,"Did you hear the frogs last night?" |
3136 | The common victual of the others was the entrails of horses and"ulgries"( goats?) |
3136 | The conscientious publisher asks two questions: Is the book good? |
3136 | The daughter said,"Mother, who was Washington?" |
3136 | The editorial comments frequently are able enough, but is it worth while keeping an expensive mill going to grind chaff? |
3136 | The expedition went up the river to a village called Patowomek, and thence rowed up a little River Quiyough( Acquia Creek?) |
3136 | The experiments fail, the experiments succeed-- at any rate, they end-- and what remains for transmission, for the sustenance of succeeding peoples? |
3136 | The fowls of the air have peas; but what has man? |
3136 | The girl opens her eyes with a startled look, and says, feebly:"Do you think he will come?" |
3136 | The greater must include the less; but how if the less leaks out? |
3136 | The lesson went on:"Who was Alcibiades? |
3136 | The man bustled away and found his late paper, and thrust it through the grating, with the inquiry,"Can you read?" |
3136 | The mystery is not their continuance, but how did they get a start? |
3136 | The next day the newspaper asks:"Where''s Blank? |
3136 | The next generation will be pretty much what they choose to make it; and what are they doing for the elevation of young men? |
3136 | The only information we obtained about it was from its porter at the station, who replied to the question,"Is it the best?" |
3136 | The only question is, is it true to human nature? |
3136 | The other ladies looked significantly at them, and one of them said,"Do n''t you think there''s something in it? |
3136 | The oval makes a pretty effect; but what are those signs between the letters?" |
3136 | The price? |
3136 | The publisher without a conscience asks only one question: Will the book sell? |
3136 | The question is,"Can not one easier change his creed than his pew?" |
3136 | The sea had the blue of Nice; why must we always go to the Mediterranean for an aqua marina, for poetic lines, for delicate shades? |
3136 | The social oyster being opened, there appears to be two shells and only one oyster; who shall have it? |
3136 | The stage can be amusing, but can it show life as it is without the aid of idealizing literary art? |
3136 | The subject is a delicate one, and should not be confused with the broader one, what is the purpose of the higher education? |
3136 | The writer was coming to Brandon; business, to be sure, was the excuse; but why should it have been necessary to announce to her a business visit? |
3136 | The"incitements"gave him courage, so that he exclaims:"Shall I be of so untoward a disposition, as to refuse to lead the blind into the right way? |
3136 | Then I shall step into the club a minute, and--""Be in at lunch? |
3136 | Then I suppose she has money?" |
3136 | Then he said, still as if reflecting:"Is n''t it queer? |
3136 | Then you think he would rather sell than buy?" |
3136 | Then you think the red man is a born gentleman of the highest breeding? |
3136 | Then, turning his eyes for a moment, and putting out his left hand to her, he said,"Well, what is it, dear?" |
3136 | There was a chorus of voices:"Where are your blackberries?" |
3136 | There were only two questions, and they are at the bottom of all creative literature-- could he see them, could he make others see them? |
3136 | There will probably be some orator for years and years to come, at every Fourth of July, who will go on asking, Where is Thebes? |
3136 | They are the influence that keeps life elevated and sweet-- are they not? |
3136 | They could float now, but where were they going? |
3136 | They have clubs, to be sure, but of what sort? |
3136 | They invent illegal modes of expenditure; and what do they or their wives care about the law? |
3136 | They might reject him-- no doubt he was a wholly unequal match for the heiress-- but could they, to the very end, be cruel to her? |
3136 | They must needs carry looking- glasses with them;"and good reason,"says Stubbes, savagely,"for else how could they see the devil in them? |
3136 | This insures a wider distribution, but what is its effect upon the quality of literature? |
3136 | This is not much about the Alps? |
3136 | This is true, but is it the last analysis of the subject? |
3136 | This was all as true before the Mavick failure as after; but, before, what was the use of effort? |
3136 | Though you know now that the embarrassing question that everybody has to answer is,''Have you been to Alaska?'' |
3136 | Through this delicious weather why should the steamboat hasten, in order to discharge its passengers into the sweeping unrest of continental travel? |
3136 | To be admired, to be deferred to-- was there any harm in that? |
3136 | To be sure, it was pleasant coming home into an atmosphere of sincerity, of worship-- was it not? |
3136 | To give her up? |
3136 | To go away? |
3136 | To go with them, not to care, to accept Jack''s idle, good- natured, easy philosophy of life and conduct, would not that have insured a peaceful life? |
3136 | To the cool and imperturbable Mavick, who was as strong and sinewy as he was cool? |
3136 | To the gallant Major? |
3136 | To what end? |
3136 | To what purpose? |
3136 | Turn her adrift after eighteen-- what is it, seventeen?--years of faithful service?" |
3136 | WHAT IS YOUR CULTURE TO ME? |
3136 | Was Berlin much out of the way in going from Vienna to Paris? |
3136 | Was I slow? |
3136 | Was Irene really enraptured by the dear little barnacles and the exquisite sea- weeds? |
3136 | Was Jack happy in the whirl he was in? |
3136 | Was Margaret content? |
3136 | Was Mr. Henderson the sort of man to whom such a woman would be attracted? |
3136 | Was Mrs. Mavick peevish and unreasonable? |
3136 | Was Scott, then, only a reporter? |
3136 | Was Smith an indulger in that new medicine for all ills, tobacco? |
3136 | Was ever any enjoyment so keen as that with which a boy rushes out of the schoolhouse door for the ten minutes of recess? |
3136 | Was ever produced so insipid a result? |
3136 | Was everybody grasping and selfish? |
3136 | Was everybody worldly and shallow? |
3136 | Was he a type or was he a freak? |
3136 | Was he about to make a fool of himself? |
3136 | Was he alone? |
3136 | Was he always to preach against sin, to strive to extirpate it, and yet always to make it easy for the sinner? |
3136 | Was he any more charitable than Uncle Jerry? |
3136 | Was he born on the wheels? |
3136 | Was he just a narrow- minded, bigoted priest? |
3136 | Was he really hers,"truly"? |
3136 | Was he still angry with her? |
3136 | Was her action punished by the same unscrupulous tactics of the Street that originally made the fortune? |
3136 | Was her husband capable of such conduct? |
3136 | Was his figure less distinct as the days went by? |
3136 | Was it a sin, she said, to be happy and prosperous? |
3136 | Was it all true? |
3136 | Was it altogether so melancholy as it might seem? |
3136 | Was it an earthquake, or another fire? |
3136 | Was it any better in divine Florence than on the chill Riviera? |
3136 | Was it any new thing for good men to do this? |
3136 | Was it because the atmosphere was more natural and genuine? |
3136 | Was it because they were children''s voices, and innocent? |
3136 | Was it gone, that life?--gone or going out of her heart? |
3136 | Was it hers? |
3136 | Was it not Madame de Sevigne who said she had loved several different women for several different qualities? |
3136 | Was it not a wife''s duty to stand by her husband? |
3136 | Was it not almost angelic there at the moment? |
3136 | Was it not an evening spent in a cottage amid the rocks, close by the water, in the company of charming people? |
3136 | Was it not an occasion that emphasized our republican democracy? |
3136 | Was it not enough to come down to breakfast and sit at the low, broad windows and watch the shifting panorama? |
3136 | Was it not enough to talk to each other, to see each other? |
3136 | Was it not natural that she should take Henderson''s view? |
3136 | Was it not proud of him? |
3136 | Was it not, then, a pretense? |
3136 | Was it only a matter of grouping and setting, or were these people different from all others the tourists had seen? |
3136 | Was it possible she thought he could go away without seeing her? |
3136 | Was it simply shame that kept him away, or had he ceased to love her? |
3136 | Was it that Philip was too irresolute to cut either law or literature, and go in, single- minded, for a fortune of some kind, and a place? |
3136 | Was it that he began to feel that he had established a personal relation with Evelyn because she had seen him? |
3136 | Was it the music or the poetic idea that held her? |
3136 | Was it the resurrection of the body? |
3136 | Was it the"Great Consummation"of the year 18-? |
3136 | Was it too sudden? |
3136 | Was it with pleasure? |
3136 | Was it written before or after the publication of Smith''s"Map and Description"at Oxford in 1612? |
3136 | Was it? |
3136 | Was life beginning, then, or ending? |
3136 | Was life like that? |
3136 | Was n''t it an impudent speech? |
3136 | Was n''t it strange?" |
3136 | Was n''t it the use that people made of money, after all, that was the real test? |
3136 | Was n''t the thrifty George Washington always adding to his plantations, and squeezing all he could out of his land and his slaves? |
3136 | Was n''t to be in deep trouble to be sorry? |
3136 | Was not all the village talking about the reputation he had conferred on it? |
3136 | Was not everything going on as usual in the Delancy house and in the little world of which it was a part? |
3136 | Was not his object, probably, to get a reputation which his whole life belied, and to get it by obliterating the distinction between right and wrong?" |
3136 | Was not the love of beauty and of goodness the same thing? |
3136 | Was not the world beautiful? |
3136 | Was she a fool in this, as so many women are about their separate property, or was she cheated? |
3136 | Was she a little less dependent on him, in this wide horizon, than in New York? |
3136 | Was she a person to run about with idle gossip? |
3136 | Was she absorbed in the life of the season? |
3136 | Was she any more serious about the german than about the mission school? |
3136 | Was she changing-- was she changed? |
3136 | Was she content in that great world in which she moved? |
3136 | Was she content? |
3136 | Was she his? |
3136 | Was she ill, perhaps? |
3136 | Was she on the shore of such a sea, and was this new world into which she was drifting only a dream? |
3136 | Was she thinking of her own marriage? |
3136 | Was she very sorry? |
3136 | Was she very worldly? |
3136 | Was she well? |
3136 | Was she, as a woman, any more likely to be reconciled to her fate when her mirror told her, with pitiless reflection, that she was an old woman? |
3136 | Was she, perhaps, unhappy and persecuted? |
3136 | Was she, then, such a monster of ingratitude? |
3136 | Was that thunder? |
3136 | Was the Central system or the Pennsylvania system contemplating another raid? |
3136 | Was the air oppressive? |
3136 | Was the mind in a vapid condition after an evening of it? |
3136 | Was there a place in Europe from Spain to Greece, where the American could once be warm--really warm without effort-- in or out of doors? |
3136 | Was there anything illegitimate in taking advantage of such an opportunity? |
3136 | Was there anything, then, that money could not do? |
3136 | Was there ever a greater exhibition of power, while it lasted? |
3136 | Was there ever a young man who could see any reasons against the possession of the woman he loved? |
3136 | Was there ever any love worth the name that could be controlled by calculations of expediency? |
3136 | Was there ever, he said, in the past, any figure more clearly cut and freshly minted than the Yankee? |
3136 | Was there no envy? |
3136 | Was there no way to break the barrier that the little brown girl had thrown around herself? |
3136 | Was there nothing said about the airs of a country school- ma''am, the aplomb of an adventurer? |
3136 | Was there nothing, nobody, that commercialism did not think for sale and to be trafficked in? |
3136 | Was there one who would have let her go back to her waiting- fawn? |
3136 | Was this a comforting hour, do you think, for Margaret in the cathedral? |
3136 | Was this a delusion? |
3136 | Was this also a part of the restlessness of American life? |
3136 | Was this an ideal married life? |
3136 | Was this expression on her mobile face merely that of amusement at seeing a country- boy? |
3136 | Was this intruding human element always to cross the purpose of his spiritual life? |
3136 | Was this little note a severance of her present from her old life? |
3136 | Was this the enthusiasm of humanity, of which he heard so much? |
3136 | Was this the railway wrecker, the insurance manipulator, the familiar of Uncle Jerry, the king of the lobby, the pride and the bugaboo of Wall Street? |
3136 | Was this the sort of woman whom Mr. Henderson fancied? |
3136 | Was this then the summit of her ambition? |
3136 | Was this, then, the meaning of her restlessness, of her charitable activities, of her unconfessed dreams of some career? |
3136 | We can afford it-- the Countess Jeremiah, eh?" |
3136 | We could n''t carry him out; could we find our own way out to get assistance? |
3136 | We knew that if we traveled southwestward far enough we must strike that trail, but how far? |
3136 | Well, Selina?" |
3136 | Well, from the time you were a little boy, did I ever give you but one sort of advice? |
3136 | Well, granting the distinction, why are both apt to be unpleasant people to live with? |
3136 | Well, why not? |
3136 | Were all women, then, alike in parrying and fencing? |
3136 | Were our thirty- six hours of sleepless staging to terminate in a night of misery and a Sunday of discomfort? |
3136 | Were the longing and the hunger it arouses ever satisfied with anything, money for instance, any more than with fame? |
3136 | Were the neighboring buildings all tumbling in upon us, or had a bomb fallen into the neighboring crockery- store? |
3136 | Were there no contractors who amassed fortunes then? |
3136 | Were there no criticisms afterwards as the guests rolled home in their carriages, surfeited and exhausted? |
3136 | Were these empty omnibuses and carriages that discharged ghostly passengers? |
3136 | Were these men anything but specimens in a Museum of Failures? |
3136 | Were these throngs the guests that were to come, or those that had been herein other seasons? |
3136 | Were these, then, shadows, or was he a spirit himself? |
3136 | Were they all patriots in the Revolutionary War? |
3136 | Were they all such agreeable people whom he had seen there in March, or has one girl the power to throw a charm over a whole watering- place? |
3136 | Were things any better because they were on a small scale? |
3136 | What are the negro traditions about it? |
3136 | What are the relations of culture to common life, of the scholar to the day- laborer? |
3136 | What are the symptoms of decay in England? |
3136 | What are the young men of the villages and the cities doing meantime? |
3136 | What are we intellectually and morally? |
3136 | What are you doing?" |
3136 | What are you going to do with such people? |
3136 | What are you going to do with the money?" |
3136 | What are you going to do, Phil, what are you going to be?" |
3136 | What became of his fallacious hope of waiting when events were driving on at this rate? |
3136 | What can I do?" |
3136 | What can be done with those who are described as"East- Londoners"? |
3136 | What can compare with the vase of yon alabaster fountain filled with crystal water? |
3136 | What can have happened? |
3136 | What can one do in such a spot, but swim in the lake, lie on the shore, and watch the passing steamers and the changing light on the mountains? |
3136 | What can one do with this new favorite? |
3136 | What can we do, what ought we to do, for his own good and for our peace and national welfare? |
3136 | What can you do?" |
3136 | What can you expect in a country where one knows not today what the weather will be tomorrow? |
3136 | What can you expect when the people are socialists and their leaders agnostics?" |
3136 | What chance had he in such a social current? |
3136 | What chance have I, anyway? |
3136 | What church does she go to?" |
3136 | What communion had supplied the place of our artificial breeding to this man? |
3136 | What could Jenks mean by intimating that she was plain? |
3136 | What could be the spring of her incessant devotion? |
3136 | What could he reply? |
3136 | What could he say? |
3136 | What could one woman do against the accepted demoralizations of her social life? |
3136 | What could she see in him? |
3136 | What could you do with such a husband? |
3136 | What devil was tempting him to break his vows and forsake his faith? |
3136 | What did Evelyn say?" |
3136 | What did it matter? |
3136 | What did she care at the moment what Carmen thought of Henderson? |
3136 | What did she say of my uncle and aunts?" |
3136 | What did she say?" |
3136 | What did we see? |
3136 | What did you do?" |
3136 | What did you make me come here for? |
3136 | What do they do it for?" |
3136 | What do we mean by the criminal class? |
3136 | What do you mean by worse?" |
3136 | What do you propose?" |
3136 | What do you say in the Street-- freeze? |
3136 | What do you want me to do? |
3136 | What does Henderson say?" |
3136 | What does Mr. Henderson say?" |
3136 | What does he get out of his occupation? |
3136 | What does it leave on land? |
3136 | What does the Parson say? |
3136 | What does the doctor say?" |
3136 | What for? |
3136 | What for?" |
3136 | What good would it do her to go to the mission now? |
3136 | What had happened? |
3136 | What had he done? |
3136 | What had he to offer her? |
3136 | What had she done that anybody should criticise her? |
3136 | What had she done? |
3136 | What had the land question to do with the salvation of man? |
3136 | What harm? |
3136 | What has the farmer to do with the"Rose Garden of Saadi"? |
3136 | What has this to do with New England? |
3136 | What have I done? |
3136 | What have the Christians of this city done?" |
3136 | What heroine of romance are you running after now?" |
3136 | What hold had this woman on him? |
3136 | What if she met him with a royal forgiveness, as if he were a returned prodigal? |
3136 | What induced the beardless young man to make this"investment"in"three- eighths"--who can tell? |
3136 | What is a garden for? |
3136 | What is a man? |
3136 | What is a woman to do? |
3136 | What is gained, he asks, by leaving cards with all these people and receiving their cards? |
3136 | What is he that he should absorb the sweets of the universe, that he should hold all the claims of humanity second to the perfecting of himself? |
3136 | What is her name?" |
3136 | What is history? |
3136 | What is it that an intelligent public should care to hear of and talk about? |
3136 | What is news? |
3136 | What is revolution? |
3136 | What is scholarship? |
3136 | What is that? |
3136 | What is the Bible? |
3136 | What is the Boston philosophy? |
3136 | What is the essential thing, without which even the glory of a nation passes into shame, and the vastness of empire becomes a mockery? |
3136 | What is the good of sending a man to Washington at the rate of a hundred miles an hour if we are uncertain of his electric state? |
3136 | What is the good of young men of leisure if they do n''t do anything for the country? |
3136 | What is the ideal of their country which these young men cherish? |
3136 | What is the justice of damning a meritorious novelist by comparing him with Dickens, and smothering him with thoughtless and good- natured eulogy? |
3136 | What is the matter, doctor?" |
3136 | What is the object of this noble tower? |
3136 | What is the price of these rooms? |
3136 | What is the relation of culture to it? |
3136 | What is the relation of the scholar to the present phase of this movement? |
3136 | What is the use of this powder? |
3136 | What is there illogical in these positions from the premise given? |
3136 | What is there in this sound that suggests the tenderness of spring, the despair of a summer night, the desolateness of young love? |
3136 | What is this London, the most civilized city ever known? |
3136 | What is this Low Pressure itself,--it? |
3136 | What is this New England? |
3136 | What is this drama and spectacle, that has been put forth as history, but a cover for petty intrigue, and deceit, and selfishness, and cruelty? |
3136 | What is this love, this divine passion, of which we hear so much? |
3136 | What is this naturalization, however, but a sort of parable of human life? |
3136 | What is this progress, and where does it come from? |
3136 | What is this quality of truthfulness which we all recognize when it exists in fiction? |
3136 | What is wrong about it?" |
3136 | What is your objection to Newport?" |
3136 | What makes a path of this sort so perilous to a woman''s heart? |
3136 | What makes you beat about the bush so? |
3136 | What man ever does, in fact? |
3136 | What more can a man do with it? |
3136 | What more pleasing spectacle than this in a world that has such a bad name for want and misery? |
3136 | What must London be? |
3136 | What nonsense do people so situated usually talk? |
3136 | What of the''modus vivendi''of the two races occupying the same soil? |
3136 | What place? |
3136 | What pleasure, I wonder, had she in her life, and what pleasure have any of these hard- favored women in this doleful region? |
3136 | What poet could now sing of the"awful chrysanthemum of dawn"? |
3136 | What relation had he to it? |
3136 | What right had she to sit there and mourn-- as she knew her aunt did-- and sigh over her career? |
3136 | What right had they to sit in judgment on her? |
3136 | What right have we to laugh? |
3136 | What sarcasm is coming now? |
3136 | What satisfaction has a man in it if he really gets to the end of his power to improve it? |
3136 | What secret influence had he over her that made her submit to such a foolish surrender? |
3136 | What secret power has a woman to make a common phrase so glow with her very self? |
3136 | What shall it be? |
3136 | What shall the art that is older than the pyramids do for these kneeling Christians? |
3136 | What shall we do? |
3136 | What should I do? |
3136 | What should he say? |
3136 | What should she do? |
3136 | What should we do in that lonesome solitude if the guide became disabled? |
3136 | What sort of a book would a member make out of"Chips from my Workshop"? |
3136 | What sort of a girl had this treatment during seventeen years produced? |
3136 | What sort of career was it that needed the aid of Carmen and the serpentine dancer? |
3136 | What sort of haven were we to reach after our heroic( with the reader''s permission) week of travel? |
3136 | What sort of leading- strings are these that I am getting into? |
3136 | What then? |
3136 | What then? |
3136 | What then? |
3136 | What this should be would depend upon the length of life; and how should this be arrived at? |
3136 | What was English politics, what was Chisholm House, what was everybody in England compared to this noble girl? |
3136 | What was Mr. Morgan always hitting at? |
3136 | What was he in thought better than she? |
3136 | What was he noted for?" |
3136 | What was it that we saw in Washington on his knees at Valley Forge, or blazing with wrath at the cowardice on Monmouth? |
3136 | What was she, one woman with an aching heart, in the midst of it all? |
3136 | What was that you were telling about Charles Lamb, the other day, Mandeville? |
3136 | What was that? |
3136 | What was that? |
3136 | What was the flavor she missed in it all? |
3136 | What was the good of money if it did not bring social position? |
3136 | What was there in this to touch a woman of fashion, sitting there crying in her corner? |
3136 | What was there in this trivial incident that so magnified it in Philip''s mind, day after day? |
3136 | What was there to confide? |
3136 | What was there to say? |
3136 | What was this nitroglycerine, that exploded so dreadfully? |
3136 | What was this that had come to him to so shake his life? |
3136 | What was wanting to make this charming camaraderie perfect? |
3136 | What weapons had this heiress of a great fortune with which to defend herself? |
3136 | What went ye out for to see? |
3136 | What were all these paltry considerations to his love? |
3136 | What were all these to a woman''s soul? |
3136 | What were they saying? |
3136 | What were this couple talking about as they promenaded, basking in each other''s presence? |
3136 | What were you doing all day, papa?" |
3136 | What will you get out of it? |
3136 | What will you have? |
3136 | What woman would not feel a little thrill of triumph? |
3136 | What would be the condition of social life if women ceased to be anxious in this regard, and let loose the reins in an easy- going indifference? |
3136 | What would be the effect upon courtship if both the men and the women approached each other as wooers? |
3136 | What would be the effect upon the female character and disposition of a possible, though not probable, refusal, or of several refusals? |
3136 | What would the poor do without the rich? |
3136 | What would they have her do? |
3136 | What would you have? |
3136 | What would you say to this case? |
3136 | What would you see if you looked into a steam boiler? |
3136 | What you have?" |
3136 | What''s her name?" |
3136 | What''s in you, Forbes, to shy so at a good woman?" |
3136 | What''s the use of all this social nonsense? |
3136 | What''s the use of objecting? |
3136 | What, Murad Ault?" |
3136 | What, in fact, is the condition in those households where the wives do not care? |
3136 | What, in short, do the schools contribute to the creation of a taste for good literature? |
3136 | What, indeed, would one say of this little group on the hotel piazza, making its comments upon the excursionists? |
3136 | What, no, not going?" |
3136 | What, then, does the common school usually do for literary taste? |
3136 | What, then, is this thing we call conscience? |
3136 | What? |
3136 | What?" |
3136 | When Henderson came back to his box Carmen did not look up, but she said, indifferently:"What, so soon? |
3136 | When a woman makes her tedious rounds, why is she always relieved to find people not in? |
3136 | When did Alexander flourish?" |
3136 | When did he flourish?" |
3136 | When did he flourish?" |
3136 | When did he flourish?" |
3136 | When did you come? |
3136 | When he gets older, he wishes he had replied,"Ai n''t you ashamed to make either an old man or a little boy do such hard grinding work?" |
3136 | When he had finished, he said:"Well, my young friend, how did you get hold of this?" |
3136 | When it is completely subdued, what kind of weather have you? |
3136 | When one enters on the path of worldliness is there any resting- place? |
3136 | When shall we have it?" |
3136 | When she can count upon her ten fingers the people she wants to see, why should she pretend to want to see the others? |
3136 | When the two were seated in the carriage, Mrs. Mavick turned to Lord Montague:"Well?" |
3136 | When we were asked, Will you have some of the fruit? |
3136 | When will you begin?" |
3136 | When you men assume all the direction, what else is left to us? |
3136 | Whence did it come? |
3136 | Where are all"sass"and Lorraine? |
3136 | Where do these days come from in January? |
3136 | Where else do you go?" |
3136 | Where has he gone? |
3136 | Where is the office?" |
3136 | Where is the primeval, heroic force that made the joy of living in the rough old uncivilized days? |
3136 | Where now are your tree- toads, your young love, your early season? |
3136 | Where shall I go?" |
3136 | Where shall he draw the line? |
3136 | Where shall we looke to finde a Julius Caesar whose atchievments shine as cleare in his owne Commentaries, as they did in the field? |
3136 | Where was the cave? |
3136 | Where will he or she find it? |
3136 | Where will they spend their evenings? |
3136 | Where would a boy be likely to go the first thing? |
3136 | Where''s the rascal of an heir?" |
3136 | Which is different from the manner acquired by those who live a great deal in American hotels? |
3136 | Which one do you want me to make my enemy by telling him or her that the other is n''t good enough?" |
3136 | Which way? |
3136 | While you are about it-- I s''pose you''ll print it anyway?" |
3136 | Whither had it gone? |
3136 | Whither? |
3136 | Who are the kings of Wall Street, and who build the palaces up- town? |
3136 | Who are these young women to associate with? |
3136 | Who can define this charm, this difference? |
3136 | Who can do justice to a moonlight night in such a climate and such a place? |
3136 | Who can guess the thoughts of a woman at such a time? |
3136 | Who can say that other weeds, which we despise, may not be the favorite food of some remote people or tribe? |
3136 | Who can tell how much this notion of mystery in the sex stands in the way of its free advancement all along the line? |
3136 | Who could have dreamed that she understood?" |
3136 | Who did he make laws for?" |
3136 | Who does live on it, till he gets beyond the necessity of depending on it? |
3136 | Who does? |
3136 | Who has been able truly to read the thoughts of a shrinking maiden in the passing days of her youth and beauty? |
3136 | Who has fallen out, who are the new recruits, who are engaged, who will marry, who have separated, who has lost his money? |
3136 | Who has gone?" |
3136 | Who is the judge? |
3136 | Who is to decide what degree of intelligence shall fit a man for a share in the government? |
3136 | Who knows what is in a woman? |
3136 | Who publishes it?" |
3136 | Who said anything about fish?" |
3136 | Who says that a woman can not be as cruel as a man? |
3136 | Who says that the rich and the prosperous and the successful do not need pity? |
3136 | Who says that the world is not full of romance and pathos and regret as we go our daily way in it? |
3136 | Who was Grand, who was Well- Beloved, who was Desired, who was the Idol of the French, who was worthy to be called a King of the Citizens? |
3136 | Who was Pericles? |
3136 | Who was Solon?" |
3136 | Who was another great lawgiver?" |
3136 | Who was she?" |
3136 | Who was there?" |
3136 | Who were the Mavicks, anyway? |
3136 | Who would not be rich if he could? |
3136 | Who, for instance, could be sure that he would grow young gracefully? |
3136 | Whose wife is this?--and that pretty one near her, whose daughter is she?" |
3136 | Why add the pursuit of happiness to our other inalienable worries? |
3136 | Why are there no women architects? |
3136 | Why attempt it? |
3136 | Why attempt to civilize the race within our doors, while there are so many distant and alien races to whom we ought to turn our civilizing attention? |
3136 | Why can not we get a law regulating the profession which is of most vital interest to all of us, excluding ignorance and quackery? |
3136 | Why could n''t he have seen? |
3136 | Why could not the former"materialize"as well as the latter? |
3136 | Why did I not stick to teaching in that woman''s college? |
3136 | Why did he doubt now? |
3136 | Why did he say so much about Mrs. Mavick and the governess, and so little about the girl? |
3136 | Why did n''t the baroness go back to England, if she was so tired of Switzerland? |
3136 | Why did n''t the people who were sleepy go to bed? |
3136 | Why did n''t you tell me you were the child of such hopes? |
3136 | Why did you go to the hotel?" |
3136 | Why do n''t people look where they put their money?" |
3136 | Why do n''t you buy it for Henderson? |
3136 | Why do n''t you charter a Fifth Avenue stage and take your friends on a voyage to the Battery? |
3136 | Why do n''t you cut a hole in it, Miss Lamont, and let the air in?" |
3136 | Why do n''t you join Miss Tavish in this charity? |
3136 | Why do n''t you make it uncomfortable for her?" |
3136 | Why do they ask, what is the use of your learning and your art? |
3136 | Why do they depend so much upon the newspapers, when they all despise the newspapers? |
3136 | Why do we respect some vegetables and despise others, when all of them come to an equal honor or ignominy on the table? |
3136 | Why do women wear the present fascinating gowns, in which the lithe figure is suggested in all its womanly dignity? |
3136 | Why do you class reformers and philanthropists together? |
3136 | Why do you never come to see me but you bring me something? |
3136 | Why do you object to my going to see this dance?" |
3136 | Why does the lady intending suicide always throw on a waterproof when she steals out of the house to drown herself? |
3136 | Why encounter these difficulties? |
3136 | Why go on? |
3136 | Why had he been so curt with her when she went to him for help this afternoon? |
3136 | Why had he written to her? |
3136 | Why had she secretly been a little relieved from restraint when her Brandon visit ended in the spring? |
3136 | Why have n''t you been at the mission lately?" |
3136 | Why is England permitted to stretch along down our coast in this straggling and inquisitive manner? |
3136 | Why is his country recognized? |
3136 | Why is it that almost all philanthropists and reformers are disagreeable? |
3136 | Why is it that the heart hardens in prosperity? |
3136 | Why is it that to do the right thing is often to make the mistake of a life? |
3136 | Why not be a monk, and lie in the sun? |
3136 | Why not be content with his little success and buckle down to his profession? |
3136 | Why not follow his inclination, the dream of his boyhood? |
3136 | Why not go back to Moses? |
3136 | Why not in literature? |
3136 | Why not let things drift as they are? |
3136 | Why not put the whole system of criminal jurisprudence and procedure for the suppression of crime upon a sensible and scientific basis? |
3136 | Why not settle down upon the formula that to be platitudinous is to be happy? |
3136 | Why not stay here and be happy? |
3136 | Why not try it? |
3136 | Why not? |
3136 | Why not? |
3136 | Why not? |
3136 | Why not? |
3136 | Why not?" |
3136 | Why protract the story of how Margaret was lost to us? |
3136 | Why should England care to keep India? |
3136 | Why should I come back to Dresden? |
3136 | Why should anybody be obliged to feed roving strangers? |
3136 | Why should artificial conventions defeat it? |
3136 | Why should he conceal a discovery which has transformed the world to him, a secret which explains all the mysteries of nature and human- ity? |
3136 | Why should he go away from that bright blaze, and the company that sat in its radiance, to the cold and solitude of his chamber? |
3136 | Why should he not be? |
3136 | Why should it not have been Carmen? |
3136 | Why should n''t beauty have a reputation? |
3136 | Why should n''t friends help each other? |
3136 | Why should n''t he write? |
3136 | Why should n''t he, she reflected, make money? |
3136 | Why should n''t men cheat at cards? |
3136 | Why should n''t she conform and float, and not mind? |
3136 | Why should n''t she live her life, and not be hampered everlastingly by comparisons? |
3136 | Why should n''t there be color on the exterior, gold and painting, like the Fugger palaces in Augsburg, only on a great scale? |
3136 | Why should nature be in a melting mood? |
3136 | Why should not women propose? |
3136 | Why should one be debarred the privilege of pitching his crude ideas into a conversation where they may have a chance of being precipitated? |
3136 | Why should one inquire in such a paradise if things do run smoothly? |
3136 | Why should she be so disturbed? |
3136 | Why should she not enjoy it? |
3136 | Why should she sacrifice herself, if he were willing to brave the opinion of the world for her sake? |
3136 | Why should she? |
3136 | Why should she? |
3136 | Why should the beggar to whom you toss a silver dollar from your carriage feel a little grudge against you? |
3136 | Why should the royal night be wasted in slumber? |
3136 | Why should the solid hill give way at this place, and swallow up a tree? |
3136 | Why should the unscientific traveler have a thing of this kind thrown in his way? |
3136 | Why should they be at a disadvantage in an affair which concerns the happiness of the whole life? |
3136 | Why should they not have some of those wandering and joyous fancies which solace my hours?" |
3136 | Why should this childish singing raise these contrasts, and put her at odds so with her own life? |
3136 | Why should we be? |
3136 | Why should we tolerate any longer a professional criminal class? |
3136 | Why so?" |
3136 | Why so?" |
3136 | Why struggle with these things in literature and in life? |
3136 | Why travel, then? |
3136 | Why was he waiting so long? |
3136 | Why was it not a higher life to enter into the common lot, and suffer, if need be, in the struggle to purify and ennoble all? |
3136 | Why was it that she had felt a little relief when her last Brandon visit was at an end, a certain freedom in Lenox and a greater freedom in Newport? |
3136 | Why was it that this peace of nature should bring up her image, and that they should seem in harmony? |
3136 | Why was n''t Thackeray ever inspired to create a noble woman? |
3136 | Why was not Edith his confidante? |
3136 | Why will people go so far to put themselves to such inconvenience? |
3136 | Why, Stanhope, you do n''t think of going there also?" |
3136 | Why, after a heavy shower, and in the midst of it, do such multitudes of toads, especially little ones, hop about on the gravel- walks? |
3136 | Why, as an illustration, are toads so plenty after a thunder- shower? |
3136 | Why, girls do, do n''t they? |
3136 | Why, then, was he reserved with her upon the absorbing interest of his life? |
3136 | Why, then, we ask, is she constituted a woman at all? |
3136 | Why?" |
3136 | Why?" |
3136 | Why?" |
3136 | Will Halifax rise up in judgment against us? |
3136 | Will culture aid a minister in a"protracted meeting"? |
3136 | Will not a few days''planting and scratching in the"open"yield potatoes and rye? |
3136 | Will not the wise novelist seek to encounter the least intellectual resistance? |
3136 | Will not the young women by- and- by find themselves in a lonesome place, cultivated away beyond their natural comrades? |
3136 | Will she press a chrysanthemum, and keep it till the faint perfume reminds her of the sweetest moment of her life? |
3136 | Will the ability to read Chaucer assist a shop- keeper? |
3136 | Will the politician add to the"sweetness and light"of his lovely career if he can read the"Battle of the Frogs and the Mice"in the original? |
3136 | Will the public next season wear its hose dotted or striped? |
3136 | Will woman ever learn to throw a stone? |
3136 | Will you get them?" |
3136 | Will you repeat the old experiment of a material success and a moral and spiritual failure? |
3136 | Will you take me to the spring? |
3136 | Will you tell me, Mr. Burnett, what nonsense you have got into your head?" |
3136 | Will you try it?" |
3136 | Will you?" |
3136 | Will you?" |
3136 | With this center of untruthfulness, what must the life in the family be? |
3136 | Without the necessity of putting forth this energy, a survival of the original force in man, how long would our civilization last? |
3136 | Wo n''t it seem rather good to get out and see your wife and family again?" |
3136 | Wo n''t you believe me? |
3136 | Wo n''t you look out for Mr. Delancy in this deal?" |
3136 | Would Evelyn be strong enough to stem it and to wait also? |
3136 | Would I like to go into the palace? |
3136 | Would Margaret not have felt it, if she also had not been growing hard, and accustomed to regard the world in his unbelieving way? |
3136 | Would a stronger pirate arise in time to despoil him, and so act as the Nemesis of all violation of the law of honest relations between men? |
3136 | Would he be in any condition to travel in the morning? |
3136 | Would he be more likely to win her by obeying the advice of Celia, or by trusting to Evelyn''s inexperienced discernment? |
3136 | Would he cease to love her for what she had done-- for what she must do? |
3136 | Would he exchange the sweetness of that for the fleeting reputation of the most brilliant lawyer? |
3136 | Would he love her if she were as unworldly as she once was? |
3136 | Would her heart be hardened or softened by the experience? |
3136 | Would her own sex be considerate, and give her a fair field if they saw she was paying attention to a young man, or an old one? |
3136 | Would it be asking too much to see her apartments? |
3136 | Would it help matters to be personally anxious and miserable? |
3136 | Would it never put out its lights, and cease its uproar, and leave me to my reflections? |
3136 | Would it not be possible for Dr. Leigh to draw from the fund on her own checks independent of him? |
3136 | Would it not render that sporadic shyness of which we have spoken epidemic? |
3136 | Would n''t it be natural, after our misfortune? |
3136 | Would not the lover be spared time and pain if he knew, as the novelist knows, whether the young lady is dressing for a rejection or an acceptance? |
3136 | Would not the one suffer because he could not see the ocean, and the other by reason of the revengeful state of his mind? |
3136 | Would our old friend survive the night? |
3136 | Would people grow young together even as harmoniously as they grow old together? |
3136 | Would she become embittered and desperate, and act as foolishly as men often do? |
3136 | Would she care for him or the career? |
3136 | Would she have admitted this? |
3136 | Would the hotel be like that at Plaster Cove? |
3136 | Would the public be injured? |
3136 | Would they do it? |
3136 | Would you advise me to make an enemy of Mr. Mavick, knowing all that he does know about Mr. Henderson''s affairs?" |
3136 | Would you have an art- gallery here, and high- priced New York and Paris shops lining the way? |
3136 | Would you like to marry, perhaps, a Greek statue? |
3136 | Would you mind my saying that Mr. Meigs is a very presentable man?" |
3136 | Would you put an American bank president in the Retreat who should so decorate his banking- house? |
3136 | Would you put that in charge of men?" |
3136 | Would you rather be that than to write?" |
3136 | Would you remove the odium of prison? |
3136 | Wounded? |
3136 | XIX Why should not Philip trust the future? |
3136 | XVII Shall we never have done with this carping at people who succeed? |
3136 | XX Did Miss McDonald tell Evelyn of her meeting with Philip in Central Park? |
3136 | XXVI Is justice done in this world only by a succession of injustices? |
3136 | Yes, highly educated? |
3136 | Yet how much superior is our comedy of to- day? |
3136 | You are not offended?" |
3136 | You believe? |
3136 | You can do without your grip? |
3136 | You can see all that as well elsewhere? |
3136 | You did n''t really see a bear?" |
3136 | You dined first?" |
3136 | You do n''t dance? |
3136 | You found the people hospitable?" |
3136 | You know Mavick?" |
3136 | You know Paris?" |
3136 | You know what an old bachelor is who never has had anybody to shake him out of his contemplation of his family?" |
3136 | You mean life seems a little thin, as the critics say?" |
3136 | You must have noticed that she likes to be accurate?" |
3136 | You must work for a living anyway; and why, now, should you unsettle your minds? |
3136 | You prefer it?" |
3136 | You presume upon my invitation to this house, in an underhand way, to-- What right have you?" |
3136 | You remember, Evelyn, how fascinating the Arizona desert was? |
3136 | You see her?" |
3136 | You see that little island yonder? |
3136 | You see that old beau there, the one smiling and bending towards her as he walks with the belle of Macon? |
3136 | You see that old lady in the corner? |
3136 | You see those under the trees yonder? |
3136 | You see what I mean? |
3136 | You studied philology in Germany? |
3136 | You take the idea?" |
3136 | You think Providence is expelled out of New England? |
3136 | You think so? |
3136 | You think this is a mood? |
3136 | You thought I never saw anything? |
3136 | You were with her at Bar Harbor, and I suppose she never mentioned to you that she was coming here?" |
3136 | You will have a private car, well stocked, a photographer will go along, and I think-- don''t you? |
3136 | You will not care to see any one who treated your mother in this way? |
3136 | You wo n''t mind it in such an old woman?" |
3136 | You''ve seen Coquelin? |
3136 | and Will it sell? |
3136 | and are they devoting themselves to the elevation of the social tone, or to the improvement of our literature? |
3136 | and human emotion, affection, love, were they alien to the Divine intention? |
3136 | and if the water had any connection with the lake, two hundred feet below and at some distance away, why did n''t the water run out? |
3136 | and if they have, why should they spend it in this Sisyphus task? |
3136 | and is not dressing an art? |
3136 | and what, on the other hand, was the good of social position if you could not use it to get money? |
3136 | and"Did I look as well as anybody?" |
3136 | and"What is the Origin of Inequality among Men, and is it Authorized by Natural Law?" |
3136 | and, if he is here, where is the Herbert that I knew? |
3136 | are you sure of that?'' |
3136 | asked he,"and from what place do you come?" |
3136 | bond on a road that has always paid its interest promptly, for a four and a half on a system that is manipulated nobody knows how? |
3136 | cried Evelyn;"and to practice?" |
3136 | cried Mrs. Mavick, looking with amazement at her daughter,"do n''t you understand that our life is all ruined?" |
3136 | did ever a man escape himself in a retreat? |
3136 | do n''t you think they are interested in each other?" |
3136 | do you see that Paris dress? |
3136 | fifteen? |
3136 | five? |
3136 | had he public esteem? |
3136 | have you a good room? |
3136 | how many moods in a quarter of an hour, and which is the characteristic one? |
3136 | in Lincoln entering Richmond with bowed head and infinite sorrow and yearning in his heart? |
3136 | inquired Jack;"all the four facades different?" |
3136 | is Cape Breton an island?'' |
3136 | is such vanity at the bottom of even a reasonable ambition? |
3136 | no inward consciousness of an undying personality?" |
3136 | or yield so abundantly? |
3136 | reconcile this state of things with not being married and being a Presbyterian? |
3136 | said he, good humoredly;''how can Campbell mistake the matter so much? |
3136 | shall I set a price upon the tender asparagus or the crisp lettuce, which made the sweet spring a reality? |
3136 | she asked, after a moment, turning to Margaret? |
3136 | to leave us?" |
3136 | twelve?" |
3136 | was he cradled in a Pullman? |
3136 | what have I done?" |
3136 | what was there in her to attract him? |
3136 | what would become of his life if he lost the only woman in the world? |
3136 | when we have learned it shall we not want to emigrate, as so many of the Italians do? |
3136 | whence but from the body and the lusts of the body? |
3136 | where is Margaret?" |
3136 | who knows a woman''s heart? |
3136 | why did n''t the company send it? |
3136 | will you send me back?" |
3136 | with whom are they to hold high converse? |
3136 | you here?" |
47289 | Did you give this advice to your American correspondents, upon the supposition that America would acquiesce in the Orders in Council? 47289 For what reason? |
47289 | Have you lately written to your correspondents in America respecting shipments of American produce to this country? 47289 If the American embargo in general were taken off, and the Orders in Council to be continued, would his trade in that case revive? |
47289 | In what degree would it affect the dealers in those commodities brought to this country, as to their remittances to this country? 47289 In what manner? |
47289 | Is she? |
47289 | To what effect have you so written? 47289 Washington, sir, was not a lawyer, and who can wonder that his fair mind was alarmed by such a solemn declaration? |
47289 | What is the reason that the Orders in Council prevent the witness sending our cotton goods in ships in ballast? 47289 Who can be so cruel as to refuse him this favor?" |
47289 | Why not? 47289 Would the Orders in Council have any other effect as to discouraging the trade? |
47289 | & c.& c. If a parcel of kegs, in those days, alarmed them so much, what will Fulton''s torpedoes do now? |
47289 | 100; why then should they not be manned? |
47289 | 128; is this House to have no influence on the conduct of the Executive? |
47289 | 138; is this House sitting as a body to remunerate those who violated the laws? |
47289 | 138; the subject of contribution considered, 139; let the inquiry be made, 139; what good purpose can it answer? |
47289 | 146; have not the British subjects been liberated? |
47289 | 146; what connection exists between the statements that have been made and the merits of the case? |
47289 | 146; what has been the situation of Great Britain to Spain? |
47289 | 148; what influence was his opinion to have? |
47289 | 149; has Congress a right in order to determine the title to landed property, to refer it to any tribunal whatever? |
47289 | 157; this bill is a concession to Great Britain and is not a hostility to France, 157; what injuries has France done? |
47289 | 172; letter of Mr. Jackson, 172; what does it amount to? |
47289 | 189; not the true principle, 189; what principles are more specifically asserted by Great Britain? |
47289 | 194; if such were the circumstances, does not the occasion require that the American Government take a firm and decided stand? |
47289 | 196; did he know that Mr. Erskine had not full power? |
47289 | 196; it was not his duty to know that he had not full powers? |
47289 | 201; what are the expressions in which it is conveyed? |
47289 | 218; is the experiment worthy to be made? |
47289 | 256; what is the nature and import of this proclamation? |
47289 | 262; is the proclamation an authorized measure of war and legislation? |
47289 | 262; what, then, is the true construction of the treaties of St. Ildefonso and of April, 1803? |
47289 | 281; what is a corporation such as the bill contemplates? |
47289 | 282; the States have the exclusive power to regulate contracts, 282; what participation has this bank in the collection of the revenue? |
47289 | 28; what are our preparations? |
47289 | 28; what is the state of the treasury? |
47289 | 28; what plans are offered for replenishing it? |
47289 | 294; what did mechanics here say relative to granting this charter? |
47289 | 29; consequences of non- intercourse under such circumstances, 30; who has been the first aggressor? |
47289 | 29; if we are to have war, with whom is it to be prosecuted? |
47289 | 29; under these circumstances what is the course that policy would dictate to this country to pursue? |
47289 | 2d, is it expedient? |
47289 | 354; as to France, what are the edicts revoked, and how? |
47289 | 359; are we prepared for those conditions? |
47289 | 368; are we bound by any faithful performance had on the part of France? |
47289 | 368; have either France or Great Britain complied with the condition? |
47289 | 369; is this an honest neutrality to revive the restrictive system against Great Britain, while the French decrees are still in force? |
47289 | 369; must this sacrifice be made in order to bolster up the President''s proclamation so prematurely issued? |
47289 | 369; the present measure is intended as a propitiatory sacrifice to conciliate Napoleon, 369; is it calculated to produce this effect? |
47289 | 372; under the act of May, 1810, 372; what is its character and the obligations arising under it? |
47289 | 373; the occurrence of the fact of revocation involves the propriety of the proclamation, 373; has the fact occurred? |
47289 | 388; has a similar temper and disposition been shown to Great Britain as to France, in the interpretation of the Cadore letter? |
47289 | 407; who are most interested in commerce; the growers of the articles, or the factors, or freighters employed in their exchange? |
47289 | 434; it would be necessary to know the ulterior views of the committee, 434; for what purpose are these troops wanted? |
47289 | 448; gentlemen will not say, we have not a good cause for war, but insist that it is our duty to define it, 448; what do they mean by this? |
47289 | 475; in such statutes there are always exceptions, 475; what would be the course of an individual? |
47289 | 600; where is your commerce to protect? |
47289 | 603; what were the preparations for the Revolutionary war? |
47289 | 624; is there probability of obtaining a recognition of this principle by a continuance of the war? |
47289 | 636; were ever a body of men so abandoned in the hour of need as the American Cabinet by Bonaparte? |
47289 | 698; what did an elevated fitness of character and conduct require of this nation when war was declared? |
47289 | 6; it was a farce, 6; ample time had been given for her to make other arrangements, 6; what accounts have we from there? |
47289 | 70; what are the reasons why the embargo has not come fully up to the expectations of its supporters? |
47289 | 70; yet it has been particularly serviceable in many instances? |
47289 | 75 Blind Alice; A Tale for Good Children, 38 Ellen Leslie; or, The Reward of Self- Control, 38 Florence Arnott; or, Is She Generous? |
47289 | 84; it is not expedient to adopt the second resolution, 84; what will be the effect of the embargo, if continued, as respects ourselves? |
47289 | A people presenting such an aspect, what have they to expect abroad? |
47289 | A possession_ by force_? |
47289 | A serious invasion? |
47289 | Accompanied with this most consequential inquiry:"Is not this a new State to be admitted? |
47289 | After the declaration of war, had they any disposition to assail us? |
47289 | After the declaration of war, what has been the conduct of the Executive? |
47289 | Again, I ask, were the principles of the embargo submission in 1774-''5-''6? |
47289 | Again, sir, I would ask the advocates of the doctrine I am reprobating, when will it be proper to show the folly and ruinous consequences of the war? |
47289 | Again, sir, has the gentleman no feeling for the sufferings, no ear for the groans of our suffering seamen? |
47289 | Again, what was the effect of the non- intercourse in 1809 upon our Treasury? |
47289 | Against France? |
47289 | Against whom were these charges brought? |
47289 | Against whom? |
47289 | All the evasions of the embargo have been made with a view to that supply; enforce it, and from whence will they procure the article of lumber? |
47289 | Am I not, then, Mr. Speaker, authorized to say, that the condition of the law of May, 1810, has not been complied with? |
47289 | Am I then required to vote for a measure of this kind? |
47289 | Am I to conclude that they are really Americans in principle? |
47289 | An ambitious General might corrupt his army, and seize the Capitol-- but will an Admiral reduce us to subjection by bringing his ships up the Potomac? |
47289 | And I would ask whether either of these events had happened when this corps of militia were ordered out? |
47289 | And about what? |
47289 | And are gentlemen considering the restoration of the seamen taken from the Chesapeake as a reason why we should continue the interdict? |
47289 | And are gentlemen prepared to obey? |
47289 | And are we not in the act of yielding obedience? |
47289 | And are we prepared to pronounce so heavy a denunciation on our predecessors, on ourselves, and the other great Departments of our Government? |
47289 | And are we so sunk in the estimation of the mighty conqueror, that he thinks it necessary and proper to use this as his official language towards us? |
47289 | And are we, he asked, to be deprived of it when we come to this House-- when we enter this temple of liberty? |
47289 | And are we, under such circumstances, to renew negotiation by extra missions? |
47289 | And are you now about again to jeopardize the peace of this nation, without any cause whatever? |
47289 | And are you ready to repeal the embargo under such a threat as this? |
47289 | And as to excuse, will it be said that there is nothing of the sort in this case? |
47289 | And by whom was it opposed? |
47289 | And by whom were they made? |
47289 | And could any thing be gathered from any thing they had ever written or said, to induce a belief that this Government had not acted with sincerity? |
47289 | And did this state of prosperity exist at a time when your commerce was protected by vessels of war? |
47289 | And do I enjoy my right of walking the street by making myself a prisoner? |
47289 | And do gentlemen believe Great Britain is willing to sacrifice all these considerations to a refusal to do you justice? |
47289 | And does she not remain sole mistress? |
47289 | And for whom? |
47289 | And from what premises is such a conclusion drawn? |
47289 | And have we adopted the monkish plan of scourging ourselves for the sins of others? |
47289 | And have we no means of doing this? |
47289 | And here, Mr. Speaker, let me ask what other class of men in our society can you find who would have acted thus nobly? |
47289 | And how do I prove it? |
47289 | And how has it been regarded by the belligerents? |
47289 | And how is this proved to be a remedy? |
47289 | And how was it to be effected? |
47289 | And how would this bill, Mr. Q. asked, less violate the constitution than such an act would have done? |
47289 | And how, sir, is it attempted to rebut this fact? |
47289 | And if it did, and this power was offensive, why was it not stricken out when the amendment was made? |
47289 | And if it has, is it proper so to decide it? |
47289 | And if not greater, has not an allowance been made for the capture of some of our ships, or, in other words, for the building of new ones? |
47289 | And if they be, sir, what inducement can possibly prevent unanimity on the present occasion? |
47289 | And if they do not intend thus to rely, in what possible way could it serve that Government thus darkly to insinuate it? |
47289 | And in comparing this bill with those declarations, will it be possible to conceive that we are consistent? |
47289 | And in fact does it not so demand in many instances? |
47289 | And is it come to this? |
47289 | And is it not better to submit to some inconveniences, eventually to insure a free trade? |
47289 | And is not a man thereby to be deprived of property without due process of law? |
47289 | And is not here an express authority?" |
47289 | And is the President to judge from the thanks of the House that he has done his duty? |
47289 | And is this bill a pioneer to the new swarms of"continental"locusts? |
47289 | And it may be fairly asked here, what measures Great Britain has taken to prevent her officers from impressing our seamen? |
47289 | And lastly, will the force be an economical one? |
47289 | And may we not suppose that these proud Spaniards, as they are called, may have feelings of a like nature? |
47289 | And must this sacrifice be made in order to bolster up the President''s proclamation so prematurely issued? |
47289 | And now, let me ask, whether we are prepared for these conditions? |
47289 | And on the question, Shall this bill pass? |
47289 | And on the question,"Shall the bill pass?" |
47289 | And on the question,"Shall this bill pass?" |
47289 | And on what, sir, does this circulation rest? |
47289 | And pray, Mr. Speaker, what has Mr. Foster been sent for? |
47289 | And shall we be told about the profitable commerce with Great Britain? |
47289 | And shall we disparage our ancestors?--shall we bastardize ourselves by placing them even below the brigands of St. Domingo? |
47289 | And shall we now refuse admission to the vessels of France? |
47289 | And surely he will not contend that this advance of premium was caused by the embargo? |
47289 | And that from mere obstinacy-- an obstinacy not encouraged by the least glimmering of hope? |
47289 | And that too, sir, at an expense to their own country so enormous in amount? |
47289 | And thus situated, what are the projects offered for replenishing the public coffers in future? |
47289 | And we may triumphantly ask, where is the nation or people that enjoy these with more freedom and safety than the American people? |
47289 | And were not French ships of war then, and have they not since been riding quietly at Annapolis, Norfolk, and elsewhere? |
47289 | And what advantage do they derive from it? |
47289 | And what are those objects? |
47289 | And what do we? |
47289 | And what do we? |
47289 | And what does he claim? |
47289 | And what does this committee do? |
47289 | And what has this sarcastic Minister of Great Britain given us in exchange? |
47289 | And what have we done in return? |
47289 | And what have we to propose, according to the principles of reprisal, to obtain the restoration? |
47289 | And what injury has the Emperor of Russia done to him? |
47289 | And what is it now? |
47289 | And what is its character? |
47289 | And what is our opinion? |
47289 | And what is the answer to all this out of doors? |
47289 | And what is the argument by which this position is maintained? |
47289 | And what is the language of George the Third, when our Minister presents to his consideration the embargo laws? |
47289 | And what is the relation in which you stand to France? |
47289 | And what is to justify this measure of imposing silence? |
47289 | And what more, sir, could have been asked of us, required, or granted, than is contained in these offers? |
47289 | And what real benefit has resulted from it to the Government? |
47289 | And what says Mr. Jackson in reply? |
47289 | And what security have we that she will not do so? |
47289 | And what substitute have we for this when it shall be destroyed? |
47289 | And what was the fact in regard to them? |
47289 | And what would you think of one individual who had thus conducted to another, and should then retreat? |
47289 | And what, Mr. Speaker, is now proposed for the future-- what is to retrieve our affairs-- on what are our hopes to rest? |
47289 | And what, sir, are you doing? |
47289 | And what, sir, was the conduct of the opposition in the British House of Commons, when their King and country were insulted by a foreign Minister? |
47289 | And when war came, what said the people? |
47289 | And where are these insults, these injuries, these vital attempts of the enemy to be found? |
47289 | And where do you send him? |
47289 | And whether we are prepared to go to war for them? |
47289 | And while these measures were going on, could Congress, by staying here constantly, add to the number of men, or expedite the loan? |
47289 | And who is prepared to say that American seamen shall be surrendered the victims to the British principle of impressment? |
47289 | And who would pay it? |
47289 | And whose money, asked Mr. R., is this? |
47289 | And why did they not? |
47289 | And why draw that into the debate on the impressment of American citizens from American vessels? |
47289 | And why should this bank be dissolved? |
47289 | And why should this clamor be raised on the question whether you will or will not make a formal renunciation of the old articles of political faith? |
47289 | And why should we make a sort of hotch- potch of two subjects, on which we do not think alike, for the purpose of getting us all united against both? |
47289 | And why was not a provision inserted to prevent foreigners from purchasing additional stock? |
47289 | And why? |
47289 | And will she be insensible to the efforts of our little Navy? |
47289 | And will you plunge yourselves in war, because you have passed a foolish and ruinous law, and are ashamed to repeal it? |
47289 | And will you refuse it? |
47289 | And with a standing army, what security for our liberties?" |
47289 | And would gentlemen favor this French population at the expense of their own interests and rights? |
47289 | And would he advise the nation to pursue a course disgraceful, and to which he would not expose himself? |
47289 | And would not the doing this place us in precisely the same situation as we were in before the Revolution? |
47289 | And would these persons believe that they were going on an unlawful expedition? |
47289 | And yet, how does this differ from invading Canada, for the purpose of defending our maritime rights? |
47289 | And yet, sir, who ever heard of two nations_ going to war_ about a single case of capture, though admitted not to be justified by the laws? |
47289 | And, I ask, is this resistance? |
47289 | And, I ask, sir, why, then, admit the vessels of England standing in the same relation to us? |
47289 | And, I wish to know, sir, what control we have over the Bank of the United States? |
47289 | And, after that, is it proposed that we shall continue the measure of hostility when the cause alone which led to it is completely done away? |
47289 | And, are we to endeavor to negotiate, as neutrals, with France, upon this ground, with any reasonable prospect of success? |
47289 | And, doing that, how could you expect an amicable result? |
47289 | And, is this course of policy now to be condemned, and regrets entered up that we have not been at war years ago? |
47289 | And, said Mr. O., shall the Government be less willing to discharge its just debts than an honest individual? |
47289 | And, shall I be charged with deserting the standard of the people, while I am treading in the footsteps of the great Father of his Country? |
47289 | And, sir, what does this bank or its branches when resort is had to it? |
47289 | And, sir, what is the mighty boon which these brave and indigent tars ask from you? |
47289 | And, sir, what is this principle? |
47289 | And, sir, what was our"restrictive"system? |
47289 | And, sir, when these messengers of hell are sent here shall we not look at them? |
47289 | And, upon whom does the loss fall? |
47289 | Are gentlemen aware how extensive is the province of master and apprentice? |
47289 | Are gentlemen ready to injure their country, weaken our Federal Union, the sheet- anchor of our political safety, to reach their political opponents? |
47289 | Are gentlemen serious? |
47289 | Are gentlemen willing to submit to this? |
47289 | Are gentlemen, possessing the feelings of Americans, prepared to submit to such degradation? |
47289 | Are new States desired? |
47289 | Are not these cases equally strong? |
47289 | Are not these searches and seizures, without warrant, on the mere suspicion of a collector, unreasonable searches and seizures? |
47289 | Are our Ocean rights there? |
47289 | Are the bounty lands to be given in Canada? |
47289 | Are the countries of the Baltic and Caspian Seas no longer cultivated? |
47289 | Are the extravagant prices of articles of the first necessity, superadded to their former embarrassments, to operate as a bounty on their trade? |
47289 | Are the gentlemen from Georgia and Kentucky the only Senators who have had their feelings wounded by the conduct of the press upon this subject? |
47289 | Are the merchants the guardians of the public honor? |
47289 | Are the merchants to be told we will protect their commerce? |
47289 | Are the old chimerical notions of_ starving_ the enemy, yet floating in the brains of gentlemen? |
47289 | Are the orders and decrees altered? |
47289 | Are the people of this country suspected of an intention to abandon their rights or their independence? |
47289 | Are the wishes of this nation to be unattended to? |
47289 | Are these apprehensions founded in reason, or are they the chimeras of a fervid and perturbed imagination? |
47289 | Are these blessings not worth preserving? |
47289 | Are these not sufficient for the recruiting service? |
47289 | Are these savings not worth notice? |
47289 | Are these the blockades which are intended? |
47289 | Are they likely to happen? |
47289 | Are they not murderers? |
47289 | Are they prepared to say the embargo shall be raised, while our commerce is subjected to this kind of depredation? |
47289 | Are they reduced to that situation, that they will become the vassals of a foreign power-- for what? |
47289 | Are they to be held as conquered territories? |
47289 | Are they to be scourged out of us by the birch of the unfledged political pedagogues of the day? |
47289 | Are they unfit for the East India trade? |
47289 | Are we bound to adopt this measure on account of the faith of Government being pledged to France by the law of May last? |
47289 | Are we guilty because we resist the British scalping knife? |
47289 | Are we in France? |
47289 | Are we not aware, sir, of the immense sums now invested and actively employed in the different manufactories distributed over our extensive country? |
47289 | Are we not officially notified that the French leeward islands are declared by proclamation in a state of blockade? |
47289 | Are we prepared to ingraft these arbitrary principles into our constitution, and cherish them when practised in so arbitrary a manner? |
47289 | Are we ready to submit to be taxed by Great Britain and France, as if we were their colonies? |
47289 | Are we sure the State banks can or will do this? |
47289 | Are we to adhere to the embargo forever, sir? |
47289 | Are we to renew negotiation, then, when every circumstance manifests that it would be useless? |
47289 | Are we to understand that the_ salus populi_ shall rule without control? |
47289 | Are we, gentlemen,( said Mr. R.,) to have a Speaker of the House of Representatives without any election? |
47289 | Are you prepared to see a foreign power seize what belongs to us? |
47289 | Are you provided with means to annoy the enemy, or to defend yourselves? |
47289 | Are you to leave them unprotected, or will you draw the sword in their behalf? |
47289 | Are you to spend four or five millions of dollars, in addition to your present extraordinary expenditures, to protect commerce? |
47289 | Are your exposed towns fortified and garrisoned? |
47289 | Are your seamen safe from impressment? |
47289 | Arm your merchantmen, as has been proposed, send them out, and you have war directly? |
47289 | As his Minister said to the King of Epirus,"may we not as well take our bottle of wine before as after this exploit?" |
47289 | As it does now, through the operation of your embargo, on the planter, on the farmer, on the mechanic, on the day- laborer? |
47289 | As the proper authority, he thrust it from him as unworthy the coffers of his country; and did not his doing so meet general approbation? |
47289 | As to France, sir, what were the edicts to be revoked, and how revoked? |
47289 | As to preparation at home, which is the only preparation contemplated to make, what or whom is it against? |
47289 | As to respect abroad, what course can be more certain to insure it? |
47289 | As to the objection which had been offered to receiving the statement of their commanders, what were gentlemen afraid of? |
47289 | As to the opportunity which the answers afforded for debate, could any one say that sufficient latitude had not been taken in debate? |
47289 | At the very moment, said Mr. B., that we know that the blacks of St. Domingo are building vessels, shall we dispose of Our public armed vessels? |
47289 | Aware of the impropriety of his deciding, he tells you-- what? |
47289 | Aye, sir-- and is that true? |
47289 | Because he is not a gentleman, shall we assert a falsehood? |
47289 | Because we can not guard against every possible danger, shall we provide against none? |
47289 | Because we can not, are we to succumb to others? |
47289 | Begin this system of abstract legislation, and where are you to stop? |
47289 | Being questioned if Henry had mentioned the names of any person with whom he had conferred? |
47289 | But I am asked, how will you contend with a maritime nation, without a navy? |
47289 | But I may ask, what on the ocean did we enjoy but by the sufferance of Great Britain? |
47289 | But I will suppose that you could export without interruption; would the whole of the exportable produce pay for the war during the continuance of it? |
47289 | But are not your privateers as much a part of the naval force of the nation as your ships of war? |
47289 | But are we unreasonable in expecting, before we give up the old opinion, to hear some argument in favor of the new one? |
47289 | But by whom had they been suppressed when they ran counter to the interests of his country? |
47289 | But can any man imagine that, if we invade the British colonies, the war will be there? |
47289 | But did an atom of it flow in from the operation of the embargo? |
47289 | But does that justify this resolution? |
47289 | But gentlemen were desirous now to fix the number of souls which should entitle to a Representative-- and why? |
47289 | But has he shown that it is necessary in order to make a preliminary arrangement similar to that entered into? |
47289 | But have the people of Spain acquiesced? |
47289 | But have they shown, by a train of argument, that their overthrow was, in any degree, ascribable to their maritime greatness? |
47289 | But how are we to cause these rights to be respected? |
47289 | But how can this be done? |
47289 | But how has this plea been supported? |
47289 | But how is this protection to be afforded? |
47289 | But how was it received by the American Cabinet? |
47289 | But how, Mr. Speaker, are we to cause our rights to be respected? |
47289 | But if it were not, where is the impropriety of an inquiry? |
47289 | But in this instance is the territory vacant-- or uninhabited-- or abandoned by its proprietors? |
47289 | But is it possible that an intolerant spirit of party has prepared us for this? |
47289 | But is it true that according to the usages of nations this is a novel system, or one now, for the first time, put in use by the British? |
47289 | But is that the case in relation to the Executive, on whose future dispositions rest the best interests of this nation? |
47289 | But is war the true remedy? |
47289 | But of what value would these provinces be to us, if they could be easily acquired? |
47289 | But on whose side has this intrigue been? |
47289 | But receiving all the sanctions of a law, and as such containing a rule of conduct in certain specified cases, what was the Executive to do? |
47289 | But shall we therefore abandon the ocean, yield our birthright, our goodly heritage, without a struggle? |
47289 | But should he, on great questions, be denied the privilege of speaking? |
47289 | But should we have been prepared by winter, the time to which gentlemen wished to have deferred the declaration of war? |
47289 | But some gentlemen affect a sympathy for the Canadians-- why, say they, will you make war on them? |
47289 | But suppose they do not; suppose they fail, and are captured in the attempt; what is that to us? |
47289 | But the question recurs, needful for what? |
47289 | But to what does this doctrine lead? |
47289 | But was there that fatal necessity; that command from Jove,"Ye fates fulfil it, and ye powers approve,"to erect corporations? |
47289 | But we are told that the enterprising merchant is deprived of an opportunity-- of what? |
47289 | But we must inquire, what is a just and necessary war? |
47289 | But were there not other decrees? |
47289 | But what are the reasons why it has not fully come up to the expectations of its supporters, as a measure of coercion? |
47289 | But what blow are you prepared to strike? |
47289 | But what can we do with four seventy- fours? |
47289 | But what does the correspondence referred to prove? |
47289 | But what has_ Revolutionary_ Spain done? |
47289 | But what have the British Government done on the subject? |
47289 | But what is here proposed? |
47289 | But what is the fact? |
47289 | But what is the law of nature and the dictate of wisdom, on this subject? |
47289 | But what is the nature of the defence which one of our large States may be supposed interested to obtain from the General Government? |
47289 | But what is the principle in contest between the two Governments? |
47289 | But what is their situation at present? |
47289 | But what is this law as modified by the practice of nations? |
47289 | But what obliges Congress to give credit at all? |
47289 | But what was left, as to her, for the surrender or repeal of which she had any anxiety? |
47289 | But what was the style in which gentlemen spoke at our last summer session, when the subject of approbation was then before us? |
47289 | But what will the merchants of Salem, and Boston, and New York, and Philadelphia, and Baltimore, the men of Marblehead and Cape Cod, say to this? |
47289 | But what, said Mr. C, has been the history of claims for four or five years past? |
47289 | But what, sir, is the price we have at length paid for the repeal? |
47289 | But whence, Mr. Chairman, proceeds this system of slander and abuse? |
47289 | But where is the difference between that and suffering yourself to be controlled by the arbitrary act of another nation? |
47289 | But while we are searching for the means of annoying the commerce of Britain, does it become us to overlook at this moment the condition of our own? |
47289 | But who was ever the friend of non- intercourse? |
47289 | But why is it necessary to know, on this occasion, whether the President did call for these powers or not? |
47289 | But why is it to be continued? |
47289 | But why this argument of despair? |
47289 | But why this change? |
47289 | But why, sir, are the injuries these nations have done contrasted, and those of the one made an apology for those of the other? |
47289 | But why, sir, should this House give an expression of approbation of the President? |
47289 | But will you trust your funds with an institution thus precarious, and whose solidity is distrusted even by its best friends? |
47289 | But"where, and what was this execrable shape-- if shape it may be called, which shape has none?" |
47289 | But, I ask, sir, if the State Governments do not possess this gigantic power? |
47289 | But, I would ask the gentleman from Connecticut, and the gentleman from Pennsylvania, also, if this be one of their abstract propositions? |
47289 | But, Is it necessary that a resolution containing it should be passed by this House? |
47289 | But, Mr. President, what is the real cause of those failures? |
47289 | But, Mr. Speaker, what was the fact? |
47289 | But, Mr. Speaker, wherefore change the term of enlistment, from five years, or during the war, to one year? |
47289 | But, are not the measures which have been adopted, submission? |
47289 | But, decide it either way, how is trading as far as we have ability, made less abject than not trading at all? |
47289 | But, for these things, we must stipulate an equivalent; and what can that be, but to unite in striking England from the list of independent nations? |
47289 | But, for what purpose are you to send them out? |
47289 | But, is it in this nation, and at this time, that it can be supposed that the profits of commerce are confined to the merchant? |
47289 | But, it seems we have changed all this-- we have perverted the whole course of procedure-- and why? |
47289 | But, it would be well to inquire, on what principle the belligerents pretend to justify these commercial restrictions? |
47289 | But, on the other hand, should we not be ready to act on that day, is it not pledging ourselves that we will then act, whether we are ready or not? |
47289 | But, on the second head, can your law be executed? |
47289 | But, said Mr. R., is time now so precious? |
47289 | But, said he, for what purpose, I feel impelled to ask, are you going to build these vessels? |
47289 | But, says the gentleman, will you take the child from the parent? |
47289 | But, since that election, another has taken place for members of Congress; and how has that turned out? |
47289 | But, sir, admit for a moment the bank may be formed to collect the revenue, ought it not to be exclusively used for that object? |
47289 | But, sir, admit the gentleman''s statement; will a war with Great Britain increase the danger? |
47289 | But, sir, can we quit this subject without looking more particularly at the consequences which result from this series of injuries? |
47289 | But, sir, gentlemen may ask, where is the remedy? |
47289 | But, sir, has this unparalleled enterprise, this gallant spirit, been carried on by a navy? |
47289 | But, sir, how happens it that we still remain under the distresses occasioned by the belligerents? |
47289 | But, sir, how have those orders at last been repealed? |
47289 | But, sir, is it prudent to rely upon an institution that may refuse you assistance? |
47289 | But, sir, let me ask what sort of possession? |
47289 | But, sir, let me ask, whether the disposition to lend be not as necessary a means towards accomplishing a loan as the ability? |
47289 | But, sir, let us admit the fact and the whole force of the argument, I ask whose is the fault? |
47289 | But, sir, what has been the state of the country since the declaration of war? |
47289 | But, sir, what is now the state of things? |
47289 | But, suppose they had been manned in other ways, were not privateers as useful in annoying the enemy as public ships? |
47289 | But, what are the principles more specifically asserted by Great Britain? |
47289 | But, what best consults the honor of a Republican Government? |
47289 | But, what have we done? |
47289 | But, what is that to us? |
47289 | But, what security did those ships afford? |
47289 | But, what was it sent there for? |
47289 | But, why, I pray you? |
47289 | By Mary Howitt, 38 Who Shall be Greatest? |
47289 | By a suitable instrument I reconvey or retrocede the estate called Louisiana to you as I now hold it, and as you held it; what passes to you? |
47289 | By force? |
47289 | By gentlemen who are for active offence? |
47289 | By granting them a right which nature has already given to them? |
47289 | By putting in force the non- importation law? |
47289 | By showing a physical disability in the country to avail itself of this force? |
47289 | By the law of''98, the President certainly could direct relative to the age and size of a recruit-- yet to whom did he apply? |
47289 | By what ligament, on what basis, on what possible foundation, does it rest? |
47289 | By what? |
47289 | By whom is it so called? |
47289 | By whom is this immense power wielded? |
47289 | By whom, would you listen to them, are they most keenly felt? |
47289 | By whom? |
47289 | Can England complain of our giving credit to a man with whom her first Secretary of State and the Governor General of Canada correspond? |
47289 | Can a violation of a solemn pledge confer an obligation which was only intended to be created on the complete fulfilment of that pledge? |
47289 | Can an agreement arising from the exercise of this power, supersede the right of exercising the power expressly delegated by the constitution itself? |
47289 | Can any man do this, and not realize that the destiny of the people inhabiting such a country is essentially maritime? |
47289 | Can any man tell what would be the consequence of war, in these times? |
47289 | Can any one doubt that our Cabinet meant that it should have this effect? |
47289 | Can any submission be more palpable, more"abject, more disgraceful?" |
47289 | Can any thing be more in direct subserviency to the views of the French Emperor? |
47289 | Can any thing be more obviously at variance with the spirit of the constitution and the first principles of civil liberty? |
47289 | Can any thing be more palpable than this? |
47289 | Can arming our merchant vessels, by resisting the whole navy of Great Britain, oppose force to force? |
47289 | Can it be any thing but the revolutions in Spain and Portugal? |
47289 | Can it be because Bonaparte has said he loves the Americans? |
47289 | Can it be conceived that all this could have been carried on, if General Miranda had not meant to conceal it from the Government? |
47289 | Can it be necessary gravely to answer these assertions? |
47289 | Can it then be said, that with treble the population, and in an offensive war, necessity requires the dangerous innovation? |
47289 | Can one million of militia be overpowered by thirty thousand regulars? |
47289 | Can such conduct be called American? |
47289 | Can such men pretend that peace is their object? |
47289 | Can that be true which gives the greatest violence to party animosity? |
47289 | Can that be true which, when the whole physical force of the country is needed, withdraws half of that force? |
47289 | Can that, then, be true in relation to war which would be reprobated in every other case? |
47289 | Can the Legislature give me a moral right to violate the Constitution of the United States, which I have sworn to support? |
47289 | Can the President be as well acquainted with the qualifications and abilities of officers in the militia as the Governors of the States? |
47289 | Can the fundamental principles of the constitution, rendering contracts sacred, be thus uprooted and destroyed? |
47289 | Can there be any necessity for this? |
47289 | Can they sell these lots, these brick houses, these canal shares? |
47289 | Can they touch no nerve in which Britons feel? |
47289 | Can they, or will they, prevent the march of an enemy''s forces through that territory into the United States? |
47289 | Can this be a desirable state of things? |
47289 | Can this be done? |
47289 | Can this ever be an alternative? |
47289 | Can this interdiction be defended on this ground? |
47289 | Can we do too much for this man? |
47289 | Can we wonder that it should be cherished by its master? |
47289 | Can you expect system and order unless you pay for it? |
47289 | Can you have economy when you go into market to bid for what you want? |
47289 | Can you punish them for not doing it? |
47289 | Can your law fail of producing more injury and loss to the United States, than benefit? |
47289 | Contending themselves for the right of naturalization, can the British Government deny it to others? |
47289 | Could America expect to starve this nation? |
47289 | Could Congress transfer to him legislative power, and authorize him to declare of how many members this body should consist? |
47289 | Could any man say that it was not proper that he should have it? |
47289 | Could any man say what would take place between this day and the third of March? |
47289 | Could it not demand prompt payment of the duties? |
47289 | Could not a single foreign frigate enter almost any of our harbors now and batter down our towns? |
47289 | Could not even a single gunboat sweep some of them? |
47289 | Could not the Territory of Columbia have been governed without erecting a single corporation in it? |
47289 | Could one be added to the catalogue? |
47289 | Could seven millions of people obtain glory by precipitating themselves upon half a million, and trampling them into the dust? |
47289 | Could that gentleman repose his head upon his pillow without returning thanks to God that he was descended from English parentage? |
47289 | Could they have chosen a more appropriate phraseology? |
47289 | Could this doctrine be asserted by any gentleman? |
47289 | Did Venice owe her decline, or fall, to her navy? |
47289 | Did a British gallery ever exhibit such a spectacle? |
47289 | Did ever one Government exhibit towards any people a more bloody and relentless spirit of rancor? |
47289 | Did he too oppose this proposition on the ground of resisting the belligerents or of making war with England? |
47289 | Did it arrest the promulgation, or has it abrogated the Orders in Council-- those orders which have given birth to a new era in commerce? |
47289 | Did it declare to how many Representatives each State should be entitled? |
47289 | Did it enter into the conception of the people when its principles were discussed? |
47289 | Did it follow that minor considerations should be placed out of view or yielded up entirely? |
47289 | Did it not interdict all trade with France under the most severe and heavy penalties? |
47289 | Did it prevent Mr. Jefferson from taking a war course? |
47289 | Did it prevent the unmanly attack upon the Chesapeake? |
47289 | Did it produce starvation in the West Indies? |
47289 | Did not the honor, the character, the independence of the country require of us to go back to our original neutral ground? |
47289 | Did not the late President, when he came into place, refuse to let such money come into the treasury in the case of the worthless Callender? |
47289 | Did not this bill completely come up to their wishes? |
47289 | Did our fathers either effect a change in her injurious policy or prevent a war by non- intercourse? |
47289 | Did that make no difference? |
47289 | Did the nation call it submission when it was enacted under General Washington? |
47289 | Do gentlemen believe it to be true? |
47289 | Do gentlemen consider harpooning a vessel to be like harpooning a whale, which has no men on board of it to take out the harpoon? |
47289 | Do gentlemen mean an abject acquiescence to those iniquitous decrees and Orders in Council? |
47289 | Do gentlemen of the"old school"undertake to say that the Father of their country submitted then to George III.? |
47289 | Do gentlemen plead the necessity of the case? |
47289 | Do gentlemen say that there is no insult in this? |
47289 | Do gentlemen suppose that boats can approach without the most imminent danger? |
47289 | Do not gentlemen perceive the tendency of this measure to involve us with the States upon delicate points? |
47289 | Do the wrongs of this nation end with this outrage? |
47289 | Do these gentlemen come forward and tell you that that the embargo is submission? |
47289 | Do these two declarations hang together, sir? |
47289 | Do they contend that the causes which rendered it necessary have been removed? |
47289 | Do they mean that it should be relinquished to our former masters without a struggle? |
47289 | Do they not bear a hostile aspect? |
47289 | Do we doubt the inveteracy of the French hatred of the British navy when it has existed so many years? |
47289 | Do we not pay an annual tribute to Algiers for liberty to navigate the sea safer from its corsairs? |
47289 | Do we want plunder? |
47289 | Do you intend again to stretch them on the rack, again to cover the country with sackcloth and ashes? |
47289 | Do you make this declaration to the enemy at the outset? |
47289 | Do you mean to submit? |
47289 | Do you persevere in the conquest of Canada? |
47289 | Do you see one gentleman, one solitary gentleman of one party, discriminated generally as a Federal, who does not vote for this measure throughout? |
47289 | Do you yet contend that the object is to protect commerce? |
47289 | Does France purchase your tobacco or cotton, which heretofore have found a market there? |
47289 | Does a necessity exist superior to the laws? |
47289 | Does a proffer of settlement, connected with such language, look like a disposition or an intention to conciliate? |
47289 | Does an unprotected seacoast of two thousand miles afford her no opportunities of attacking us? |
47289 | Does any gentlemen believe, even allowing the pressure of the embargo to be great upon her, that she can yield, that she can afford to yield? |
47289 | Does any man believe it? |
47289 | Does any man believe that this frontier traffic is not as beneficial to us as to our enemies? |
47289 | Does any man doubt that the war is justly undertaken? |
47289 | Does he believe he has all this time been deceiving the Legislature? |
47289 | Does he discharge as he ought the duties of a friend, a brother in society? |
47289 | Does he recollect the invasion of the Spaniards two years ago? |
47289 | Does it comport with our honor and dignity to admit into our ports and harbors the very vessels destroying our commerce? |
47289 | Does it fall within the power to pay the debts of the United States? |
47289 | Does it follow, from that, that they are entitled to all the rights of hospitality that one nation could possibly show to another? |
47289 | Does it follow, in all cases, that that which would have prevented the war in the first instance should terminate the war? |
47289 | Does it not confine the legality of arming to resident citizens alone? |
47289 | Does it not go, not only to the abandonment of the ocean, but to the seacoast also? |
47289 | Does it not then result, inevitably, as the dictate of common prudence, that we should, as soon as possible, commence our naval preparations? |
47289 | Does it, then, become the representatives of the nation to leave the nation at the mercy of a corporation? |
47289 | Does not England naturalize foreigners? |
47289 | Does not flour find a great proportion of its consumption on the continent? |
47289 | Does not the constitution say, no laws shall be passed abrogating contracts? |
47289 | Does not the industry of the country languish? |
47289 | Does not the right to create a bank, which shall issue this representative of money, come within the same reason? |
47289 | Does not this prove that so much danger existed on the ocean that it was next to impossible to pass without seizure and condemnation? |
47289 | Does she not naturalize your citizens? |
47289 | Does she produce them at home? |
47289 | Does the bank affect the people locally? |
47289 | Does the gentleman mean to assimilate a tribute exacted by Great Britain with that paid to Algiers? |
47289 | Does the gentleman mean to excite our fears for the loss of our property? |
47289 | Does the gentleman say that it was atrocious in 1798 to defend ourselves against the French? |
47289 | Does the history of the past in our own, or any other country, warrant such an expectation? |
47289 | Does the prospect of security there flatter us? |
47289 | Does this prove a change? |
47289 | Does this prove that the embargo was the cause of the change of the politics of the Maryland Legislature? |
47289 | Does this, sir, comport with the principles of justice? |
47289 | Does your flag float afterwards in honor? |
47289 | Even if the price was as low as eight, or say seven dollars, wherefore should the soldier receive less than any other man? |
47289 | First, has the United States a claim, either real or disputed, to this territory? |
47289 | For I would ask, what are we to promise to ourselves from such a system as this; what will be the probable effects of it? |
47289 | For a private, unassisted, insulated, unallied individual? |
47289 | For any great boon that this Government has received from the hands of Great Britain? |
47289 | For gallons will you spill torrents; or am I to understand that we shall have war without bloodshed? |
47289 | For what have you given money to build fortifications? |
47289 | For what purpose were protections given to American seamen? |
47289 | For what purpose, sir, let me ask, have we adopted the resolution preceding this? |
47289 | For what purpose, then, could they be wanted? |
47289 | For what reason are we to subject even our coasters to plunder and abuse? |
47289 | For what was he contending? |
47289 | For what was the object of the opposition in this debate? |
47289 | For what, sir, are we assembled here under a constitution the purest in the world? |
47289 | For whose benefit, sir, is the Government to strip itself of this right, so essential for the due administration of its finances? |
47289 | For why? |
47289 | Forty thousand? |
47289 | From these principles what desertions have we not witnessed? |
47289 | From whence was this conclusion drawn? |
47289 | From which decision Mr. RANDOLPH moved an appeal; which being seconded, the question was put,"Is the decision of the Chair correct?" |
47289 | From which of these stations, said Mr. C., could she have spared, with safety and prudence, a portion of the force employed? |
47289 | GOLD.--The first object with a wise Legislature is, Is the law expedient? |
47289 | Gentlemen ask, has there not been a satisfactory adjustment of our differences with Great Britain? |
47289 | Gentlemen get up and abuse the Spanish Government and people, and what then? |
47289 | Good heavens, between what, Mr. Speaker? |
47289 | Ground their arms and surrender themselves prisoners of war; or are they, sir, to drop their muskets and take to their heels? |
47289 | Had Congress that power? |
47289 | Had he done it? |
47289 | Had it not been more injurious to the United States than to foreign nations? |
47289 | Had not a special court been refused in relation to a property of much greater value than this? |
47289 | Had not gentlemen even called others by name, and introduced every subject on any question? |
47289 | Had not the Navy of Great Britain a beginning? |
47289 | Had the decrees been so modified, under present circumstances, as that they had ceased to violate our neutral commerce? |
47289 | Had the interdiction been confined to British vessels by this law, what would Great Britain have said to this discrimination? |
47289 | Had they not amply redressed the insult of the individual? |
47289 | Had they not had them in other countries? |
47289 | Had we, when all the rest of Louisiana was surrendered to us, obtained possession of Florida? |
47289 | Has France herself agreed to bury her surplus breadstuffs in the earth? |
47289 | Has Great Britain held out the hand of friendship, and have we refused to meet her? |
47289 | Has a picaroon or a buccaneer ever been chastised by them? |
47289 | Has any capitalist said he would venture out in the present tempest which blackens the ocean? |
47289 | Has any malediction of Heaven doomed them to perpetual vassalage? |
47289 | Has it come to this? |
47289 | Has it occurred? |
47289 | Has it operated upon the present Executive? |
47289 | Has it operated, to any perceptible extent, except upon ourselves, during the twelvemonth it has been in existence? |
47289 | Has it released from galling and ignominious bondage one solitary American seaman, bleeding under British oppression? |
47289 | Has not Congress solemnly pledged itself to the world not to surrender our rights? |
47289 | Has not Great Britain driven them all from the ocean? |
47289 | Has not our country increased in wealth and population, in a superior degree to any country on earth? |
47289 | Has not the British army increased with equal pace with her navy? |
47289 | Has not the United States''Bank produced serious alarm? |
47289 | Has not, in fact, the gallant Captain Decatur taken our own seamen out of one of them? |
47289 | Has our hospitality been violated and our officers insulted in our very ports by the vessels of France? |
47289 | Has she not seized every vessel which has arrived at her ports since that period? |
47289 | Has she withdrawn her Orders in Council, and have we insisted on a continuance of our commercial restrictions? |
47289 | Has the Nile ceased to fructify the fields of Egypt? |
47289 | Has the President acted correctly or not? |
47289 | Has the President given any such information? |
47289 | Has the embargo answered? |
47289 | Has the experiment been tried? |
47289 | Has the love of gain superseded every other motive in the breasts of Americans? |
47289 | Has the navy of Russia protected her commerce? |
47289 | Has there been any thing of the kind on our part? |
47289 | Have Sicily and the Barbary coasts returned to a barren state of nature? |
47289 | Have either complied? |
47289 | Have gentlemen reflected on the disastrous consequences of such a system at the present time? |
47289 | Have our citizens been restored to their country? |
47289 | Have they attempted even to show that there exists in the nature of this power a necessary tendency to destroy the nation using it? |
47289 | Have they been committed within our waters? |
47289 | Have they brought forward the mass of their voters as signers to petitions? |
47289 | Have they disturbed the quiet of either House? |
47289 | Have they ever refused supplies because a war was unpopular, since their revolution? |
47289 | Have they not considered it a delicate one? |
47289 | Have they not done so in Baltimore? |
47289 | Have they not in their conduct given us the most sound and wholesome advice on the subject? |
47289 | Have they not more troops on and near the line than we have? |
47289 | Have they not told you, continually, to let them alone; that they knew their own business best? |
47289 | Have they taken a single man out of a ship of war, or one man out of the dungeons of Paris or Arras? |
47289 | Have this Government, and the people of this country, no interest in the prosperity of these manufactories? |
47289 | Have those causes wrought on her a perseverance in her measures? |
47289 | Have those certificates, or protections, as they are commonly called, been confined to_ bona fide_ American citizens? |
47289 | Have those contingencies happened? |
47289 | Have we any French frigates now in our seas? |
47289 | Have we any other evidence of the disposition of the Executive in relation to this bill than that certain gentlemen are in favor of it? |
47289 | Have we constitutional authority to legislate on this subject, and is it expedient so to do? |
47289 | Have we done nothing? |
47289 | Have we done this, as respects Great Britain? |
47289 | Have we from the effects of their trial any lively hope of success in our present attempt? |
47289 | Have we gone to insurance companies or corporations of one kind or another? |
47289 | Have we indeed received no answer? |
47289 | Have we intrigued with the people to induce them to take sides with us? |
47289 | Have we made an impression on the Prince Regent and his Ministry? |
47289 | Have we no country of our own? |
47289 | Have we not already territory enough? |
47289 | Have we not an undoubted right to navigate the Mediterranean? |
47289 | Have we not conclusive evidence to the contrary? |
47289 | Have we not, moreover, the best recorded proof that the present President holds similar opinions on this subject? |
47289 | Have we obtained the objects for which it was commenced? |
47289 | Have we opened our ports to her traders? |
47289 | Have we renewed commercial intercourse with her? |
47289 | Have we stirred up the people into town meetings to aid us by memorials? |
47289 | Have you an army or navy which can make any impression? |
47289 | Have you any thing to hope, by operating upon the minds of the rulers of that nation, a conviction that you are boasting no longer? |
47289 | Have you ever heard of an army on earth that was carried into the field before it had been seasoned in the camp? |
47289 | Have you not as good a right to do that as to pass this law? |
47289 | Have you the least prospect, if you declare war, of attacking Canada this season? |
47289 | He asked if we were prepared to violate the public faith? |
47289 | He asked what will be the situation of this people in sixty days? |
47289 | He asked whether we were prepared to assail our enemy, or repel her attacks? |
47289 | He asked, how efficient could that species of force be, of which the Chief Magistrate did not think it worth while to have a record kept? |
47289 | He asked, what security had the United States, if they did all this, if they submitted to such abject humiliation, that Great Britain would treat? |
47289 | He asked, whether it is wise in an unarmed nation, as we are, to commence hostilities against one so completely prepared? |
47289 | He asked, why rush with this precipitancy into the war? |
47289 | He demanded what there is in the nature and construction of maritime power to excite the fears that have been indulged? |
47289 | He had satisfied his mind that they had engaged in this business unknowingly and unwillingly-- and, what was now asked of the Government? |
47289 | He said, there were two parties in this House; and asked, is it ever known how a question will be decided, until it is taken? |
47289 | He sees the danger clearly? |
47289 | He supposes a sally from a Spanish garrison upon the American forces, and asks what is to be done? |
47289 | He sympathized with the sufferings of his impressed and incarcerated fellow- citizens; but would a territorial war exempt them from impressment? |
47289 | He was asked if any essential alterations would be made within sixty days, in the defence of our maritime frontier or seaports? |
47289 | He wished to know, in point of principle, what difference gentlemen could point out between the abandonment of this or of that maritime right? |
47289 | He would ask that gentleman if he was, during the last embargo, a ship owner? |
47289 | He would, for instance, ask whether so much as related to sacked towns, bombarded cities, ruined commerce, and revolting blacks, had been realized? |
47289 | How abstract, I pray you? |
47289 | How are these orders and decrees to be opposed but by war, except we keep without their reach? |
47289 | How are these pacific advances met by the other party? |
47289 | How are they to be supplied with the article of salt? |
47289 | How are we to get things right? |
47289 | How can we get rid of the war, if we may not say that it is inexpedient, impolitic, and ruinous? |
47289 | How can we make a sacrifice of our own opinions? |
47289 | How comes he in the ranks against us, with his tomahawk and scalping knife? |
47289 | How could one committee properly attend to the mass of business before the Committee of Commerce and Manufactures? |
47289 | How could they be made one with the United States unless by the use of the same language? |
47289 | How did this happen? |
47289 | How distressed? |
47289 | How had it turned out? |
47289 | How had this indisposition for war got into the House? |
47289 | How happens all this? |
47289 | How has it been applied? |
47289 | How has the President performed this constitutional duty? |
47289 | How has this prediction been verified? |
47289 | How is he to know that they have expressed their sense of his conduct from proper motives? |
47289 | How is it now? |
47289 | How is it submission, then, to these orders for us to trade to Gottenburg, when neither France nor Britain command, nor prohibit it? |
47289 | How is our faith plighted? |
47289 | How is our honor affected by removing it? |
47289 | How is that to be done? |
47289 | How many were unable to apply? |
47289 | How shall the law be repealed? |
47289 | How shall we best do it? |
47289 | How stand the people of the British Empire? |
47289 | How then can any encouragement be drawn from that precedent, to support us under the privations of the present system of commercial suspension? |
47289 | How then can we trust to the future predictions of gentlemen? |
47289 | How then has it happened that Congress has taken upon itself the right to erect light- houses, under their general power to regulate commerce? |
47289 | How was it in the conspiracy of Blount and Liston? |
47289 | How wide- spread the relation in the community? |
47289 | How, I ask, could the President act a different part, from the evidence in the case? |
47289 | How, let me ask you, sir, is your Government constituted? |
47289 | How, sir, can I make this matter plainer? |
47289 | How, sir, is it with the State banks? |
47289 | How, then, could the gentleman, after his admissions, with the facts before him and the nation, complain? |
47289 | How, then, is the national faith plighted to France by that law? |
47289 | How, then, sir, are we to account for their late conduct? |
47289 | I ask gentlemen, if her ability to carry on a distant war by land or sea, has diminished? |
47289 | I ask him whether he considers the impressment of American seamen"a violation of an essential right of this country?" |
47289 | I ask if it is necessary? |
47289 | I ask the gentlemen on the other side of the House, whether we have not gained something in this respect by the war? |
47289 | I ask then what physical ability we have to discharge the State taxes, or any other? |
47289 | I ask this House and this nation, whether their hopes or wishes extend beyond what we then enjoyed? |
47289 | I ask whether, under such circumstances, the question ought not to be considered settled? |
47289 | I ask you, sir, where is the strength of which these nations formerly boasted? |
47289 | I ask you, then, sir, why do we hesitate? |
47289 | I ask, did any nation ever do more? |
47289 | I ask, now, whether the impression made by the gentleman from New York was a just one? |
47289 | I beg to be excused for asking him( for I know he scorns submission as much as any man) if submission will pay the public debt? |
47289 | I have been asked, shall Congress rise and do nothing? |
47289 | I have no idea of laughing the subject out of the House; but how can gentlemen see the least probability of success in the invention? |
47289 | I know, sir, that there are men who condemn the conduct of the President in issuing the proclamation; and why? |
47289 | I make the appeal to gentlemen, I demand of the chairman of the committee who reported this bill, why and wherefore it is presented? |
47289 | I might trace the scheme a little further back, and ask, whence the outrages? |
47289 | I now solemnly appeal to gentlemen, why shall we, at this moment, make this marked distinction? |
47289 | I pray you, was not that the condition of the country when Mr. Rose arrived? |
47289 | I request gentlemen to reflect, whether this is not, in point of fact, an abandonment of the other points in dispute? |
47289 | I say, perish the heart, the head and the tongue, that will attempt her justification or apology? |
47289 | I shall, however, examine the non- intercourse system from the date of the law of March, 1809, and inquire what was its professed object? |
47289 | I will admit, sir, that this is not the time or place to institute the general inquiry, whether banks are or are not beneficial to a nation? |
47289 | I will ask how many regiments you have in your present establishment? |
47289 | I will ask the gentleman from South Carolina, what has the nation benefited for this enormous expenditure? |
47289 | I will ask the honorable gentleman from Maryland whether he does not know that letters have been written for that purpose? |
47289 | I will ask, how we succeeded in the Revolutionary war? |
47289 | I will ask, in return, when an officer is appointed to collect the customs, has he not a salary and emoluments? |
47289 | I will ask, what would be the case if such laws had not been passed by the States? |
47289 | I will now proceed, Mr. President, to inquire whether the facts stated in the resolution are supported by the correspondence upon which it is founded? |
47289 | I will put this question to gentlemen: what has Britain done which would require a discrimination as to her public vessels? |
47289 | I wish to know of gentlemen, whether trading with the belligerents, under their present restrictions on commerce, would not be submission? |
47289 | I would ask, how can it be contended to the contrary? |
47289 | I would ask, in a few words, if we ought to continue this establishment in its present state? |
47289 | If B refuses, does A, under the circumstances of such a declaration, violate any obligation, should he refuse to permit the passage? |
47289 | If France has revoked her decrees, is not a non- importation with Great Britain inevitable, and does it not exist? |
47289 | If France revoked her decrees, she was entitled to a non- importation against Great Britain, and if she failed to revoke, what? |
47289 | If a gentleman from Baltimore gives his agent instructions to provide every thing necessary for an East India voyage, what would he expect? |
47289 | If a man submits, of what use are calculations of money, for it may be drawn from him at the pleasure of his master? |
47289 | If done, has it been so done as to amount to an honorable fulfilment or acceptance of our terms? |
47289 | If gentlemen will have it that this is the accepted time for war, how has it happened that we have not had it before? |
47289 | If he did not feel perfectly comfortable in a cold day, should he therefore divest himself of all clothing? |
47289 | If he wished to promote division, how could he better attain his object than by denouncing the people of a particular section? |
47289 | If her Legislature possess it not, can they give it to a Senator? |
47289 | If it is possible to operate on France by commercial restrictions, let me ask if this bill will not accomplish that object? |
47289 | If it was indispensably necessary a day or two ago to provide a revenue, what had since occurred obviating that necessity? |
47289 | If it was not to have influence, why thus evade a decision on the prayer of the petitioner? |
47289 | If it would, to what amount? |
47289 | If justice be not already established in our country, can there be any probability that a more formidable army will effect an object so desirable? |
47289 | If not, then what is meant by this grant to take the property of your constituents, and leave them no remedy for the injury? |
47289 | If obligations of friendship do exist, why does Great Britain rend those ties asunder, and open the bleeding wounds of former conflicts? |
47289 | If obtained, will it accomplish the end proposed? |
47289 | If on such a question the House was to be governed by individual interests, what was the nation to expect from them? |
47289 | If our Government takes away our liberty, is it necessary to contend with a foreign Government for our rights? |
47289 | If our towns could not be defended by fortifications, he asked, would ten frigates defend them? |
47289 | If provision was made for trying this case, must it not be extended to all others? |
47289 | If she can turn our vessels into her ports to pay duty and take out license, what prohibits us from doing the same as to her vessels? |
47289 | If she has it not, can she give it to her Legislature? |
47289 | If so, did he not go to England during the embargo? |
47289 | If so, how can we rely on them against a foe invading our country? |
47289 | If so, how did he go? |
47289 | If so, what will be the effect on the articles of cession and agreement between you and Georgia? |
47289 | If so, why not give the same credence to the letters of the Duke of Massa and the Duc de Gaete? |
47289 | If so, why not unite against the one as well as against the other? |
47289 | If so, would not a fleet secure us from attack also? |
47289 | If such doctrine is to be admitted, when should we have had a moment''s peace? |
47289 | If the alleged principle of retaliation be not the true one, what is? |
47289 | If the article of the constitution, however, did not mean that Congress might take States out of new Territories, what did it mean? |
47289 | If the decree existed in April, 1811, why was it not communicated to this nation, the only one interested in the subject? |
47289 | If the present establishment is not full, what is the reason? |
47289 | If the right to land be indefeasible, could the Government run a road through it? |
47289 | If their existence had been known at the time, would the President in his message recommending an embargo have failed to notice the fact? |
47289 | If then assistance should be offered on the part of the constitutionalists, what is your army to do? |
47289 | If this law were passed, Mr. W. asked, was it perfect? |
47289 | If this law were to pass, could the Secretary of State be authorized to declare the number of Representatives to which each State was entitled? |
47289 | If this principle, then, be equally urged by both, who is to judge between them? |
47289 | If this was the fact, as the committee appear to have believed, I ask, in what their case differs from that of men taken captives by the Algerines? |
47289 | If this were not her object, why such a continued system of illegitimate blockades? |
47289 | If we are to have war, with whom is it to be prosecuted-- not in terms I mean, but in fact? |
47289 | If you did not at once return blow for blow, and injury for injury, would you not at least take a little time to consider? |
47289 | If you mean war, if the spirit of the country is up to it, why have you been spending five months in idle debate? |
47289 | If you settled at all, might you not consider it your duty in some way to make him feel the consequences of his strange intemperance of passion? |
47289 | If your citizens are united, you can capture Canada, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick; when you have effected this, what remains next to be done? |
47289 | If, as some gentlemen say, it is a precursor to war, there were some very serious questions to be asked-- What is the situation of our fortresses? |
47289 | If, at so early a period, the right of search for men was objected to by this Government, how much more forcible is the objection now? |
47289 | If, said Mr. C, we are not able to meet the wolves of the forest, shall we put up with the barking of every petty fox that trips across our way? |
47289 | If, sir, the sufferers under the sedition law did suffer contrary to the constitution, ought not their expenses to be reimbursed? |
47289 | If, then, it be inexpedient to make this discrimination against Great Britain, how is it less so, when directed against France? |
47289 | If, then, while creating a public debt, we neglect to provide the means of payment, what will be the consequence? |
47289 | In a word, is resistance submission? |
47289 | In a year from the time of enlistment their term expires, and what becomes of your conquest, without force to keep it, supposing it to be made? |
47289 | In bank bills, the credit of which is at least doubtful? |
47289 | In despite of experience, do they yet believe that our blessed country_ alone_ can produce food for the world? |
47289 | In other words, why the number of officers should now be fixed agreeably to the act of April 21, 1806, rather than that of the 3d of March, 1801? |
47289 | In peace we require no defence, and shall we declare war in order to defend ourselves? |
47289 | In performance of their lofty promises, in disregard of sacred duties, what have they done? |
47289 | In point of revenue how does it work? |
47289 | In relation to negotiating with measures of coercion in existence, Mr. N. asked, when did the violations of our rights commence? |
47289 | In spite of all its boasted effects, are not the two nations brought to the very brink of war? |
47289 | In such case, what will you do? |
47289 | In such case, would staying at home, and refusing any more to go upon the sea, be an exercise of independence in the citizens of New York? |
47289 | In the Revolutionary war how did England stand-- how her islands? |
47289 | In the commencement of this inquiry, Mr. Chairman, we naturally ask ourselves, what edicts are to be revoked, and how are they to be revoked? |
47289 | In the days of terror, we shrunk at standing armies; and what is the object now-- defence? |
47289 | In the intermediate period, what aspect does a Union, thus destitute of cement, present? |
47289 | In the name of God, Mr. Speaker, what grounds had he for this presumption? |
47289 | In the name of common sense, how can this be true? |
47289 | In this view can you be prepared for war at the expiration of the embargo? |
47289 | In this way, I grant, our conduct may be impartial; but what has become of our American rights to navigate the ocean? |
47289 | In what are these ten millions of dollars to be collected? |
47289 | In what condition do they leave the country, which, eight years since,"in the full tide of successful experiment,"fell into their hands? |
47289 | In what do they differ, to their advantage from other felons? |
47289 | In what does it consist? |
47289 | In what does your export to that region consist? |
47289 | In what mode, or by what_ means_ are they to be effected? |
47289 | In what respect, then, are they to be compared to Aaron Burr? |
47289 | In what school had these illustrious men formed those noble principles of civil liberty asserted by their eloquence and maintained by their arms? |
47289 | In what situation would she have stood in relation to the United States? |
47289 | In what situation would you then place some of the best men of the nation? |
47289 | In what way are we bound again to launch our country into this dark sea of restriction; surrounded on all sides with perils and penalties? |
47289 | In what way will the public coffers be filled? |
47289 | In what will this Government consist? |
47289 | Indeed, sir, and in what respect is it entitled to this definition of self- evident? |
47289 | Independently of the obvious propriety of this proceeding in itself, have we, sir, no examples of the course of conduct recommended by the resolution? |
47289 | Is Canada so far conquered that you can now reduce the term of enlistment? |
47289 | Is Great Britain less powerful now, than she was twenty years ago? |
47289 | Is Napoleon our king? |
47289 | Is a question of construction never to be at rest? |
47289 | Is all this trade of no importance to trading people? |
47289 | Is another brood of"restrictive"harpies, more unseemly and more hungry than their predecessors, to be let loose among them? |
47289 | Is any advantage to be derived from complaining of this? |
47289 | Is any disposition evidenced to omit tearing them from their homes and families in future? |
47289 | Is any gentleman prepared to say a smaller penalty will effect the object? |
47289 | Is commerce to be protected by abridging the natural rights of the people? |
47289 | Is he a man of truth? |
47289 | Is it a fact, that greater injuries exist from France than from Great Britain? |
47289 | Is it a land force? |
47289 | Is it a restoration of French property seized under the law of non- intercourse? |
47289 | Is it a want of capacity? |
47289 | Is it admitted that the British fleet secures her from attack? |
47289 | Is it an enjoyment of our rights, or a direct, full submission? |
47289 | Is it because the British officers impress from our vessels others besides natives? |
47289 | Is it because you have power on your side, sir, that you will not submit to a judicial decision of this question? |
47289 | Is it by merely reviving the law of May last, as is the object of this amendment? |
47289 | Is it calculated to produce this effect? |
47289 | Is it come to this, that a law constitutionally enacted, even after a formal decision in favor of its constitutionality, can not be enforced? |
47289 | Is it denied that the Government can take property from an individual, making him compensation therefor? |
47289 | Is it equal and exact justice to those two nations? |
47289 | Is it extinct? |
47289 | Is it for the benefit of the great mass of the American people? |
47289 | Is it for the honor of the nation to remove the embargo, without taking any other measure, and to bear with every indignity? |
47289 | Is it for the honor or happiness of this nation that we should again pass under the yoke of Great Britain? |
47289 | Is it from his past treatment of us? |
47289 | Is it from the correspondence in the genius of the two governments? |
47289 | Is it indeed guilty to defend our country? |
47289 | Is it lost to this nation? |
47289 | Is it necessary as a measure of self- defence, as the only mode of resistance which will bring England to terms? |
47289 | Is it necessary for me at this time of day to make a declaration of the principles of the Republican party? |
47289 | Is it necessary for me to allude to the reduction of the Army-- to say by whom it was made? |
47289 | Is it necessary for me to descant upon the topics of difference which then separated the two great parties in the Government? |
47289 | Is it necessary to show that the right which was exclusive during the patent, is now the common right of all? |
47289 | Is it not a convenient agent for paying and receiving money? |
47289 | Is it not a spirit of war? |
47289 | Is it not admitted that we may lawfully exclude or admit the vessels of both belligerents? |
47289 | Is it not an abandonment of those rights to which we are entitled? |
47289 | Is it not an exclusive privilege secured to the stockholders of this bank? |
47289 | Is it not for the purpose of promoting"the general welfare"of the nation which we represent? |
47289 | Is it not important that the men who live on the seaboard should know that we have a force to repel attack? |
47289 | Is it not known that all the surplus product of the agriculture of this country finds its vent on the Continent of Europe? |
47289 | Is it not known that, of the whole of our tobacco, seven out of eight parts are consumed on the continent? |
47289 | Is it not obvious that England will not comply with her part of the condition, and that the Emperor never expected that she would? |
47289 | Is it not obvious, from the very terms of the letter, that it contains a condition that the repeal is a qualified one? |
47289 | Is it not presumable that the President would choose to have some communication with our Ministers abroad before the meeting of Congress? |
47289 | Is it not rewarding the perfidy of the one at the expense of the other, and at the expense of ourselves? |
47289 | Is it not surprising, then, that we are called upon to give him the approbation of this House? |
47289 | Is it not then our duty, as guardians of the public interest, to provide this powerful, this necessary means of defence? |
47289 | Is it not these acts which have shut us out from a market? |
47289 | Is it nothing to us to extinguish the torch that lights up savage warfare? |
47289 | Is it on similarity of language? |
47289 | Is it on the ocean that the impression is to be made? |
47289 | Is it possible such doctrine should be advocated on the floor of Congress? |
47289 | Is it possible that such a declaration could be deemed orthodox when proceeding from lips so unholy as those of an excommunicant from that church? |
47289 | Is it possible that this Government will sanction such arbitrary practices? |
47289 | Is it pretended to enter into any stipulations with Great Britain as to our conduct? |
47289 | Is it right to take from one part of the community ten millions of dollars and put it into the hands of another part? |
47289 | Is it so believed by the Administration? |
47289 | Is it that of a nation keen to discern, and strong to resist, violations of its sovereignty? |
47289 | Is it to be imagined that a power so vast would have been left by the wisdom of the constitution to doubtful inference? |
47289 | Is it to be supposed that the people of the United States will agree to this? |
47289 | Is it to our advantage to be excluded from the trade of the continent? |
47289 | Is it to secure the independence of the people, to suffer a foreign nation to impose upon them any terms which it thinks proper? |
47289 | Is it to tell us she never will redress our wrongs; or is it to divert us from a prosecution of our rights? |
47289 | Is it to the interest of the Administration that these abuses should continue, and that loans and taxes should be resorted to to cover them? |
47289 | Is it to walk about this earth, to breathe this air, and to partake the common blessings of God''s providence? |
47289 | Is it unjust to continue the war, till this demand is complied with? |
47289 | Is it want of pecuniary or want of physical capacity? |
47289 | Is it, that we have suffered the non- intercourse law to expire? |
47289 | Is it_ Le Roi s''avisera_? |
47289 | Is no respect due to the opinions of our predecessors? |
47289 | Is not a bank a proper place for the deposit and safe- keeping of money-- more so than the custom- house? |
47289 | Is not every office in law called a franchise or a particular privilege? |
47289 | Is not the authority of the marshals competent to the execution of the laws? |
47289 | Is not the course a just and necessary one? |
47289 | Is not the income of every man impaired? |
47289 | Is not the war- worn soldier calling on us every day with his demands? |
47289 | Is not this a consideration that ought to be taken into account? |
47289 | Is not this feature modelled after the feature in the Government of England? |
47289 | Is not this proof that the merchants did not consider the risk very great? |
47289 | Is not this sufficient to induce us to take away from Governors this prerogative? |
47289 | Is not, then, the exemption from these liabilities an important immunity? |
47289 | Is such an act calculated to induce the belief that the embargo operates as a bounty on British trade? |
47289 | Is that a consideration to have no weight upon such a question as this? |
47289 | Is that a fact? |
47289 | Is that a mere idle discussion? |
47289 | Is the Administration for negotiation? |
47289 | Is the American nation ready to bow the neck? |
47289 | Is the Executive to infer from the proviso that something exists in the law which the friends of the proviso declare does not exist? |
47289 | Is the Secretary of the President of the United States knocking at the door for admittance? |
47289 | Is the South of easier access than the North, and is the circle of hostility to be extended to that quarter? |
47289 | Is the embargo submission? |
47289 | Is the enemy at the gate? |
47289 | Is the gentleman who represents that district( Mr. SEYBERT) willing that they shall absolve themselves from their contract by enlisting in the Army? |
47289 | Is the gentleman willing to surrender the carrying trade to Great Britain? |
47289 | Is the last effort to preserve the peace of the nation, to be abandoned from these considerations? |
47289 | Is the minority thus to be dragooned into this measure? |
47289 | Is the new and before unheard- of system of blockade abandoned? |
47289 | Is the object of this bill to promote science or the useful arts? |
47289 | Is the power to create this paper medium, or national currency, an attribute of State or national sovereignty? |
47289 | Is the removal of the non- importation act, and the admission of British vessels, nothing? |
47289 | Is then a refraining from so doing, submission? |
47289 | Is there a land upon the globe so fair, so happy, and so free? |
47289 | Is there a man who hears us who has not experienced its utility? |
47289 | Is there any liberty left among the people of France, or of those countries that France has conquered? |
47289 | Is there any limitation to the law on the statute book? |
47289 | Is there any probability that there will be any? |
47289 | Is there any probability, the slightest indication, that it will answer? |
47289 | Is there any provision in the constitution directing it? |
47289 | Is there any provision now made? |
47289 | Is there any thing in the last communication from the President, calculated to produce such an effect? |
47289 | Is there any thing yet wanting to fill up the full measure of injustice you have sustained? |
47289 | Is there no danger that we shall become enervated by the spirit of avarice, unfortunately so predominant? |
47289 | Is there no difference between protecting an existing right, and taking away a right from one party for the purpose of vesting it in another party? |
47289 | Is there no difference in the price under these circumstances? |
47289 | Is there not in this some proof that the evil has been magnified? |
47289 | Is there not time, I beseech you, gentlemen, to proceed in the regular mode to the election of our officers? |
47289 | Is there, indeed, a physical impossibility of removing them? |
47289 | Is this a justification for such an atrocious and exorbitant grasp at power? |
47289 | Is this a novel doctrine, either as to time, or the nation who now attempts to enforce it? |
47289 | Is this an honest neutrality? |
47289 | Is this coincidence of members, this exclusively Federal petitioning, no mark of party? |
47289 | Is this embargo what it pretends to be-- preparation for war? |
47289 | Is this great continent and the free millions who inhabit it, again to become appendages of the British Crown? |
47289 | Is this measure no abridgment of their rights? |
47289 | Is this no argument for reduction? |
47289 | Is this republican? |
47289 | Is this the period of all others to be selected to incorporate unmeaning laws in the body of your statute book? |
47289 | Is your course along the highway of nations unobstructed? |
47289 | It appears to be limited to sixty days; at the expiration of that time will any one say we shall be prepared for war? |
47289 | It had been asked, why was the country unprepared for defence? |
47289 | It has been asked whether the embargo has not operated more on the United States than on the European Powers? |
47289 | It has been rejected by France, and rejected by England after an expense of hundreds of thousands of dollars-- and now are we to take it up? |
47289 | It is asked of us, why admit the vessels of France, whilst injuries which she has done us are unatoned for? |
47289 | It was possible, but was it probable that any event would occur to alter our situation for the better? |
47289 | It was then read a third time; and on the question, Shall the bill pass? |
47289 | It would rise, on a removal of the embargo, to ten or twelve dollars; and how long would that price last? |
47289 | Let me ask him, if Administration should not take this course, whether it would not be perfectly proper that Congress should be in session? |
47289 | Let me ask if an American vessel under it can go to any port of France? |
47289 | Let me ask if it be not better to admit them? |
47289 | Let me ask the gentleman who asked that question, what mighty good our Army has done by land? |
47289 | Let me ask who will buy them when put into the market? |
47289 | Let me ask you, sir, what else he did, or could intend? |
47289 | Let me ask, what will be your export while that war continues? |
47289 | Let me ask, which have we placed in the best situation, France or England? |
47289 | Let me, therefore, inquire, in what this horrible act of substitution, as Mr. Jackson would make it appear, consists? |
47289 | Man is frail, and why should not, at times of public agitation and concussion of parties, abuses arise? |
47289 | May I not trust their confutation to that general knowledge of the subject which every member of the House possesses? |
47289 | May we not cherish this sentiment, without presumption, when we reflect on the characters by which this war was distinguished? |
47289 | May we not, in time, have the whole of South America, some of the West India islands, and, possibly, Great Britain? |
47289 | Mr. Chairman, is it for an infant nation, or a popular Government, to be deterred by the want of preparation? |
47289 | Mr. D. asked if the nation was to be saved by long speeches? |
47289 | Mr. MACON asked under what clause of the constitution Captain Murray and others had been remunerated? |
47289 | Mr. STANFORD said:--Mr. Speaker, I would ask if my colleague''s motion of amendment can be in order? |
47289 | Mr. Speaker, are we to be thus amused? |
47289 | Mr. Speaker, can any argument be more conclusive? |
47289 | Mr. Speaker, what would be your conduct on such an occasion? |
47289 | Mr. Speaker: What is this liberty of which so much is said? |
47289 | Must I not, then, deplore the feebleness of voice, the want of force, of manner, and promptness of mind and thought, which limit me? |
47289 | Must the best interests of the nation be put to hazard to save him the mortification of acknowledging his error and retracing his steps? |
47289 | My colleague( Mr. CLAY) has asked for the congeniality between a bank and the collection of our revenue? |
47289 | Need I remind you, said Mr. R., of the millions of victims sacrificed to commercial cupidity on the plains of Hindostan, by means of this navy? |
47289 | Need I say any thing further on the subject? |
47289 | Need I undertake to prove that, from the moment Whitney''s patent expired, his exclusive right ceased to exist? |
47289 | No doubt, sir, when the embargo is taken off, a momentary spur will be given to exportation; but how long will it continue? |
47289 | No; it has the ability, that is admitted; but will it not have the disposition? |
47289 | No; it was intended by this bounty to make us a great commercial people; and shall we ungratefully reject the enjoyment of his unexampled beneficence? |
47289 | Now I would ask, whether it is probable, that the British subjects would be willing to lend us money to carry on war against their sovereign? |
47289 | Now suppose we should look over our former exports to this island in any one year, what should we find the amount to be? |
47289 | Now the questions which result are, has the act been done? |
47289 | Now what is proposed by denying a renewal of the United States''Bank charter? |
47289 | Now, I ask, if they dare not resort to a direct tax, excise laws, and stamp acts, where will they obtain money? |
47289 | Now, he asked, whether men who had any regard to national honor would consent to navigate the ocean on terms so disgraceful? |
47289 | Now, if it became a State, would not all right of negotiation on the subject be taken from the President? |
47289 | Now, is not here an essential right to be alienated? |
47289 | Now, is there any reason to suppose that the contingent expenses of our navy would be greater in proportion to its force than this? |
47289 | Now, sir, I ask when we have made this country a State if we can do this? |
47289 | Now, sir, after thus stripping this extraordinary sentence of all its disguises, and translating it into plain English, to what does it amount? |
47289 | Now, sir, as to the non- intercourse system-- how does that operate? |
47289 | Now, sir, did this decree exist at the time of its date? |
47289 | Now, that the State which the gentleman represents is almost in arms against us? |
47289 | Now, what is the fact? |
47289 | Now, what reliance could be placed on this patriotism? |
47289 | Now, when a vile spirit of party has gone abroad and distracted the Union? |
47289 | Of what avail is the proclamation of the Prince Regent in this country, ordering the British subjects home? |
47289 | Of what consequence is it to us what way the Gottenburg merchant disposes of our products, after he has paid us our price? |
47289 | Of what materials will this army be composed? |
47289 | Of what nature are the rights in contest? |
47289 | On commercial intercourse? |
47289 | On the question, Shall the bill be read a third time as amended? |
47289 | On the question, Shall the bill pass to the third reading as amended? |
47289 | On the question, Shall this bill be engrossed and read a third time as amended? |
47289 | On the question, Shall this bill be engrossed and read a third time as amended? |
47289 | On the question, Shall this bill be engrossed and read a third time as amended? |
47289 | On the question, Shall this bill pass as amended? |
47289 | On the question, Shall this bill pass as amended? |
47289 | On the question, Shall this bill pass as amended? |
47289 | On the question, Shall this bill pass as amended? |
47289 | On the question, Shall this bill pass as amended? |
47289 | On the question, Shall this bill pass as amended? |
47289 | On the question, Shall this bill pass? |
47289 | On the question, Shall this bill pass? |
47289 | On the question, Shall this resolution pass? |
47289 | On the question,"Shall this bill be engrossed and read a third time, as amended?" |
47289 | On the question: Shall this bill pass to a third reading, as amended? |
47289 | On the subject of impressments, for which alone the war is now to be continued, what, let me ask, is the principle for which our Government contends? |
47289 | On the subject of maritime law, has he not stated things which before were unheard of? |
47289 | On what does the ability of a nation depend? |
47289 | On what ground can this discrimination be defended? |
47289 | On what ground does this rest? |
47289 | On what principle is it that British ships were first excluded and on which their exclusion was confirmed by the non- intercourse law? |
47289 | On what, sir, is the honor of this nation now suspended? |
47289 | Or against England, who, with the monopoly of commerce which you leave her to enjoy, has no object further to annoy you? |
47289 | Or by what right do we create a military school? |
47289 | Or does the obligation of friendship exist on the part of the United States alone? |
47289 | Or in what section of the Union does the gentleman presume to say the American people will not submit to the law? |
47289 | Or is he the President of the United States? |
47289 | Or is he to get that information from inofficial sources? |
47289 | Or is it there our seamen are held in captivity? |
47289 | Or was it ever contended that had not the embargo been raised, the terms of Jay''s treaty would have been worse? |
47289 | Or was the Administration conducted in such a manner as to make the firmness and patriotism of the nation itself doubted abroad? |
47289 | Or, are we to tantalize their hopes with energy in one law and imbecility in another? |
47289 | Or, if it be one of those unmeaning propositions, the discussion of which could answer no good to this House? |
47289 | Ought it not, then, to follow, that the rights of those employed on land or water should also be inseparable? |
47289 | Ought the impending calamities to be left to the hazard of a contingent remedy? |
47289 | Ought we not to relieve its anxieties? |
47289 | Ought we, sir, to depend upon these men to man our fleets, or to defend our ports and harbors? |
47289 | Our privateers; will they have no effect on Great Britain? |
47289 | Pay tribute-- for what? |
47289 | Permit me here to endeavor to illustrate my idea by a reference to the constitution itself? |
47289 | Permit me to ask, how has it been ascertained that a bank is necessary to the operations of the Government? |
47289 | Permit me to inquire of that gentleman whether he ever saw a law authorizing one man to give another his promissory note? |
47289 | Permit me to inquire, in the first place, how the object of the constitution may be attained? |
47289 | Porter,"Free trade and sailor''s rights,"617; is there a man doubts the war was justly undertaken? |
47289 | Public property; and what species? |
47289 | Put down this bank, and how then are your revenues to be collected? |
47289 | Question 2--At what place was the conversation held? |
47289 | Question 3--Have you seen the members alluded to, or any of them, since you first appeared before this committee on Saturday last? |
47289 | Question by the committee-- From the conversation of what members did you collect the information of which you have spoken? |
47289 | Question, shall the Senate adhere to their amendments? |
47289 | Question-- Do you know where Henry is now? |
47289 | Respectable merchants, I observe, form a part of the bank deputies-- for what? |
47289 | Retain the qualified veto, and take away the power to prorogue and dissolve, and what will be the consequence? |
47289 | Reverse this picture, admitting that you have a war with Great Britain, what will be its consequences? |
47289 | SIR: Before I reply to your question,"how many major generals and brigadiers are necessary for an army of thirty- five thousand men?" |
47289 | Say thirty- five, and you add twenty, making together fifty- five: what use is there in multiplying regiments without men? |
47289 | Say, if you please, that you had those ships built, could you send them to sea? |
47289 | Seamen, who shall be attached by every tie to this country, and on whom we can depend for its defence in time of danger? |
47289 | Shall I be obliged by a laborious process of reasoning to prove the obligation of Government to rescue him from such suffering? |
47289 | Shall I be pardoned, sir, when I fear our vessels will only tend to swell the present catalogue of the British navy? |
47289 | Shall I be told the President had discovered that the blockade had been"avowed to be comprehended in, and identified with, the orders in council?" |
47289 | Shall I not attempt to arrest your progress in the path where lies a serpent that will sting you to death? |
47289 | Shall it again be held, in its orbit by the attractive, the corruptive influence of the petty island of Great Britain? |
47289 | Shall it lie unproductive in the public vaults? |
47289 | Shall negotiation be spun out further? |
47289 | Shall the majority govern, or shall a few wicked and abandoned men drive this nation from the ground it has taken? |
47289 | Shall the nation give way to an opposition of a few, and those the most profligate part of the community? |
47289 | Shall the revenue be reduced? |
47289 | Shall this bill pass to a third reading as amended? |
47289 | Shall we after this be told that Congress can not constitutionally exercise any right by implication? |
47289 | Shall we always shrink from the contest? |
47289 | Shall we always yield? |
47289 | Shall we exclude both, admit both, or discriminate? |
47289 | Shall we have companies without captains, or shall the United States pay for two captains? |
47289 | Shall we sit here with our arms folded until the enemy is at our gates? |
47289 | Shall we then abandon commerce, or shall we strive to support it? |
47289 | Shall we then believe the one and not the other? |
47289 | Shall we thereby secure our commercial rights? |
47289 | Shall we turn a deaf ear to the claims of individuals upon Government because of this statute? |
47289 | Shall we vindicate our independence at the expense of our social or moral obligations? |
47289 | Shall we, by their conquest, obtain the objects for which this war is waged? |
47289 | Shall we, sir, continue the war for these men? |
47289 | Shall we, then, by passing this resolution, sanction an idea that Lieutenant- Colonel Washington was entitled to more respect than others? |
47289 | Shall we, then, utter this libel on the nation? |
47289 | Should France have been selected? |
47289 | Sir, are we to continue in this state any longer? |
47289 | Sir, can men thus situated, solvent as they ought to be ten times over, find relief from the State banks? |
47289 | Sir, have I moved you a nauseous, sickening resolution, stuffed with adulation? |
47289 | Sir, have we no rights to defend? |
47289 | Sir, have we not been for years contending against the tyranny of the ocean? |
47289 | Sir, how is this to be done? |
47289 | Sir, if simplicity was not originally contemplated by the framers of the constitution, why the imposition on the people in publishing it to the world? |
47289 | Sir, if this be the fact, of whom does this wealthy population consist? |
47289 | Sir, is it possible that Congress can so far forget their duties to the people and their respect for themselves? |
47289 | Sir, shall I not be permitted to point to the yawning gulf beneath? |
47289 | Sir, what can gentlemen flatter themselves by suffering this discussion to be protracted to so unwarrantable a length? |
47289 | Sir, what has been the cause of our present condition? |
47289 | Sir, what in such a case would be true honor? |
47289 | Sir, what is the nature and import of this proclamation? |
47289 | Sir, what is this power we propose now to usurp? |
47289 | Sir, what sort of title is this? |
47289 | Sir, what would be the effect of passing by unnoticed these gross and insidious insults to both the people and Government? |
47289 | Sir, where is your commerce now to protect? |
47289 | Sir, will not the same reasoning apply against the maritime towns being taxed to support the army of 10,000 men in the West? |
47289 | Sir, will your money, when collected, be safe in the State banks? |
47289 | Sir, without indulging in vague conjectures, what are the best data we have to form an estimate of the amount of specie in the country? |
47289 | Sir, would Great Britain rely for her oracles on the newspapers or pamphlets of this country? |
47289 | Sixty thousand? |
47289 | So far from it, would not the danger of French influence be resounded throughout the nation? |
47289 | Some gentlemen indulge great expectations from privateers; but has Great Britain any unarmed or unprotected trade which they can attack? |
47289 | Strip the proposition, and what language does it speak? |
47289 | Suppose an attack upon any portion of the American army within the acknowledged limits of the United States by a Spanish force? |
47289 | Suppose an attempt to subvert this Government, would not the traitor first aim, by force or corruption, to acquire the treasure of this company? |
47289 | Suppose it ours, are we any nearer to our point? |
47289 | Suppose that the whole fine in any particular case had been paid by individual subscription, what has the Government to do with that? |
47289 | Suppose these men had been arrested and tried in this country, what would have been their lot? |
47289 | Suppose they should neglect or refuse to make these appointments, can you compel them to do it? |
47289 | Suppose this expectation disappointed-- suppose the harbor of New York blockaded by two seventy- fours? |
47289 | Suppose you make this transmission once, can you do it a second time? |
47289 | Surely; and yet we pay annually a tribute for permission to do it-- and why? |
47289 | Surrender your independence-- for what? |
47289 | Take a landsman on board a ship, and what sort of a sailor will he make? |
47289 | Take off the embargo, they cry-- for what? |
47289 | Take, then, the population of Canada to be 300,000 souls; what number of militia should this population furnish? |
47289 | Tell me, said he, what is to keep a great proportion of them from your coast in 1813? |
47289 | That is out of the question; then, the only question is, whether in the present state of the world, the embargo or war is the best for us? |
47289 | That of our cotton, at least one- half finds its market there? |
47289 | That she can admit that we have her always perfectly in our power? |
47289 | That the gentlemen on the other side of the House were divided on that subject, as they were upon the question of the reduction of the Navy? |
47289 | That they should expend large sums of money for the purpose of buying them out? |
47289 | That we should repel insults and respect ourselves? |
47289 | That, because we can not submit to the edicts of the belligerents, we will therefore open a free trade with them? |
47289 | That, under the pretext of a purchase from an Indian, named Double Head, people have gone over to settle lands, is true; but from where? |
47289 | The Orders in Council-- and what were they worth to him? |
47289 | The SPEAKER inquired whether Mr. G. yielded the floor? |
47289 | The SPEAKER then decided that the main question to now put, was:"Will the House concur with the Senate in the amendments made to the bill?" |
47289 | The amendments made by the House having been agreed to, the question was stated, Shall the bill be engrossed, and read a third time? |
47289 | The avowed principle is retaliation, but is it the true principle? |
47289 | The basis of all commerce is calculation; what calculation can be found for distant enterprises when the data are perpetually shifting? |
47289 | The commerce of that city, which exists only by commerce, destroyed? |
47289 | The committee rose and reported the bill without amendment, and the question was, Shall it be engrossed for a third reading? |
47289 | The gentleman from Kentucky( Mr. CLAY) asked, if banks are necessary for collecting the public revenues, why give them any other power? |
47289 | The gentleman from Pennsylvania asked yesterday, why not repeal the embargo laws, and provide for the enforcement of this system by a new law? |
47289 | The gentleman had appealed to the House to know why they would retain them? |
47289 | The gentleman says, suppose they were to return to their country, would they not be punished? |
47289 | The great subject for the contemplation of every reflecting mind in America was, what that remedy should be? |
47289 | The inquiry has been made, with some solicitude, what will you do with_ naturalized foreigners_? |
47289 | The majority now stand on high ground-- what will be said, and what will be the consequence of a refusal? |
47289 | The merchants? |
47289 | The negotiation opens, and what is done? |
47289 | The only question is, do they cease to violate our neutral commerce? |
47289 | The only question that presents itself is, Is the information useful to us? |
47289 | The press is groaning with pamphlets-- for what? |
47289 | The proceeding was unanimous; and what benefit did the British nation receive from this unanimous and prompt proceeding? |
47289 | The proper extent of the discussion growing out of this bill seemed to be confined to these inquiries: Can the force contemplated be obtained? |
47289 | The protection of the General Government claimed? |
47289 | The question is, Has he told the truth? |
47289 | The question is, how many marines are necessary, and in what battles are they employed? |
47289 | The question is, what regulation shall we make respecting public ships, and one of three courses is to be pursued? |
47289 | The question is, what should be done? |
47289 | The question ought always to be, What becomes the nation? |
47289 | The question then arises, what, under these circumstances, ought the officers and crew to be allowed? |
47289 | The question then presents itself, has Congress the power to divest the people of that right? |
47289 | The question was stated thus:"Is the decision of the SPEAKER correct?" |
47289 | The question was then taken--"Shall the amendments be engrossed, and, together with the bill, be read a third time?" |
47289 | The question was then, on what day shall it be read? |
47289 | The question which at once presents itself to every mind disposed to inquire, is, what is the object of this vast military force? |
47289 | The question"Shall the bill be engrossed for a third reading?" |
47289 | The right of not being vexed or endangered by paper blockades? |
47289 | The said bill was, accordingly, read the third time: Whereupon, Mr. SPEAKER stated the question from the chair, that the same do pass? |
47289 | The second object, which should never for a moment escape attention, Can the law be executed? |
47289 | The ship owners, the East and West India merchants, and what cause have they for war? |
47289 | The spoliation of your property? |
47289 | The true question is not, Is the matter expressed in this abstract proposition true? |
47289 | The violation of the personal liberty of your citizens and the degradation of the ensign of your sovereignty? |
47289 | The whole estate or my moiety only? |
47289 | Then the question results, has Congress a right, in order to determine its title, to refer it to any tribunal whatever? |
47289 | Then, to my mind, the only question is, shall we defend ourselves, or shall we submit? |
47289 | There ought to be no question as to what stock they sprung from; the true question was, ought they to be a State? |
47289 | They ask where are the men-- where is the money to be obtained? |
47289 | They asked--"What do we want of Canada? |
47289 | They complained of the first embargo; what did they get? |
47289 | They have been delivered to you by my honorable colleague-- what are they? |
47289 | They were gaining strength daily, and what was the situation of our Southern borders? |
47289 | They were repealed, finally, in consequence-- of what? |
47289 | Thirty thousand? |
47289 | This being the case, who would now be most likely to be supplied with it? |
47289 | This decree did not exist; and why was it not issued? |
47289 | This decree purports to be an act of reprisal on this country, and for what cause? |
47289 | This heaped up measure of legislative contumely is prepared; for whom? |
47289 | Through the medium of the State banks? |
47289 | To break up your infant manufactories, and to deprive poor children at once of a useful employment, and a home? |
47289 | To defeat the passage of this bill? |
47289 | To promote the public good or advance the national prosperity? |
47289 | To protect the constituents of my worthy colleague, in the enjoyment of their peace of mind? |
47289 | To provide no protection against smaller powers? |
47289 | To such favored beings what would be the suggestions of love, truly parental? |
47289 | To the Baltic, sir? |
47289 | To what is it owing that we are at this moment deliberating under the forms of a free representative government? |
47289 | To what purpose do we keep up the Marines, another branch of the Establishment? |
47289 | To what was our superiority owing? |
47289 | To whom will you confide the charge of leading the flower of our youth to the Heights of Abraham? |
47289 | Under all these circumstances was it wise and prudent to discharge the Navy? |
47289 | Under such circumstances is it not to be expected that this measure of the Executive will result in war? |
47289 | Under such circumstances, what should hurry us into the war? |
47289 | Under these circumstances what ought I to do? |
47289 | Under these circumstances, Mr. R. asked the House if it were not necessary for a committee to be appointed to probe into this business? |
47289 | Under this grant, Congress can pass laws to carry into effect the powers vested in the judicial department? |
47289 | Under what clause money paid into the Treasury had been returned in various instances? |
47289 | Upon meeting with this gentleman he inquired of me what had been done? |
47289 | Upon what ground, then, sir, is it that we are called on to pass this additional non- importation act against Great Britain? |
47289 | Upon whom are they dependent for legal existence and for length of days? |
47289 | Virginia has the physical force, but has she a moral right to violate the Constitution of the United States? |
47289 | War has been declared by a law of the land; and what would be thought of similar attempts to defeat any other law, however inconsiderable its object? |
47289 | Was Holland ruined by her navy? |
47289 | Was any nation ever less prepared for war? |
47289 | Was ever any body of men so cruelly wounded in the house of their friend? |
47289 | Was he expected to answer this question? |
47289 | Was he to set at defiance the law of the land? |
47289 | Was it believed that the gentleman from Pennsylvania( Mr. SMILIE) was disposed to submit to the belligerents? |
47289 | Was it competent, he asked, to the Government to receive as testimony the statement of the commander or crew of an American corsair? |
47289 | Was it for the purpose of destroying the Government? |
47289 | Was it for this the martyrs of the Revolution died? |
47289 | Was it not for want of unanimity in support of the measure? |
47289 | Was it not in consequence of its having been wantonly, shamefully, and infamously violated? |
47289 | Was it not, he asked, infinitely absurd and a direct violation of the constitution, to apportion the representation before these numbers were known? |
47289 | Was it obtained_ bona fide_ for a fair and full consideration? |
47289 | Was it proposed now to declare war? |
47289 | Was it so considered by the Republicans, when resorted to for redress against the primary violations in 1793? |
47289 | Was it such a repeal as the gentleman contends ought to have taken place of the Berlin and Milan decrees, viz: under the sign manual of the Emperor? |
47289 | Was it taken from an impression which had gone abroad in the country? |
47289 | Was it that the members of that Army should sheath their swords in the bowels of the liberties of their country? |
47289 | Was it then for the first time, that a division of sentiment appeared on this floor? |
47289 | Was not the President, in good faith, bound to believe the fact, and, believing it, bound to act as he did? |
47289 | Was not the first vessel which ever doubled the Cape of Good Hope, under the flag of the United States, the old frigate Alliance? |
47289 | Was not the royal family decoyed by artifice from Madrid to Bayonne? |
47289 | Was the President of the United States presumed to have turned a deaf ear to the cries of our suffering countrymen in captivity in a foreign nation? |
47289 | Was the batture ceded to the United States? |
47289 | Was the embargo principle considered submission in the days of the stamp act? |
47289 | Was the fact so? |
47289 | Was the gentleman from Maryland( Mr. KEY) who represented the adjacent district, in the same belligerent temper? |
47289 | Was the letter of Mr. Erskine a repeal of the British orders? |
47289 | Was the right of the citizen to fall prostrate before such an_ ex parte_ opinion or statement as that might be? |
47289 | Was there not some difficulty, under the proclamation, in the admission of the Statira frigate, bearing that Minister into our waters? |
47289 | Was this a necessary of life without which they could not subsist? |
47289 | Was this an avowed object in the Convention when it formed this article? |
47289 | Was this blockade such a violation of the neutral rights of the United States as to come decidedly within the act of the last session? |
47289 | Was this body calculated for that branch of Government? |
47289 | Was this the ground on which the subject was placed? |
47289 | We are farther told that impressment of seamen was not considered a sufficient cause of war; and are asked why should it be continued on that account? |
47289 | We are not only, sir, to ruin many innocent and unoffending individuals, but to derange the national finances; and for what is all this to be done? |
47289 | We are now going to war for the protection of these rights; but in what way, and under what circumstances? |
47289 | We are, sir, in a state of war; and what is evidently the course which we should pursue whilst in that situation? |
47289 | We asked, What were the emoluments? |
47289 | We create a military school-- for what purpose? |
47289 | We have been asked, Mr. Speaker, why not lay upon your table a proposition to go to war? |
47289 | We have been asked,"What are some of the small States when compared with the Mississippi Territory?" |
47289 | We lay an embargo-- is there any clause in the constitution authorizing us to lay embargoes? |
47289 | We say we will not trade-- with whom? |
47289 | We take off the embargo, and trade on their terms; what will be the consequence? |
47289 | Well, sir, how does she dispose of it? |
47289 | Well, sir, how was this miracle brought about? |
47289 | Well, sir, if the bank promptly calls in its loan of four hundred thousand dollars, will the debtors be enabled to meet their payments? |
47289 | Well, sir, was there ever a crisis calling on a people for vigorous exertions more awful than that which impends over us now? |
47289 | Well, sir, what then? |
47289 | Well, what then, say my friends? |
47289 | Well, what then? |
47289 | Were I to affirm the House is now in session, would it be reasonable to ask for proof? |
47289 | Were ever a body of men so abandoned in the hour of need, as the American Cabinet, in this instance by Bonaparte? |
47289 | Were gentlemen willing to submit to this: to raise the embargo, and subject our trade to this depredation? |
47289 | Were not parties arrayed against each other in 1796 on the subject of the British Treaty, and in 1798-''9, on the question of a war with France? |
47289 | Were not the disputes in this House, in those times, as long and as bitter as they have ever been since? |
47289 | Were the islands starved during these years? |
47289 | Were these people to be starved out, when they could actually purchase cheaper now from other places than they had formerly done from us? |
47289 | Were they to have resisted, and how? |
47289 | Were we more regardful of the property than the personal liberty of the citizen? |
47289 | Were we not to resist Great Britain because of her 1,130 sail of armed vessels? |
47289 | Were we to redress those wrongs, those commercial injuries, on the land? |
47289 | Were you able in the summer to recruit your army of twenty- five thousand men, could it be employed in any service in the course of this year? |
47289 | What State would have adopted the constitution, if it had been foreseen that this power would be granted to any man, however distinguished by office? |
47289 | What accounts did he bring? |
47289 | What advantage are my constituents to derive from the expenditure of this money? |
47289 | What advantage have we derived from it? |
47289 | What are a few seaport towns-- enterprising, wealthy, and prosperous, as indeed they are-- what are they, compared to my continental system?" |
47289 | What are his doctrines? |
47289 | What are our preparations for war? |
47289 | What are some of the legal effects of this incorporation? |
47289 | What are statutes of limitation as applicable to individual cases? |
47289 | What are the reasons for vesting Congress with the right to regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several States? |
47289 | What are they? |
47289 | What are they? |
47289 | What are you about to do-- to breathe vigor and energy into the bill? |
47289 | What becomes of the immense revenues derived from those sources? |
47289 | What better mode could have been adopted, to prevent Indian hostility and intercept British supplies of the instruments of massacre? |
47289 | What but pillage, insult, and scorn? |
47289 | What can resuscitate wheat devoured by the fly? |
47289 | What cause of complaint has Denmark, or ever had Denmark, against us? |
47289 | What cause, Mr. Chairman, which existed for declaring the war has been removed? |
47289 | What change, sir, has occurred in the state of things to produce this strange impossibility? |
47289 | What claim has the Spanish Government upon our moderation and forbearance? |
47289 | What crime has been left undone? |
47289 | What did she first dictate for remedying any complaint? |
47289 | What did they do? |
47289 | What did you in this instance? |
47289 | What do its terms necessarily include? |
47289 | What do they imply? |
47289 | What do we understand by regulating commerce? |
47289 | What does it still require? |
47289 | What does public economy require, but that every one should serve the Republic in that capacity in which he can be most useful? |
47289 | What does the Attorney- General state in his report? |
47289 | What does this prove? |
47289 | What earthly good can result from it? |
47289 | What effect do gentlemen expect that the embargo will have had in May? |
47289 | What effect has it produced on France? |
47289 | What effect has this measure produced on foreign nations? |
47289 | What evidence have we had since to give us a more favorable prospect, as it respects the revocation of the decrees? |
47289 | What fate befalls the agriculture of the South? |
47289 | What glory? |
47289 | What has Mr. Canning given you in return? |
47289 | What has become of that high Federal spirit which disdained to buy Louisiana? |
47289 | What has become of that vast amount of money? |
47289 | What has become of the newspaper called the Washington Federalist? |
47289 | What has been her conduct since we acquired Louisiana? |
47289 | What has been her conduct? |
47289 | What has he said? |
47289 | What have been the propositions heretofore made by our Government to Great Britain upon this subject? |
47289 | What have we done since? |
47289 | What have we gained? |
47289 | What have we here, in the estimate of last year? |
47289 | What have we to destroy this proof? |
47289 | What if the other Hull had commanded? |
47289 | What influence could the opinion of the Attorney- General have? |
47289 | What injuries have been received from France? |
47289 | What insults, what injuries had we not suffered? |
47289 | What is a corporation such as the bill contemplates? |
47289 | What is a just and necessary war? |
47289 | What is done with it at this epoch? |
47289 | What is due to the national honor? |
47289 | What is it that the youth has not to prepare, or when was it that a popular Government taxed itself with previous preparation? |
47289 | What is it to lead to? |
47289 | What is it we do for a license to go into the Mediterranean? |
47289 | What is necessary to sustain an elevated fitness of character and conduct in the nation? |
47289 | What is now the situation of affairs? |
47289 | What is that plan, and what are the objects in contemplation? |
47289 | What is the consequence? |
47289 | What is the declaration made to the British Minister at this place, by our Secretary of State, on this subject? |
47289 | What is the doctrine of my friend from Georgia? |
47289 | What is the effect of this double obligation? |
47289 | What is the expression of the British Envoy on which gentlemen rely, and on which they are about to sit down quietly under the vine and fig tree? |
47289 | What is the fact, admitting all that this person has said to be true? |
47289 | What is the fact? |
47289 | What is the import of this provision? |
47289 | What is the language they speak? |
47289 | What is the nature of the title set up by the gentleman from Vermont? |
47289 | What is the nature of this Government? |
47289 | What is the object of this language? |
47289 | What is the object of this vast military force? |
47289 | What is the plain language of this preamble? |
47289 | What is the proposition which he submits? |
47289 | What is the result of it? |
47289 | What is the situation of our country generally? |
47289 | What is the spirit that breathes in the five resolutions which have been adopted-- resolutions which were in entire accordance with my feelings? |
47289 | What is the state of British commerce at this time? |
47289 | What is the state of the bank in this city? |
47289 | What is the state of things alluded to? |
47289 | What is the state of trade between us and France? |
47289 | What is the subject- matter in dispute? |
47289 | What is this argument of infancy? |
47289 | What is this tribute? |
47289 | What is to fill your Treasury now, if the people can not sell their products? |
47289 | What limitation does it contain upon the power to raise and support armies? |
47289 | What limitation does the constitution contain upon the power to lay and collect taxes, imposts, duties, and excises? |
47289 | What loans, I ask, have Government ever received from the Bank of the United States? |
47289 | What maritime strength is it expedient to provide for the United States? |
47289 | What may be the effect, if you introduce either of these two principles into this bill? |
47289 | What misfortune so great as the loss of character? |
47289 | What more can you do? |
47289 | What must be the effect of such insinuations? |
47289 | What must be the inevitable consequence if this measure is suffered to go into effect? |
47289 | What must you do? |
47289 | What nation or individual ever reached that state? |
47289 | What nation, in so short a time, ever before ascended to such a height of commercial greatness? |
47289 | What new order of things has disqualified them for the enjoyment of liberty? |
47289 | What object could he have in view which should induce him to conclude an arrangement, except with full confidence of its being carried into effect? |
47289 | What offence has she committed against France? |
47289 | What power have we to negotiate about the territory of any of the States? |
47289 | What prohibits us from doing to England what England does to us? |
47289 | What prospect is there that the embargo will be removed? |
47289 | What reason could there be for enacting this law, if the principles of the law of 1807 were correct? |
47289 | What reason had been given for such a course? |
47289 | What regular trade can yield such profits on the outward and inward cargoes? |
47289 | What reply did the majority of Congress give to this train of reasoning? |
47289 | What republicanism is this? |
47289 | What resistance do they afford against their decrees or confiscation? |
47289 | What restore flour soured in the barrel? |
47289 | What restriction is to be found in it upon the right to provide and maintain a navy? |
47289 | What right has Britain to tyrannize on the ocean, and prescribe limits to our trade? |
47289 | What right, in the whole charter of our rights, has not at some time been abused? |
47289 | What rights, Mr. Chairman? |
47289 | What satisfaction has been received for your plundered property? |
47289 | What says France? |
47289 | What says it? |
47289 | What says the sarcastic British Minister? |
47289 | What shall we say of the_ French_ doctrine in relation to this subject of impressment? |
47289 | What sort of attack have we cause to expect? |
47289 | What the ability of its debtors to meet their engagements? |
47289 | What then is the inference from this state of the case? |
47289 | What then is the object of the opposition? |
47289 | What then results? |
47289 | What then was her situation? |
47289 | What then will be the consequence of passing this bill? |
47289 | What then would be the case? |
47289 | What then? |
47289 | What think you, sir? |
47289 | What though their cities offer no plunder? |
47289 | What though their conquest can yield no glory? |
47289 | What upon the right to declare war and make peace? |
47289 | What use has been made of it? |
47289 | What was our situation now? |
47289 | What was that case? |
47289 | What was the amount of the gentleman''s showing on this occasion? |
47289 | What was the case in 1798? |
47289 | What was the condition to be performed on the part of France? |
47289 | What was the consequence? |
47289 | What was the consequence? |
47289 | What was the consequence? |
47289 | What was the effect of our eloquent addresses, when colonies, placed at the foot of the British throne? |
47289 | What was the effect of this information? |
47289 | What was the fact as respected France? |
47289 | What was the fact in this case? |
47289 | What was the history of it? |
47289 | What was the leading object of the adoption of the Federal Constitution in the northern parts of the Union? |
47289 | What was the occupation of a Virginian wife-- her highest ambition? |
47289 | What was the offer made to our Government by the British Ministry? |
47289 | What was the policy of the ordinance, and what the object of its framers? |
47289 | What was the power of Venice and Genoa when they led the van of naval power? |
47289 | What was the situation of some branches of our commerce then? |
47289 | What was the situation of the slaveholding States? |
47289 | What was the vote then? |
47289 | What was then our condition? |
47289 | What was then our situation with those nations? |
47289 | What was there to mar success? |
47289 | What was this ground? |
47289 | What were the House about to do? |
47289 | What were the facts? |
47289 | What were the objects of the war? |
47289 | What were then the doctrines of the French Government? |
47289 | What were those measures? |
47289 | What were those that characterized its progress and termination? |
47289 | What were your preparations for the Revolutionary war, and when made? |
47289 | What will avail the activity or gallantry of your officers and seamen against such disparity of force? |
47289 | What will be the consequence of laying down our arms, of shrinking from our present attitude? |
47289 | What will be the consequence of such neglect? |
47289 | What will be the influence of such an institution on the Government, and the country at large? |
47289 | What will be the situation of this unhappy, misguided country? |
47289 | What will in this case become of your source of wealth in the Western country? |
47289 | What will the Government of Spain, Junta, King, or Governors of Spanish provinces to whom you apply, say to you on this subject? |
47289 | What will the gentleman discover, by examining the history of the period he referred to? |
47289 | What would an honest Dutchman in the West think of a man who kept as many stables as horses, and those of the most expensive construction, too? |
47289 | What would be inferred from this procedure? |
47289 | What would be said in a court of justice in a case of murder? |
47289 | What would be the effect of such a system in the present war? |
47289 | What would be the effect of this war upon ourselves? |
47289 | What would be the effects of war, the tocsin of which was for the first time sounded through the land? |
47289 | What would be the object of a war? |
47289 | What would be the situation of your seaports and their seafaring inhabitants? |
47289 | What would be the upshot? |
47289 | What would have been the situation of our cause in the Revolution, if, after the British successes in Jersey, we had desponded? |
47289 | What would have been thought of such conduct in the war of the Revolution? |
47289 | What would it have been for sixty, one hundred, or three hundred and sixty- five days past? |
47289 | What would then be the state of the Territorial Legislatures? |
47289 | What, I would ask, is the probable fact, as to the facilities which this bank will afford the Government in borrowing? |
47289 | What, Mr. President, is the nature of this title? |
47289 | What, Mr. Speaker, are we now called on to decide? |
47289 | What, have we a Minister abroad, and is he afraid or unwilling to make a proposition to the Government where he is resident? |
47289 | What, he asked of the House, was settled by the passage of this bill? |
47289 | What, he asked, was the extent of the country in question? |
47289 | What, said Mr. C, is this statute of limitations, which, whenever mentioned in this House, seems to make everybody tremble? |
47289 | What, said Mr. D., is the situation in which we are now placed? |
47289 | What, said Mr. M., will be the effect of a proposition for taxing salt in the country? |
47289 | What, said Mr. R., has been the situation of Great Britain in relation to Spain? |
47289 | What, sir, are, or have been its effects on Great Britain? |
47289 | What, sir, did gentlemen on this floor say was the purport of this note? |
47289 | What, sir, has been the practice of the British House of Commons? |
47289 | What, sir, has been the practice under this law? |
47289 | What, sir, have the other party done? |
47289 | What, sir, said Mr. M., would have become of Rome, had she desponded when Hannibal defeated her armies? |
47289 | What, sir, shall constitute cause of war? |
47289 | What, sir, was the avowed object of this war? |
47289 | What, sir, was the conduct of the British Parliament and nation upon that occasion? |
47289 | What, sir, was the object of that law? |
47289 | What, sir, were the circumstances under which that mission was despatched here? |
47289 | What, sir? |
47289 | What, then, had experience taught them on this subject? |
47289 | What, then, is the true construction of the Treaties of St. Ildefonso and of April, 1803, from whence our title is derived? |
47289 | What, then, is this case? |
47289 | What, then, let me ask, has changed the character of those people, that they are to be despised? |
47289 | What, then, was our situation when Congress met? |
47289 | What, then, were the causes of the war? |
47289 | When Bonaparte talks of the freedom of the seas, does he mean the same idea which we attach to these words when we use them? |
47289 | When Mr. Jefferson, that illustrious character, presided over the destinies of the United States, why was not this navy- building proposed? |
47289 | When Spain was the ally of France she was-- what? |
47289 | When an adjustment is made with one of those powers, what is your language? |
47289 | When did our coercive measures commence? |
47289 | When did that voracious monster ever disgorge the plunder he had once received into his insatiable maw? |
47289 | When did they begin; when, though they may have been varied in character, were they relaxed in degree, and when were they probably to cease? |
47289 | When gentlemen attempt to carry this measure, upon the ground of acquiescence or precedent, do they forget that we are not in Westminster Hall? |
47289 | When has England been at peace with all the world, since she became a great naval power? |
47289 | When he talks of the principles of maritime law, does he mean the same as we? |
47289 | When the country was in want of clothing, and could get it for one- fourth price from the British, what was the consequence? |
47289 | When you had differences with both the belligerents, what was your language? |
47289 | When, by the express letter of the instrument,"new States may be admitted,"and when Vermont, not mentioned in the Confederation, has been admitted? |
47289 | Whence but from that origin came all the blessings of life, so far as political privileges are concerned? |
47289 | Whence can the money be obtained? |
47289 | Whence comes it, that in the archives of this Assembly, we find copies of licenses given by the Executive power of the nation-- to do what? |
47289 | Whence could be the objection to Congress meeting at an earlier day? |
47289 | Whence did we derive a power to purchase Louisiana, and incorporate it with the good old United States? |
47289 | Whence does this gentleman derive the power of declaring an act of Congress not in force, declared by the President''s proclamation to be in force? |
47289 | Whence the inducement to urge the annulment of a blockade of France, when, if annulled, no American cargoes would obtain a market in any of her ports? |
47289 | Whence the power to make it an instrument of commerce? |
47289 | Whence was derived a power to pass a law laying an embargo without limitation? |
47289 | Whence, sir, do you get the right, whence do you derive the powers to erect custom- houses in the maritime districts of the United States? |
47289 | Where are her colonies into which we could carry our arms? |
47289 | Where are her ships?--where her commerce? |
47289 | Where are the navies of Sweden and Denmark? |
47289 | Where are they gone? |
47289 | Where are those rights when great maritime powers become belligerent? |
47289 | Where are we to come in contact with our enemy? |
47289 | Where can the necessary supply of cotton be procured? |
47289 | Where could we have carried on against her any of the operations of war? |
47289 | Where could we subjugate her provinces? |
47289 | Where do you expect to find regulations of commerce? |
47289 | Where does the remainder usually go? |
47289 | Where have you seen a National Bank, connected with the Government, which has not ultimately ruined the circulating medium of the nation? |
47289 | Where is Holland now? |
47289 | Where is it when Canada is mentioned? |
47289 | Where is that spirit which enforced a simple resolution of the old Congress, not then binding upon the people, as a law from Heaven? |
47289 | Where is that spirit which for this reason separated us from the nations of Europe? |
47289 | Where is the Macedonian phalanx, the opposition in Congress? |
47289 | Where is the Montgomery, or even the Arnold, or the Burr, who is to march to Point Levi? |
47289 | Where is the difference, sir? |
47289 | Where is the impost duty which has supported the Government, and sunk to a considerable degree the national debt? |
47289 | Where is the justice-- where the equality-- of such a provision? |
47289 | Where is the justice? |
47289 | Where is the limitation upon this power to set up corporations? |
47289 | Where is the necessity of a proviso if the law does not bear such a construction? |
47289 | Where is the proof that the Executive did not call for those powers? |
47289 | Where is your revenue then to come from? |
47289 | Where now is the Revolutionary hero to whom you are about to confide this sacred trust? |
47289 | Where shall we stop, said Mr. D., if we tread back on the steps of each other? |
47289 | Where was the necessity, they will tell you, of declaring that the Orders in Council will_ have been_ withdrawn? |
47289 | Where were they found? |
47289 | Where will be the boasted militia of the gentleman? |
47289 | Where will proof be found of a fact so disgraceful? |
47289 | Where will those supplies be drawn from? |
47289 | Where would it end if the House were now to make a solemn resolution approving of the conduct of the President? |
47289 | Where, sir, could we attack France? |
47289 | Where, then, is the ground of such an influence? |
47289 | Where, then, is the money to be found, or what has been done with it? |
47289 | Where, then, is the necessity for this bank? |
47289 | Where, then, will you protect your commerce? |
47289 | Whether Congress have the power by the constitution to renew the charter of the Bank of the United States? |
47289 | Whether it does not appear probable that at least one thousand of those contained in this list were impressed without even a plausible pretext? |
47289 | Whether we believe in all the rights which the French Emperor condescends to claim for us from the British, although he will not admit them himself? |
47289 | Which is best-- to keep them at home, to a certain loss and probable ruin, or adventure them abroad to a possible loss and highly probable gain? |
47289 | While we facilitate negotiations with the British, why should we embarrass and prevent the same with the French? |
47289 | While we throw wide open the door of negotiation to England, why should we shut it against France? |
47289 | Whilst these peaceful experiments are undergoing a trial, what is the conduct of the opposition? |
47289 | Who but Christophe and Petion? |
47289 | Who can bear the idea of our being obliged to burn or sink all the ships we may take away from the enemy, for fear of their being recaptured? |
47289 | Who could say them nay? |
47289 | Who denies it? |
47289 | Who ever pretended to believe in its efficacy? |
47289 | Who has not heard of the once formidable fleets of Venice and Genoa? |
47289 | Who is here that hears these words, but what approves the sentiment they contain? |
47289 | Who is properly the presiding officer in this case? |
47289 | Who is there, now, in this body who has not voted for the erection of a light- house? |
47289 | Who is this man, and where is he? |
47289 | Who is this war party? |
47289 | Who must suffer by it? |
47289 | Who then has been the first aggressor? |
47289 | Who was in possession of the land when the law passed? |
47289 | Who was there now to supply all these various colonies that used to be supplied by us? |
47289 | Who was to decide which was the correct one? |
47289 | Who were the members of our first Congress? |
47289 | Who were they? |
47289 | Who will become the purchasers-- Great Britain? |
47289 | Who will impute to this body so disgraceful a motive? |
47289 | Who will profit by it? |
47289 | Who would dare to avow an intention to defeat its operation? |
47289 | Who would step forward to rescue them from that punishment due to their crime if convicted by our own courts? |
47289 | Who, sir, are the true friends-- I do not speak of motives-- who in fact are the true friends of Administration? |
47289 | Who, sir, can estimate the complicated mischiefs of a depreciated paper currency, without specie for its redemption? |
47289 | Who, sir, will be most likely to avail himself of this privilege, or rather of this course? |
47289 | Who? |
47289 | Whose products, then, would Great Britain carry? |
47289 | Why are we partisans of either? |
47289 | Why are your Ministers now loitering in foreign Courts? |
47289 | Why do it, then? |
47289 | Why give to Congress the right to coin money and regulate its value? |
47289 | Why has it so happened that this necessity has never existed until the last session of Congress? |
47289 | Why has the gentleman shielded British instigation of their outrages? |
47289 | Why has the measure failed of expected success? |
47289 | Why invest it with a capital immense in amount, and sovereign in its control over the external and internal commerce of the country? |
47289 | Why is a judge, sworn to support the laws and constitution of the country, bound by a train of decisions contrary to his own opinions? |
47289 | Why is he impelled to shed our blood? |
47289 | Why is it out of order? |
47289 | Why keep them up at this place, whence they could not get out of the river perhaps in three weeks or a month? |
47289 | Why kiss the rod of iron which inflicts the stripes without a cause? |
47289 | Why legislate by halves? |
47289 | Why love her rulers? |
47289 | Why make the distinction in this instance? |
47289 | Why need they decide this business immediately? |
47289 | Why not, it was asked, wait for the actual census of the territory? |
47289 | Why not, sir? |
47289 | Why not? |
47289 | Why should our sympathies be awakened in favor of Spain? |
47289 | Why should such a power have been delegated? |
47289 | Why should they come here then? |
47289 | Why should we hurry into a war from which nothing but calamity can be expected? |
47289 | Why so many vexatious restrictions upon neutral trade, tending to destroy competition on our part in the continental markets? |
47289 | Why then is it, that we are called upon to make a new declaration of independence? |
47289 | Why then should they not be manned and put in readiness for service? |
47289 | Why then, in this awful crisis, shall we not look to the same quarter? |
47289 | Why then, sir, should we not have union, when it is so easy and efficacious a remedy for all our difficulties? |
47289 | Why this great cry about domestic manufactures? |
47289 | Why was he not hanged as a traitor? |
47289 | Why was not that mercy which is so pathetically called for bestowed on them by that tribunal before whom the case was examined? |
47289 | Why was the evidence of the repeal of the decrees withheld? |
47289 | Why were they not liberated? |
47289 | Why, and for what was the constitution made? |
47289 | Why, sir, do you think the merchants will believe that you really intend to go to war? |
47289 | Why, sir, does the gentleman disapprove of the President''s proclamation? |
47289 | Why, sir, is it strange? |
47289 | Why, sir, was justice so long delayed, and why was it at last obtained? |
47289 | Why, then, should it be condemned? |
47289 | Why, then, should it be now determined at all events to abandon this measure? |
47289 | Why, then, sir, shall he now affect not to understand us? |
47289 | Why, then, will gentlemen persist in that course where danger is almost unavoidable, and shun that where safety is almost certain? |
47289 | Will a navy have this effect? |
47289 | Will any gentleman regret that this twenty- six gun ship has been built, though the mastery of the Lakes has been acquired without it? |
47289 | Will gentlemen be good enough to condescend so far as to assign some object that the Executive could have had in view from such conduct? |
47289 | Will gentlemen suffer me to turn their attention to this last fact? |
47289 | Will gentlemen tell us from whence they are to procure the principal articles of provisions and lumber? |
47289 | Will he explain it? |
47289 | Will he pretend to say, that this is an offensive war; a war of conquest? |
47289 | Will it be less difficult or unpopular to do this after the debt has accumulated to an enormous amount? |
47289 | Will it be said, that when the arrangement was made with Mr. Erskine the President had no knowledge of the blockading orders of May, 1806? |
47289 | Will it come from the Eastward, in bills of the State banks? |
47289 | Will it compel the great belligerent Powers to do us justice for past injuries and secure us for the future? |
47289 | Will it contradict itself by taking away the seamen? |
47289 | Will it not be prudent to diminish the extent of this evil by putting down this bank which is the fountain from which the whole system flows? |
47289 | Will it then be asked, shall we not go to war and fight our way? |
47289 | Will not the alarm be increased by its continuance at this time? |
47289 | Will not the officer be also liable to the State laws? |
47289 | Will not the same causes produce the same effects now as then? |
47289 | Will she learn nothing from the loss of three or four hundred ships? |
47289 | Will she make no diversions in their favor? |
47289 | Will she suffer us to carry the war into her territories, and not retort upon us? |
47289 | Will she then respect our rights? |
47289 | Will the country be less able to repress insurrection? |
47289 | Will the gentleman say she values the principles of the Orders in Council, as she did the sovereignty of her colonies? |
47289 | Will the gentleman trust the merchants with the guardianship of his own honor? |
47289 | Will the honorable gentleman tell us why? |
47289 | Will they deign to listen to the voice of history, and learn how chimerical are their apprehensions? |
47289 | Will they not forever hereafter compel us to trade as they please? |
47289 | Will they prove us by the_ waters_, and reject all such as will not lap as the dog lappeth? |
47289 | Will this old argument, in favor of a navy, now be used, which we have so often heard heretofore? |
47289 | Will you call upon her to leave your ports and harbors untouched, only just till you can return from Canada to defend them? |
47289 | Will you find him in the person of an acquitted felon? |
47289 | Will you have a list of them? |
47289 | Will you have any? |
47289 | Will you keep house forever, rather than make choice of the path through which you will resume your external rights? |
47289 | Will you not only go to war, but wage a_ bellum ad internecinum_ for it? |
47289 | Will you open your campaign at mid- summer? |
47289 | Will you protect that clandestinely destined to Great Britain? |
47289 | Will you protect that destined to the coast of France? |
47289 | Will you refuse to do yours?" |
47289 | Will you say that your provocations were less then than now? |
47289 | Will you say to England,"end the war when you please, give us the direct trade in our own produce, we are content?" |
47289 | Will you seek for the deep foundations of her power in the frozen deserts of Labrador? |
47289 | Will you tax the great agricultural community for the purpose of protecting this extraneous commerce? |
47289 | Will you, sir, have the goodness to direct an inquiry, and order the release of such as are citizens of the United States? |
47289 | Will, then, any injury, or any combination of injuries, authorize or require national resentment? |
47289 | With them alone? |
47289 | With these facts staring him in the face, how could he do otherwise than urge an early session? |
47289 | With this discriminating, permanent, municipal law, could we expect Great Britain to treat with us as a neutral? |
47289 | With what sentiment, think you, would such doctrines have been received? |
47289 | Without her maritime strength, would she have aspired to balance the scales of power on the Continent? |
47289 | Would a tax on salt, he asked, be equal? |
47289 | Would any gentleman who regarded his honor tell the House that there were 30,000 inhabitants in the undisputed Territory? |
47289 | Would he not be right to suspect those who vote for, and more especially those who bring forward such a proposition, of improper motives? |
47289 | Would he not have used it as one of the strongest inducements to the adoption of this system? |
47289 | Would he respect us more than England would? |
47289 | Would it be good policy, he asked, to let our means of carrying on war on the ocean rot in our docks, and not make use of them? |
47289 | Would it be possible that foreign powers could look up with any reverence to their acts? |
47289 | Would it establish our neutral rights? |
47289 | Would it have been proper for the Government to have entered into no stipulations for the security of American seamen? |
47289 | Would it have had that power, if this right had not been expressly delegated? |
47289 | Would it not prove beyond doubt that the Administration was sincere in its wishes for peace? |
47289 | Would it, in your opinion, be advisable to increase the duty on foreign tonnage? |
47289 | Would not the passage of this resolution be considered as an indirect censure on the other Revolutionary characters who have gone from us? |
47289 | Would not these carriers supply their own manufacturers? |
47289 | Would she carry products of other nations, and let her own manufacturers starve? |
47289 | Would she have become a party to the infamous conspiracy of Pilnitz? |
47289 | Would she have broken the peace of Amiens whence her present dangers arise? |
47289 | Would she have wantonly plotted the dismemberment of France? |
47289 | Would the English nation have endured it? |
47289 | Would the chivalry of gentlemen on the other side of the House have suggested an invasion of France? |
47289 | Would the conquest of those colonies shake the policy of the British cabinet? |
47289 | Would the remedy for this interference with our rights be abandoning the ocean altogether? |
47289 | Would they have been permitted in favor of the United States, could those wants be supplied from any other quarter? |
47289 | Would they suffer cotton to go elsewhere, until they themselves were supplied? |
47289 | Would this satisfy the Emperor? |
47289 | Would you be apt to look as much at the nature of the propositions, as at the temper of the assailant? |
47289 | Would you consent to see a scuffle at the gallows between the civil authority and the military for the body of that wretch? |
47289 | Would you have excluded British vessels since 1793, for taking the vessels engaged in your lawful trade, and for impressing your seamen? |
47289 | Would you not tell such an assailant, that you were not to be bullied nor beaten into any concession? |
47289 | Would you ratify such an arrangement if you could help it? |
47289 | Would you ship your commerce there merely to surrender so much property into the grasp of the Emperor? |
47289 | Yes, Mr. President, I reiterate, are they not murderers? |
47289 | Yes, sir, ask yourself this question in regard to any man, to whom you are about to confide important trusts: Does he pay his just debts? |
47289 | Yet, I ask the question: is not the spirit which it breathes disgraceful? |
47289 | You have always got the better of the argument; you have better proclamations; but what avails all this? |
47289 | You have been heretofore told your paper measures were worth nothing: now that it is proposed to give blow for blow, what is said? |
47289 | You have taken Quebec-- have you conquered England? |
47289 | You will wage war, and not to rescue your fellow- citizens from imprisonment and stripes? |
47289 | Your trade was, a few years ago, unrestrained and flourishing-- did it not enrich the most distant parts of your country? |
47289 | [ 34] For these injuries and insults what atonement has been made? |
47289 | _ Blank ballots, shall they be counted?_--In the House on election for Speaker two blank ballots were cast, shall they be counted? |
47289 | _ In the House_, bill taken up, 547; is it such as to require secrecy? |
47289 | _ Now_, where are we? |
47289 | above the legal rate of interest? |
47289 | and has she not always refused to make any arrangement about them? |
47289 | and that, too, from a nation at all times disposed to depress this growing country? |
47289 | and what would be the probable addition to the revenue applicable to the year 1814 by such increase? |
47289 | are they now more disposed to succumb and accept your terms than before the war? |
47289 | debate become angry and be prolonged? |
47289 | did they fall? |
47289 | for relieving him from a dreadful captivity? |
47289 | has the gentleman received any such, even informally, from any officer of this Government? |
47289 | how is it so influenced? |
47289 | how? |
47289 | if so, whence did it arise? |
47289 | is this that_ bona fide_ performance of the condition? |
47289 | or does any American wish to see his country prostrated still lower? |
47289 | or from the unofficial conversation of the members of the House? |
47289 | or how can Mr. Jackson reconcile it to himself to say that in adhering to these gross insinuations, he did not intend to give offence? |
47289 | or is her hostility merely commercial? |
47289 | or should even endeavor to teach others to venerate, to cherish, to support it? |
47289 | shall our militia be commanded by officers commissioned by the President? |
47289 | the orders of June and November, 1793, which produced Jay''s treaty? |
47289 | to engage every man who is willing to serve his country? |
47289 | to place a recruiting officer in almost every town and village in the United States? |
47289 | were parties never before heard of in this country? |
47289 | what injury have we not suffered? |
47289 | what''s that? |
47289 | what''s that?" |
47289 | where would have been that proud spirit of resistance to Ministerial encroachment on our rights and liberties, which achieved our independence? |
47289 | whether, by our laws, and the practice under them, we have afforded them all that protection and security to which they are entitled? |
47289 | who are they?" |